Lufthansa plane with 148 aboard crash in France

© Rolf Vennenbernd, dpa
None of the 148 people on board the Germanwings passenger jet that crashed Tuesday over southern France are likely to have survived, French President Francois Hollande said.
The Airbus A320 operated by Lufthansa's budget airline was carrying 142 passengers and six crew members when it went down over the French Alps as it made its way from Barcelona to the German city of Dusseldorf, French media reported.
Hollande said in televised remarks that the cause of the accident is still unclear, reports dpa.
The aircraft crashed near the town of Digne les Bains, in the south of France, some 140 kilometres north-east of Marseille.
A spokeswoman for Airbus said the company was also monitoring news reports but could not immediately confirm the crash.
Flight data compiled by monitoring site Flightradar24 showed flight 4U9525 reaching an altitude of 38,000 feet before descending.
French Prime Minister Manuel Valls said that he had called for the activation of a inter-minister crisis group and Interior Minister Bernard Cazenueve was en route to the crash site.
Hollande said he would speak later in the day with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Spanish King Felipe VI, who is currently in France on an official visit.          

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