Pilots refuse to fly, Germanwings cancels flight

A rescue helicopter from the French Gendarmerie flies over the snow covered French Alps during a search and rescue operation near to the crash site of an Airbus A320, near Seyne-les-Alpes, March 25, 2015. French investigators will sift through wreckage on Wednesday for clues into why a German Airbus operated by Lufthansa's Germanwings budget airline plowed into an Alpine mountainside, killing all 150 people on board including 16 schoolchildren returning from an exchange trip to Spain.     REUTERS/Jean-Paul Pelissier
A rescue helicopter from the French Gendarmerie flies over the snow covered French Alps during a search and rescue operation near to the crash site of an Airbus A320, near Seyne-les-Alpes, March 25, 2015. French investigators will sift through wreckage on Wednesday for clues into why a German Airbus operated by Lufthansa’s Germanwings budget airline plowed into an Alpine mountainside, killing all 150 people on board including 16 schoolchildren returning from an exchange trip to Spain. REUTERS/Jean-Paul Pelissier

A number of pilots at German low-cost airline Germanwings refused to fly Wednesday following the deadly crash in the French Alps, saying they were mourning the victims of the doomed aircraft.

A spokeswoman for Germanwings’ parent company, German flag carrier Lufthansa, said that “Lufthansa flights are going ahead as planned. One Germanwings flight has been cancelled because pilots don’t feel they are in a position to fly.”

She declined to say how many pilots declined to work on Wednesday.

The flight cancelled was the connection from the western German city of Duesseldorf to Barcelona. The Airbus that crashed on Tuesday killing all 144 passengers and six crew was travelling to Duesseldorf from Barcelona.

A spokesman for the pilots’ union Vereinigung Cockpit, Joerg Handwerg, insisted the decision was not because of concerns about safety.

“It has nothing to do with safety. The pilots have friends and colleagues who have died,” Handwerg said on public television.

“That is such a heavy emotional burden that it’s better not to get into the cockpit.”

Already on Tuesday, Germanwings had reported “occasional flight disruptions within its route network” as pilots were too shocked to fly following the news of the crash of an A320 Germanwings jet.

It was the first fatal accident in the history of Germanwings, and the deadliest on the French mainland since 1974.

“We understand their decision,” Germanwings executive Thomas Winkelmann  said on Tuesday.

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