Probe into fatal Egypt plane crash
Updated | By AFP
Investigators probing the tragic plane crash in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula at the weekend, say the Russian airliner "broke up in the air" before plummeting to the group.
The Islamic State has claimed responsibility for the crash which claimed the lives of 224 people, including 17 children.
Flight KGL-9268 took off from the Egyptian resort area of Sharm el-Sheikh and was flying to Russia.
A plane carrying the remains of scores of people killed when a Russian airliner crashed in Egypt has landed in Saint-Petersburg.
The plane, the first to bring back the bodies of the victims arrived in the Pulkovo airport of the country's second-largest city at around 0300GMT.
Flags flew at half-mast in Russia yesterday as the country mourned its worst air disaster after a jetliner full of Russian tourists crashed in Egypt, killing all 224 on board.
The remains were to be taken in a motorcade to a crematorium in Saint Petersburg for identification, which will begin later on Monday, according to Russia's emergency ministry, which organised the flight.
Family members have been providing DNA samples at a crisis centre set up close to the airport, now the site of an impromptu memorial where people are bringing flowers and cuddly toys to commemorate the victims, many of them children as young as 10 months old.
Most of those who died were vacationers from Saint-Petersburg and the surrounding region who were due to come back home at midday Saturday from the popular Egyptian resort of Sharm el-Sheikh.
Reasons for the crash are still unknown and an international group of investigators were working with Egyptian authorities.
Russia's top aviation officials have said that the plane broke apart in mid-air, and the head of the Russian air transport agency Alexander Neradko on Sunday said it appeared the aircraft disintegrated at high altitude.
"All signs prove that the structure of the plane disintegrated in the air at a high altitude," he told Russian state television on Sunday evening.
Interstate Aviation Committee head Viktor Sorochenko, who has been working in Egypt, said that "a first look showed that so far we cannot rule out any theory".
(File photo: Getty Images)
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