Egypt Says Wreckage Found From Missing EgyptAir
Plane
EgyptAir Wreckage Found North of Alexandria: Report
EgyptAir Wreckage Found North of Alexandria: Report
Plane was en route from Paris to Cairo with 66 people on board
Lack of pilot distress signal suggests foul play, analyst says
Egyptian authorities said they found wreckage and belongings from the missing EgyptAir plane that vanished en route from Paris to Cairo with 66 people on board, marking the first breakthrough in the investigation.
Egyptian military aircraft and naval ships Friday morning found personal items and parts of the plane about 290 kilometers (180 miles) north of Alexandria, the country's military spokesman said on an official Facebook page. The search, which has been ongoing since the plane disappeared early Thursday morning over the Mediterranean Sea, is continuing.
Salvage teams from Greece and Egypt have been joined by French investigators to find debris as authorities seek to piece together what happened to the Airbus A320 plane. The flight lost contact in the middle of the night in the wider area of the Strabo trench in the so-called Hellenic Arc in the sea south of Greece, where waters are as much as 3,000 meters (9,800 feet) deep.
Authorities aren't ruling out any possible cause for the disappearance, including a deliberate act or malfunction, though Egyptian Minister of Aviation Sherif Fathy said the possibility of a terrorist attack is higher than a technical failure. The Airbus jet made sudden movements before swooping into a deep descent before air-traffic control lost contact, according to Greek radar reports. Pilots sent no emergency signal, and their final contact with controllers revealed no signs of distress.
The Egyptian presidency expressed its "deepest sorrow" and offered its condolences to the families of the victims. EgyptAir said it would take all necessary measures following discovery of the debris.
Salvage crews will focus on retrieving the flight and data recorders, so-called black boxes that store key flight metrics and voices and sounds from the cockpit that can help investigators pinpoint the cause of a crash. Finding a plane after an incident, particularly over water, can often take days.
EgyptAir Investigators Race Against Time, Sea for Evidence
Several factors come into play when searching for wreckage in an ocean. Sea currents, weather and the speed at which the jet hits the water are some issues to be taken into consideration, said Ken Mathews, a former accident investigator who's worked with the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board as well as its U.K. and New Zealand peers.
"If they narrow down the likely area, then it's only a matter of time," Mathews said. "The Mediterranean is not a vast area, or so deep as an ocean."
Investigators focused on the last minutes of the flight, which took off at 11:09 p.m. in Paris with 56 passengers, 7 crew and 3 security personnel. The aircraft, a modern single-aisle jet manufactured in 2003, was traveling at cruising altitude before disappearing from radar off the Egyptian coast. French air safety investigator BEA will dispatch three experts, accompanied by Airbus technical adviser, to help with the search and retrieve the cockpit-voice and flight-data recorders.
While the cause of the incident hasn't been identified, mid-air emergencies are rare, especially for a relatively new plane. The weather in the area of the sea close to Egypt was also good, with no winds or clouds, the Hellenic National Meteorological Service in Greece said. The sudden disappearance of an airliner at cruising altitude and with no distress call from the pilot at least raises questions of foul play, said Paul Hayes, director of air safety at London-based Ascend, an aviation consultancy.
"It is our duty to know everything about the causes," French President Francois Hollande said at a press conference Thursday. "As soon as we know the truth, we'll have to draw all conclusions, be it an accident or any other hypothesis," including terrorism.
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