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Ethiopian Airlines jet black boxe found PDF Print E-mail
Written by fenet   
Sunday, 07 February 2010 10:41

Search teams off Lebanon's coast have located the flight recorders of an Ethiopian Airlines jet that crashed into the Mediterranean sea last month, the Lebanese transport minister said.

 

 

 

 

Ghazi Aridi said on Saturday that the recorders, commonly referred to as black boxes, were discovered at a depth of 45m, off the coastal village of Naameh, just south of Beirut airport.

 

 

"Lebanese army divers have gone down to retrieve them, but this operation will take time," Aridi said.

 

 

"We have to be cautious because we must preserve the data contained in the boxes."

He said the recorders were found under parts of the plane's fuselage and tail.

 

 

Ethiopian Airlines Flight ET409, a Boeing 737 aircraft, crashed on January 25, just minutes after taking offfrom Beirut airport in the middle of a thunderstorm.

 

 

All 90 passengers and crew aboard the flight - mostly of Lebanese and Ethiopian descent - are believed to have died in the crash, although not all bodieshave been accounted for.


A Lebanese army officer announced more than a week ago that the flight recorders' signal had been detectedat a depth of about 1,300m and about 10km from Beirut's seaside airport. Search teams, however, have not yet been able to collect the boxes.

 

 

Aridi said that retrieving the flight data recorders would be crucial to determining the cause of the crash.

 

 

 

Preliminary investigations indicated that the plane broke apart in mid-air before crashing into the sea.

 

 

 

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