Ships continued to search yesterday for survivors, bodies, and wreckage from Yemenia Flight 626, which went down Tuesday in heavy winds off the coast of the Comoros islands.
(Tony Karumba/AFP/Getty Images)
After protests, airline suspends service
Demonstrators say problems had been ignored
Ships continued to search yesterday for survivors, bodies, and wreckage from Yemenia Flight 626, which went down Tuesday in heavy winds off the coast of the Comoros islands.
(Tony Karumba/AFP/Getty Images)
PARIS - Protesters linked arms across an entrance at Paris’ main airport yesterday to keep passengers off a Yemeni flight to Comoros on a route that saw a deadly crash this week after years of complaints about dangerous conditions en route to the Indian Ocean island nation.
The airline that operated the crashed jet, Yemenia, suspended its service to Comoros in response to the Paris protest and other demonstrations this week, accusing the protesters of “inadmissible violence.’’
Many in the Comoran community in France are angry that it took Tuesday’s accident, which killed 152 people on Yemenia airlines’ Paris-Moroni flight, to focus attention on the problems. They say that since 2004 they have been complaining about dangerous planes, unhelpful crews, and stopovers in the Yemeni capital of San’a that last hours or days in stifling heat with little information and few basic services from the Yemeni airline.
French Transport Minister Dominique Bussereau warned that Yemenia risked inclusion on a European Union list of banned airlines.
Khaled el-Wazeer, the Yemeni transportation minister, said that his government will provide documents within a week showing how the airline deals with technical problems on planes, a measure the EU has called necessary to keep it off the blacklist.
On Thursday, hundreds of shouting demonstrators at Marseille’s airport tried to block passengers from boarding a Yemenia flight to the Comoran capital.
The airline said it was indefinitely suspending its flights from the Mediterranean port city to Moroni.
“SOS Trips to Comoros,’’ a group formed to push for better conditions, said that it had complained to airline officials as early as 2004 that planes on the route were unsafe.
Yemeni officials brushed aside the concerns, saying “that if their planes didn’t meet standards they wouldn’t put their crew on it,’’ member Zalifa Youssouf told the Associated Press by telephone yesterday. Yemeni officials issued no public statement on the group’s claims yesterday.
Ships continued to search for survivors, bodies, and wreckage from Yemenia Flight 626, which went down in heavy winds off the coast of the Comoros islands. .
A 14-year-old girl was rescued after clinging to floating wreckage for more than 13 hours, suffering from hypothermia, a fractured collarbone and bruises to her face, elbow, and foot. Her mother was presumed dead.
Bahia Bakari returned to France aboard a French government plane on Thursday and was hospitalized in Paris.
President Nicolas Sarkozy named a former French ambassador to Sudan, Christine Robichon, as the liaison between families and international authorities managing the investigation regarding the Comoros crash.
The French government also fended off criticism that it was not doing as much for the families of the Comoros crash victims as it did for an Air France flight that crashed en route from Brazil to Paris last month.![]()



