Germanwings Offers Emotional Damage Payments to Crash Victims’ Families

By | June 30, 2015

Germanwings is offering €25,000 ($27,833) compensation payments to close relatives of those killed in the March 24 plane crash for their pain and suffering, it said on Tuesday.

Evidence shows co-pilot Andreas Lubitz locked the captain out of the cockpit of Germanwings flight 4U9525 from Barcelona to Duesseldorf and deliberately steered the plane into a remote mountainside, killing all 150 onboard.

The €25,000 payouts are on top of €50,000 [$55,667] already paid as immediate financial assistance to relatives. German law does not usually provide for a separate award for pain and suffering, unlike in the United States.

Germanwings, a unit of Lufthansa, said on Tuesday it wished to treat everyone fairly, although one lawyer said the offer was not sufficient.

The damages payout for emotional distress will be made to parents, widowed spouses, partners and children of the victims and does not require proof of damages incurred to be presented in order for the payout to be made, it said.

Relatives living in Germany may also claim an additional €10,000 [$11,133] each as compensation for any health problems without needing to offer formal proof, the company said.

Families of the victims still have the right to make further claims for other financial costs, such as burial costs or lost pensions, although this will require proof of damages incurred.

A lawyer representing some of the German victims, Elmar Giemulla, described the offer as “completely inadequate,” noting pilots’ strikes last year had cost Lufthansa around €200 million [$222.7 million] while the offer of €25,000 for the relatives would cost the airline around €7.5 million [$8.35 million].

Lufthansa said in response it had looked at similar cases and its offer went beyond those.

(Reporting by Victoria Bryan; Editing by David Holmes)

Topics Germany

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