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Air France says no hope of survivors

Air France employees stand outside the Notre-Dame cathedral, in Paris, Wednesday June 3, 2009, during an ecumenical church service for relatives and families of the passengers of Air France's flight 447 which vanished Monday over the Atlantic ocean. The reason for the crash remains unclear, with fierce thunderstorms, lightning or a catastrophic combination of causes as possible theories.
Jet broke apart over Atlantic

FERNANDO DE NORONHA, Brazil — Air France told families of passengers on Flight 447 that the jetliner broke apart and they must abandon hope that anyone survived, a grief counselor said today as military aircraft tried to narrow their search for the remains of the plane.

Air France's CEO Pierre-Henri Gourgeon told families in a private meeting that the plane broke apart either in the air or when it slammed into the ocean and there were no survivors, according to Guillaume Denoix de Saint-Marc, who was asked by Paris prosecutors to help counsel relatives. The plane, carrying 228 people, disappeared after leaving Rio de Janeiro for Paris on Sunday night.

Investigators were relying heavily on the plane's automated messages to help reconstruct what happened to the jet as it flew through towering thunderstorms. They detail a series of failures that end with its systems shutting down, suggesting the plane broke apart in the sky, according to an aviation industry official with knowledge of the investigation. He spoke on condition of anonymity Wednesday because he was not authorized to discuss the crash.

"What is clear is that there was no landing. There's no chance the escape slides came out," said Denoix de Saint-Marc, who heads a victims' association for UTA flight 772, shot down in 1989 by Libyan terrorists.

No survivors makes Flight 447 Air France's deadliest plane crash and the world's worst commercial air accident since 2001.

Military rescue planes were trying to narrow the search zone today as ships headed to the site to recover wreckage. The "extreme cloudiness" in the search zone also has prevented U.S. satellites scanning the area to provide any useful leads, according to French military spokesman Christophe Prazuck.

Brazil's Defense Minister Nelson Jobim said debris discovered so far was spread over a wide area, with 140 miles separating pieces of wreckage they have spotted. The overall zone is roughly 400 miles northeast of the Fernando de Noronha islands off Brazil's northern coast, where the ocean floor drops as low as 22,950 feet below sea level.

The floating debris includes a 23-foot (seven-meter) chunk of plane, but pilots have spotted no signs of survivors, Brazilian Air Force spokesman Col. Jorge Amaral said.

Brazilian military planes located new debris from Air France Flight 447 on Wednesday, after spotting an airline seat and oil slick a day earlier. But Prazuck said today French planes had made six missions over the area and have yet to spot any wreckage. He said, however, French teams have been searching in different places and at different times from the Brazilian search teams.

Three more French overflights were planned for today, Prazuck said. A U.S. Navy P-3C Orion surveillance plane also joined Brazil's Air Force in trying to spot debris. Heavy weather delayed until next week the arrival of deep-water submersibles.

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