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DOOMED FLIGHT

Explosives found on bodies of Egyptair flight victims after ministers said ‘mystery crash’ that killed 66 was a ‘terrorist attack’

The downing of Flight 804 killed all 66 people on board

TRACES of explosives have been found on the victims' of an EgyptAir plane that crashed into the Mediterranean in May killing all 66 people on board.

An official investigative committee by Egypt's aviation ministry announced today which made the discovery has referred the case to Egypt's state prosecution, it added in a statement.

 

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 Personal belongings and other wreckage from EgyptAir flight 804
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Personal belongings and other wreckage from EgyptAir flight 804Credit: AP:Associated Press

Under Egyptian law, the prosecution takes over "if it becomes clear to the investigative committee that there is criminal suspicion behind the accident", the ministry said.

EgyptAir MS804 was en route from Paris to Cairo when it disappeared from radar over the Mediterranean.

Investigators determined that a fire broke out in or near the cockpit of the Airbus A320 before it crashed between Crete and the coast of northern Egypt.

 The two black boxes recovered from the doomed flight
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The two black boxes recovered from the doomed flightCredit: Getty Images

Egypt's aviation minister, Sherif Fathy, said a terrorist attack was the most likely cause of the EgyptAir crash shortly after the horrific crash.

The chances of a terror attack were "higher than the possibility of a technical (failure)" for the downing of the plane, Fathy said in May.

Aviation experts have said there is little chance that a mechanical fault was responsible.

 An act of terror was suspected from the moment the plane disappeared
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An act of terror was suspected from the moment the plane disappearedCredit: EPA

If a bombing is established, investigators will have to determine if a device could have been smuggled aboard a flight taking off from France's busiest airport, Paris Charles de Gaulle.

Security has been tight since last year's jihadist attacks in the French capital.

Internet site FlightRadar24 indicates the EgyptAir plane travelled to Egypt, Tunisia and Eritrea in the two days before Thursday's crash, leaving open the possibility that a device could have been planted prior to its arrival in France.

 Yara Hani Faraq Tawfiq died in the Egyptair crash
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Yara Hani Faraq Tawfiq died in the Egyptair crash
 Ahmed al-Ashri, a doctor, and his wife Reyhan Mussad, a teaching assistant, died in the Egyptair crash, leaving their children behind. The youngest, Adam, was still in nursery. Alia and Salma, the two daughters, were in school
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Ahmed al-Ashri, a doctor, and his wife Reyhan Mussad, a teaching assistant, died in the Egyptair crash, leaving their children behind. The youngest, Adam, was still in nursery. Alia and Salma, the two daughters, were in school

France's air safety agency BEA and the plane manufacturer Airbus both declined to comment on Thursday's announcement, which comes while Cairo is still investigating the October 2015 crash of a Russian passenger plane in Egypt's Sinai.

The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for bombing the Airbus A321 Russian plane that crashed after takeoff from a Sinai resort headed for St Petersburg, killing 224 passengers and crew.

There has been no such claim linked to the EgyptAir crash.

Among the 66 people on board the EgyptAir plane were 40 Egyptians, including the 10-member crew, and 15 French nationals.

The plane only entered service in 2003, making it relatively new for an aircraft that tends to operate for 30 to 40 years.

The EgyptAir plane was flying at 37,000 feet (11,000 metres) and disappeared about 130 nautical miles off the Greek island of Karpathos.

The plane plunged 22,000 feet and swerved sharply before it disappeared from radar screens, Greece's Defence Minister Panos Kammenos said at the time.

 

 

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