Fifty bodies have so far been recovered from the crash zone, along with hundreds of pieces of the aircraft that went down in the Atlantic earlier this month
Brazil’s military said on Saturday it was taking a specialized aircraft with on-board radar out of the search for more remains from the Air France plane disaster in the Atlantic.
The air force Embraer R-99 was being removed from the operation after nearly three weeks of flying over the zone, 1,000km off Brazil’s coast, the military said in a statement.
NIGHT FLIGHTS
The plane was the first to spot debris from Air France flight AF 447, using its radar during night flights over the area in the first week of this month.
“The R-99 flew more than 100 hours and fulfilled a fundamental role in the operation, especially in its initial phase,” the statement said.
The search operation was continuing with other aircraft and a small flotilla of Brazilian and French navy vessels, though nothing more was found on Saturday.
BODY
A Brazilian tanker was bringing to shore a body, some debris and a small amount of passenger baggage, officials said.
Fifty bodies have been recovered from the crash zone, along with hundreds of pieces of the plane.
Hope was fading of finding more, and the search operation was being evaluated by Brazil as to whether it would continue.
A separate search by a French submarine for the plane’s black boxes was continuing. The homing beacons on the devices will only operate for around another week.