Click photo to enlarge
Reverend Peter Beck and family members attending the DC-10
Remembrance in Antarctica. Credit:NZPA / Sam Shepherd.
Memorial services were held in Antarctica, France and New
Auckland today to commemorate two Air New Zealand tragedies
separated by 29 years.
Services were conducted in Auckland and Christchurch to
remember the 30th anniversary of the Mt Erebus disaster in
Antarctica and the loss a year ago of an aircraft off the
south of France.
The Erebus tragedy, in which all 257 people on board a DC10
sightseeing flight from Auckland perished, was also marked at
Scott Base by about 70 people including six who lost
relatives in the crash.
A service conducted by the Very Reverend Peter Beck from
Christchurch Cathedral inside the base was followed by a
ceremony at the base's flagpole at 12.50pm -- the moment when
Flight TE901 slammed into the foothills of the mountain.
Scott Base co-ordinator Yvonne Costar said it was a poignant
ceremony with a period of silence and a wreath -- taken from
the crash site to be "refreshed" -- laid by the flagpole.
A helicopter carrying the six family members had been
prevented by high winds from landing at the site yesterday.
But if the weather improves the wreath, along with a
koru-shaped capsule containing messages from families, will
be placed under the cross at the crash site on Monday.
"Peter Beck handed the sculpture, wreath and prayer over to
us just in case they don't get to the crash site on Monday so
we can take them there before the end of the season," Mrs
Costar told NZPA.
Today the base was engulfed in fog, the mercury was at minus
5degC, "and it was blowing 15-20 knots, so it was pretty
chilly", she said.
Earlier today, a ceremony was held in France to commemorate
the first anniversary of the crash of an Air NZ Airbus.
The A320, which had been leased to German company XL Airways,
was undergoing trials before being handed back to Air NZ.
During the flight, it plunged into the sea, claiming the
lives of the five New Zealanders and two Germans on board.
About 20 relatives of the New Zealanders travelled to France
for the commemoration.