Some 1,500 people attended a memorial service Monday at Barcelona's iconic Sagrada Familia Cathedral, and paid homage to the 150 people killed in last month's Germanwings plane crash.
The March 24 budget flight took off from Barcelona but never made it to its Duesseldorf destination. It crashed in the French Alps, killing everyone on board, including 72 Germans and 50 Spaniards.
Spain's King Felipe VI, Queen Letizia, Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy and French State Secretary for European Affairs Harlem Desir were among the mourners on Monday.
The ceremony was held in several languages. Students from a college near Barcelona, which had hosted 16 German teenagers before their tragic deaths, held a solemn march.
They lit up 150 candles, one for each victim, placing them at the altar of the impressive cathedral, which was designed by Catalan modernist architect Antonio Gaudi.
Families of the 50 Spanish victims accompanied dozens of the Germans' relatives at the ceremony.
Lufthansa chief executive Carsten Spohr and Germanwings managing director Thomas Winkelmann were also present.
On April 17, grieving relatives already joined political and religious leaders at a sombre memorial service in Cologne, Germany.
Co-pilot Andreas Lubitz, who had been diagnosed as suicidal in the past, is believed to have deliberately flown the plane into a mountainside after locking the pilot out of the cockpit.
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