The airline said the bodies of 43 of the victims had been recovered from the swollen river in Laos, some many kilometres downstream from the crash site.
The turboprop ATR-72 went down in stormy weather last Wednesday near Pakse airport in Champasak province, sinking to the bottom of the river.
More than half of the passengers and crew were foreigners from some 10 countries.
Laos authorities said investigators detected a signal from a black box flight data recorder -- which may hold clues to the cause of the crash -- but their efforts to reach it were being hampered by strong currents and poor visibility.
Powerful currents have forced divers to use ropes to guide them through the murky waters, he said, adding that only parts of the submerged plane have been found.
"It's difficult for divers to go down because the water is not clear. It's fast-flowing and about 12-13 metres deep," he added.
The airline said two more bodies had been retrieved today about 25 kilometres (15 miles) from the crash site.
There were also five crew, including the Cambodian captain.
Impoverished Laos, a one-party communist state, observed a nationwide minute's silence this afternoon to remember the victims of the crash, which is the nation's worst known air disaster.
In 2010 the UN's air safety arm, the International Civil Aviation Organisation, found Laos was just above the world average for all factors except airworthiness and operations, which were recorded as marginally below global norms.
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