Use BBC.com or the new BBC App to listen to BBC podcasts, Radio 4 and the World Service outside the UK.

Find out how to listen to other BBC stations

Episode details

World Service,16 Dec 2021,40 mins

The father and daughter finding closure after a plane crash

Outlook

Available for over a year

Gonzalo Dussan and his daughter Michelle still cannot comprehend how they are able to share their story. For years, they didn't speak about it, but recent developments have given them a new purpose. Back in December 1995 they were on a flight from Miami to Cali in Colombia, when the plane crashed into a mountain, killing almost everyone on board. Michelle was only six years old at the time and the family had been planning to spend Christmas with their relatives in Colombia. Also on board were Michelle's mother and brother, who both died as a result of the crash. Gonzalo and Michelle were two of only four people to survive the crash - out of 163 people. They tell Emily Webb why a new theory about what may have caused the crash has helped them to find closure. The theory has emerged from a film by former airline pilot Tristan Loraine, called American 965. James Redon has taken his obsession with Japanese video games to extraordinary lengths. He gave up his job and home in France and moved to Japan to create one of the largest collections of video games in the world. He now lives in a quiet suburb of Tokyo where he keeps his collection and hosts the Game Preservation Society - a group set up to gather and preserve games for future generations. Emily Webb went to meet him there in November 2016. Get in touch: [email protected] (Photo: Gonzalo Dussan and his daughter Michelle. Credit: Courtesy of Michelle Dussan)

Programme Website
More episodes