Forensic teams working on the site of the Germanwings crash may already have recovered the body of suspected killer co-pilot Andreas Lubitz, as it emerged that a road is being built to the remote location in the French Alps.
Investigators say tests on Lubitz's body could provide crucial clues to explain why he might have locked himself in the cockpit of Flight 9525 and set the plane's autopilot to crash into the side of a mountain.
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Speaking to Germany's Bild newspaper, leading forensic scientist Professor Michael Tsokos said his team had been working round the clock to test and sort as many as 600 separate body parts from the 150 people killed in the crash.
Mr Tsokos said he hoped that within three weeks up to 95 per cent of all the victims will have been identified and officially declared dead, and was reported as saying Lubitz's body was among those already recovered.