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Two bodies and debris have been found from the Air France plane which went missing over the Atlantic last Monday, the Brazilian air force has said. The remains were taken from the water early on Saturday morning, said spokesman Jorge Amaral. Experts on human remains are on their way to examine the find. All 228 passengers and crew on board AF 447 are believed to have been killed when the plane disappeared during its flight from Rio de Janeiro to Paris. "We confirm the recovery from the water of debris and bodies from the Air France plane," Col Amaral said at a news conference in the northern city of Recife. He later added that two male bodies had been found, as well as objects linked to passengers known to be on the flight, including a suitcase with a plane ticket. A seat was also found, but there has been no confirmation that it was from the flight. The remains were picked up some 900km (600 miles) north-east of the islands of Fernando de Noronha, off Brazil's northern coast. Flight recorders The items were the first to be definitely linked to the plane, nearly six days after the crash. Some debris thought to be from the plane was spotted earlier in the week, but items recovered proved not to be linked to it. Correspondents say that much of the search effort so far has been focused on finding flight data recorders, which have sonar beacons - or "pingers" - attached to them. But French officials say there was no guarantee the beacons were still attached to the flight recorders, and they may have been separated in the impact of the crash. The officials do not know what triggered the plane's problems, but it was flying through an area of thunder storms and turbulence. They said it sent 24 error messages minutes before it crashed. On Friday, French Defence Minister Herve Morin said a French submarine was being sent to join in the search since it had sonar equipment that could help locate the airliner's flight data recorders. The US is also sending specialised listening equipment. Source: BBC

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DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.