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German and Chinese families sue over Air France crash

Frankfurt — German and Chinese families who lost relatives in a plane crash off Brazil will sue Air France, aircraft maker Airbus and the French aviation authorities for negligence, lawyers said Friday.

Lawyers acting for the families based in Germany are representing the relatives of 26 Germans and eight Chinese from the 228 people who died onboard Flight AF 447, an Airbus A330, when it crashed on June 1 on its way from Rio de Janeiro to Paris.

The lawyers claim the accident was "foreseeable" as recurring problems with aircraft speed sensors had been pointed out since 1998 but "neither Airbus, nor Air France intensively investigated the problem."

Airbus suggested in 2006 installing a back-up system in case the sensors failed, but French aviation authorities never made the upgrade compulsory, the lawyers said.

They added that they would set up a German victims association in Berlin on Friday.

Elmar Giemulla, one of the families’ legal representatives, told AFP that the negligence charges would be filed in January.

He added that the Chinese families were suing in Germany as no victims associations had been set up in China.

Similar groups already exist in the United States, France and Brazil.

AFP/Expatica