BSP-04 UK rescuers launch bid to recover body from Sala’s plane

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BSP-04

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UK rescuers launch bid to recover body from Sala’s plane

LONDON, Feb 6, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – British crash investigators on Tuesday
launched an underwater operation to recover a body from the wreckage of the
plane carrying Argentine footballer Emiliano Sala in the Channel.

“We are attempting to recover the body. If we are successful, we will
consider the feasibility of recovering the aircraft wreckage,” an Air
Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB) spokesperson said in a statement.

The light aircraft carrying the 28-year-old footballer and pilot David
Ibbotson to his new Premier League team Cardiff City disappeared near the
British island of Guernsey on January 21.

The shipwreck hunter hired by Sala’s family with the help of funds donated
by football stars such as Lionel Messi found the plane wreckage on Sunday.

The AAIB has since taken over operations. It revealed on Monday that an
unidentified body had been found at the site.

But it warned on Tuesday that strong tides “mean we can only use the
remotely operated vehicle (ROV) for limited periods each day”.

“Regardless of the results, we will not be making a further statement until
the families have been informed,” it said.

– ‘Technically possible’ –

Shipwreck hunter David Mearns had earlier warned that “time is of the
essence” in an underwater operation like the one being launched by Britain
off France’s northern coast.

“As tragic as the loss is, it’s made much, much worse if the body is never
recovered or (the family) never get an answer to what happened,” Mearns said.

“Finding it is just the starting point. The AAIB has got to investigate
it.”

Sala was flying to join up with Cardiff from his old French team Nantes.

His signing was the most expensive in the Welsh club’s history and marked
what fans had hoped would be a turning point in its bid to avoid relegation
from England’s top division.

“There’s no longer any hope,” Horacio Sala, Emiliano’s father, told Fox
Sports, acknowledging there was no longer any prospect of finding his son
alive.

“We hope the two bodies are inside (the plane). It’s over, the only thing I
hope now is that they find them.”

Mearns said his discovery of two seat cushions on the French coast last
week revealed that the plane had broken up.

“It’s in one area (on the seabed), it’s all one mass, but some bits may not
be connected. So what you don’t want to do is to disturb the body in a way
that you lose it,” he said.

Sala’s family raised more than 370,000 euros ($422,000) in an online
campaign to pay for the private search.

“Had that not happened, I don’t think anybody would have searched for the
plane,” Mearns said.

“We were told by the AAIB that they didn’t feel that there was much to be
gained,” he said.

The AAIB ended up chartering a ship to join Mearns on Sunday.

He said recovery was now “technically possible — the water depth isn’t an
issue really, and the weather can be managed with the right ship”.

“It’s a matter of will to do it,” he added.

BSS/AFP/GMR/0850 hrs