On Now
Weekdays 19:00 - 23:00
OFM Nights Ashmund
NEXT: 23:00 - 23:59 Overnight with Oscar
Listen Live Streams

Africa News

Egyptian navy finds EgyptAir wreckage

───   14:40 Fri, 20 May 2016

Egyptian navy finds EgyptAir wreckage | News Article
File photo

Cairo - A sweep by Egypt's navy off the coast of Alexandria has recovered debris and passenger belongings from the missing EgyptAir flight.


Wreckage was found about 290km north of the Egyptian city on Friday, Egyptian state TV quoted the Egyptian military as saying.

The plane disappeared over the Mediterranean with 66 people on board early Thursday.

"Egyptian aircraft and navy vessels have found personal belongings of passengers and parts of the wreckage 290 kilometres (180 miles) north of Alexandria," a military spokesperson said on his Facebook page.

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi expressed his condolences on Friday to the families of victims.

"The presidency with utmost sadness and regret mourns the victims on board the EgyptAir flight who were killed after the plane crashed in the Mediterranean on its way back to Cairo from Paris," Sisi's office said in a statement.

The search intensified on Friday, a day after Egypt's aviation minister said it was too soon to say why the Airbus A320 flying from Paris to Cairo had vanished from radar screens, a "terrorist" attack would be a more likely scenario than a technical failure.

The tragedy raised fears of a repeat of the  bombing of a Russian passenger jet by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) group over Egypt last October that killed 224 people.

The plane disappeared between the Greek islands and the Egyptian coast without a distress signal from its crew.

Greek Defence Minister Panos Kammenos said the aircraft swerved sharply twice in Egyptian air space before plunging 6,700 metres.

Both Egypt and Greece dispatched aircraft and naval vessels. They were expected to be joined by French teams, while the US sent a surveillance plane to help with the operation.

Richard Marquise, a former FBI agent who led the US task force investigating the Lockerbie bombing, told Al Jazeera that Egypt was quick to point to an attack, unlike France.

"It's becoming a game of finger pointing about who's responsible, whether it's mechanical failure of EgyptAir, or a terrorist bomb on the aircraft," he told Al Jazeera.

He added this was in contrast to the October 2015 Metrojet bombing, when Egypt was more reluctant than Russia to point to a possible attack. In that case, Egyptian authorities were responsible for security as the city of Sharm el Sheikh was the departure point.

- Download the OFM app in the Apple or Android app store to read the latest news/sports stories.



-News24.com



@ 2024 OFM - All rights reserved Disclaimer | Privacy Policy | We Use Cookies - OFM is a division of Central Media Group (PTY) LTD.