Stunned France probes Argentina crash

Prosecutors in France have opened a manslaughter investigation after two helicopters crashed in Argentina, killing eight French nationals.

Three well-known French sports personalities were among those killed in the collision, which also claimed the lives of the two Argentine pilots.

French President Francois Hollande said it was “a cause of immense sadness”.

Both helicopters were involved in the filming of TV survival show Dropped, which airs on French channel TF1.

On the show, celebrities are flown into rough terrain and filmed while they attempt to find food and shelter.

Yachtswoman Florence Arthaud, Olympic swimmer Camille Muffat and Olympic boxer Alexis Vastine were the show’s celebrities on board at the time of the crash. They all died.

Other contestants were standing on the ground blindfolded a few hundred metres away when the accident happened, French media said.

The five other French nationals killed were said to have worked for Adventure Line Productions (ALP), the company making the programme. They were named as Laurent Sbasnik, Lucie Mei-Dalby, Volodia Guinard, Brice Guilbert and Edouard Gilles.

The Argentine pilots were named as Juan Carlos Castillo and Roberto Abate.

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The three sports stars killed

Camille Muffat, Alexis Vastine and Florence ArthaudCamille Muffat, Alexis Vastine and Florence Arthaud were confirmed dead by President Hollande’s office

Camille Muffat, 25, won three medals, including gold in the 400m freestyle in the 2012 London Olympics. She retired from competitive swimming in 2014.

Alexis Vastine, 28, won bronze at the 2008 Beijing Olympics in the light-welterweight category. He was narrowly beaten in the quarter-finals of the 2012 Games.

Florence Arthaud, 57, was a hugely accomplished sailor, winning the 1990 Route du Rhum, the prestigious solo Atlantic race. A serious car accident put her in a coma when she was 17.

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The cause of the crash is as yet unclear and investigations are under way. The inquiry in France is standard procedure when its nationals die overseas.

Weather conditions were described as good, as Sarah Corker reports

‘Great athletes’

Tributes have poured in to the dead stars from France and beyond.

“We are shocked by this sad news,” said Thomas Bach, President of the International Olympic Committee.

“Our thoughts are with the families and friends of these great athletes who have left us.”

“The world of sport and the Olympic family have lost three of their key members,” he said, calling them champions and role models.

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British round-the-world yachtswoman Dame Ellen MacArthur told the BBC: “Florence’s view was that the sea is out there and it’s there for the taking.

“You know, I’m sure she’s inspired many, many people,” she added.

Christian Estrosi, the mayor of Nice, Muffat’s hometown, spoke of his sadness: “I’m distraught. Immense grief,” he said.

“I saw her grow up a little as if she were my daughter. I’m thinking of her parents. Camille, we miss you.”

Image uploaded to Facebook on Saturday shows, clockwise from bottom left, Alain Bernard, Philippe Candeloro, Anne-Flore Marxer, Silvain Wiltord, Jeannie Longo, Alexis Vastine, Florence Arthaud and Camille Muffat

The three sports stars killed are shown here on the right-hand side of this photograph taken as they were leaving for Argentina. It was uploaded to Facebook by French Olympian Philippe Candeloro (middle left)

The three French sports stars (from L) Champion sailor Florence Arthaud, Olympic gold medallist swimmer Camille Muffat, and Olympic boxer Alexis Vastine, moments before they getting aboard a helicopter that crashed while filming a reality TV show on Monday in La Rioja, Argentina

The three sport stars who died were pictured moments before boarding the helicopter

A man stands near the smoking remains of a helicopter that crashed with another near Villa Castelli in the La Rioja province of Argentina on Monday

The accident happened in the remote, rugged province of La Rioja, close to the Andes mountains

Two helicopters take off in La Rioja province

The collision took place moments after the helicopters had taken off

Filming for the TV programme began late last month at Ushuaia in the deep south of Argentina and had since moved to the mountainous western province of Rioja.

One cast member, figure skater Philippe Candeloro, was said to be “extremely shocked but unharmed”.

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Reaction: Lucy Williamson, BBC News, Paris

France is waking up to the shock of its loss, with the death of the three sports stars and five other French nationals splashed across every paper, every news bulletin.

Prime Minister Manuel Valls tweeted his “immense sadness” saying “all France is grieving this morning”.

Meanwhile Culture Minister Fleur Pellerin told the BFM-TV news channel that the three athletes were “among the most outstanding ambassadors for our country”.

Former Arsenal and France striker Sylvain Wiltord, who was taking part in the current series, said via social media, “I’m trembling, I can’t talk. I’m horrified.” And a former team-mate of Camille Muffat, Yannick Agnel said simply: “not her… Let us be strong.”

But amid the horror there are also the first signs of anger. Well-known musician Benjamin Bioley has criticised what he called a “horrible TV reality show that serves up cardboard stars and then steals three wonderful athletes”.

As the country begins to absorb the news, the questions over this incident and the circumstances that led to it will only grow.

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Officials have said the weather conditions in the mountainous area where the helicopters went down were good.

“An explosion occurred and it’s believed that they must have collided,” said La Rioja Secretary of Security Cesar Angulo. “Aeronautical experts will have to determine that,” he added.

“We learn with great sadness about the accident during the filming of the Dropped show,” said a statement issued by TF1.

“All TF1 teams come together in this terrible time with the pain of the families and relatives of the victims.”

TF1 says the show will be postponed and the rest of the crew is returning home.

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Reality TV meets tragedy

  • 2013: On Koh Lanta show produced by ALP for TF1, Gerald Babin, 25, dies of a heart attack. Days later the doctor who treated him, Thierry Costa, 38, kills himself complaining of bad media coverage
  • 2010: Phil Harris, a fisherman, suffers a huge stroke while unloading crab during filming for Discovery Channel’s Deadliest Catch reality series and dies days later. The episode featuring his death is later broadcast, followed by a special tribute episode
  • 2009: a contestant on the Bulgarian version of Survivor, Noncho Vodenicharov, 53, suffers a heart attack in the Philippines and dies
  • 2009: Saad Khan, a 32-year-old father of four, drowns while taking part in a swimming challenge on a Pakistani reality TV show
  • 2006: Australian Steve Irwin, international wildlife expert and star, dies off Queensland coast after being pierced with a stingray barb while shooting a film called Ocean’s Deadliest

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