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25 bodies identified from plane crash in Spain
(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-08-21 23:27

Two experts interviewed by The Associated Press said the gauge problem was unlikely to have caused the crash.

Alvaro Gammicchia, an Iberia pilot who has flown MD-82's for seven years and represents the pilots union SEPLA, said that even without the gauge "the plane would not fail to the point of causing a tragedy."

The MD-80 series aircraft have a number of static ports or pitot tubes located near the nose of the aircraft. They have different functions, but mostly provide data on air speed, air pressure and outside temperature. Probes for the engine parameters are located around the engines themselves.

"Most likely, whatever the malfunction of the probe was, it is probably not related to what happened," Patrick Smith, a US-based MD-80 pilot and aviation author said by telephone.

The Spanish newspaper El Pais reported that one of the two engines failed and may have caught fire during takeoff. La Vanguardia said witnesses saw the plane's left engine explode and catch fire before the aircraft went down.

Spanair has not released a complete list of the nationalities of those on board. In a provisional report it said Thursday they included one person from Turkey, two from Sweden, four from Indonesia and six from Germany. Seventy-nine lived in the Canary Islands but were not necessarily Spanish, the company said.

Spain began three days of mourning for those who died. Flags in Madrid flew at half-staff and silent vigils were held at noon around the country. The king and queen visited the makeshift morgue where the bodies were taken after the crash.

Development Minister Magdalena Alvarez said 25 bodies have been identified. She said the process could take several days because many bodies were burned beyond recognition and forensic teams are using DNA to help make identifications.

Some mourners spent the night at the morgue. The morgue was set up at Madrid's main convention center -- the same facility used for bodies after the March 11, 2004 Islamic terror attacks that killed 191 people on Madrid commuter trains.

Spanair is Spain's second largest airline, after Iberia. It is a money-loser, though, and owner SAS put it up for sale more than a year ago but failed to find a buyer. Spanair reported losses of euro55 million ($81 million) in the first half of this year.

The US National Transportation Safety Board said it will send investigators to assist in the inquiry.

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