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224 die in Russian plane crash
 
By:
Sun, 1 Nov 2015   ||   Nigeria,
 

The Airbus A-321 had just left the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, bound for the Russian city of St Petersburg.

Wreckage was found in the Hasana area and bod­ies removed, along with the plane’s “black box”. An official described a “tragic scene” with bodies of vic­tims still strapped to seats. Russian President Vladi­mir Putin has declared Sun­day a day of mourning.

He has ordered an official investigation into the crash, and for rescue teams to be sent to the crash site.

Egyptian officials said 214 of the passengers were Russian and three Ukrainian.

A commission headed by Russian Transport Minister Maksim Sokolov is to leave for Egypt on Saturday after­noon.

A criminal case has also been opened against the airline, Kogalymavia, for “violation of rules of flight and preparation for them”, Russia’s Ria news agency re­ported.

Oksana Golovin, a spokes­woman for the airline, said the company did not see any grounds to blame human er­ror.

She told a press con­ference that the pilot had 12,000 hours of flying ex­perience. Kogalymavia did not yet know what caused the crash, she said, but the plane was fully serviced.

Police are reported to be searching the company’s of­fices.

Russian authorities say the plane was carrying 217 pas­sengers, 138 of them women and 17 children aged between 2 and 17. Most were tourists. There were seven crew on board.

Egyptian officials inves­tigating the scene said there were no survivors.

A centre to help relatives of the passengers has been set up at Pulkovo airport, Tass news agency quoted St Petersburg city officials as saying.

Initially there were conflicting reports about the fate of the plane, some suggesting it had disappeared over Cyprus.

But the office of Egyptian Prime Minister Sharif Ismail confirmed in a statement that a “Russian civilian plane crashed in the central Sinai”.

Officials say up to 50 am­bulances have been sent to the scene.

Access to the area is strictly controlled by the military and the terrain is difficult, corre­spondents say.

One official told Reuters news agency that at least 100 bodies had been found.

“I now see a tragic scene,” the official said. “A lot of dead on the ground and many died whilst strapped to their seats.”

The plane split in two, with one part burning up and the other crashing into a rock, he added.

The Egyptian cabinet said in a statement that flight KGL9268 left Sharm el- Sheikh at 05:58 local time (03:58 GMT)

It added that the aircraft went off the radar 22 minutes after take-off.

The flight had been due into St Petersburg’s Pulkovo airport at 09:10 GMT.

Egypt’s civilian aviation ministry said the plane had been at an altitude of 9,450m (31,000ft) when it disap­peared.

Live flight tracking ser­vice Flight Radar 24’s Mikail Robertson confirmed the al­titude.

He told the BBC that the plane started to drop very fast, losing 1,500 metres in one minute before coverage was lost.

Aviation official Ayman al-Mukadem said the pilot had reported technical dif­ficulties before the plane went missing, the Associated Press reported.

The BBC’s Orla Guerin in Cairo says it is likely there will be speculation about militant involvement in the incident. Sinai has an active militant network, with lo­cal Jihadis who have allied themselves to so-called Is­lamic State.

But the aircraft’s altitude suggests that it could not have been struck from the ground, she adds.

Local weather observa­tions in the vicinity of the rescue scene suggest rela­tively benign conditions.

 

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