Daily Mail

Plane lurched then passengers were sucked out in their seats

Airline bosses say bomb on board could be to blame

- By Tom Kelly t.kelly@dailymail.co.uk

A DOOMED Russian passenger jet lurched up and down before plunging 31,000 feet after being blown apart by an ‘external impact’, airline bosses said yesterday.

Travellers still strapped in their seats were sucked from the stricken Airbus A321 through a hole at the back of the jet when the tail blew off 23 minutes after leaving the Egyptian Red Sea resort of Sharm El Sheikh, it was claimed.

The plane twice abruptly climbed nearly 3,000 feet in three seconds before falling 3,000 feet moments later in the final minutes before disappeari­ng from radar.

It crashed in the Sinai peninsula with

‘Tail blown off 23 minutes into flight’

the loss of all 224 passengers and crew.

As the first coffins of the victims – who included 17 children – were taken home to Russia yesterday, David Cameron said security officials were ‘looking very carefully’ at whether there was any safety risk to British holidaymak­ers travelling to the Red Sea.

Bosses at carrier Metrojet ruled out a technical fault or pilot error, indicating that a bomb or missile strike brought down the jet. Alexander Smirnov, the airline’s deputy general director, said: ‘The only possible explanatio­n could be an external impact on the airplane.’

He refused to say what type of impact could have caused the crash but said the St Petersburg­bound Airbus was reliable and would not fall into a spin even if the pilots made a grave error because its automatic systems would correct crew mistakes.

The captain did not make a mayday call or contact traffic controller­s before the crash, airline bosses added, contradict­ing earlier claims by an Egyptian official that the pilot radioed complainin­g saying he wanted to land at the nearest airport because of technical problems.

British military analyst Paul Beaver said he thought the crash was most likely to have been caused by a bomb on board.

He said he was certain that Islamic State – which initially claimed it had shot down the jet – did not possess a missile system capable of hitting the plane.

‘ I’m pretty convinced that Islamic State doesn’t have a “double-digit” SAM (surface-toair missile) that is necessary to go up as far as 31,000 feet,’ he said. ‘That’s a very serious piece of equipment, and I don’t think they have that sophistica­tion.’

He also said the Sinai desert is well scrutinise­d by intelligen­ce agencies, so a missile would have been seen. But US Director of National Intelligen­ce James Clapper said there was no ‘direct evidence’ that terrorists brought down the jet and said no firm conclusion­s could be reached until an investigat­ion was complete.

However, he noted that IS did have a significan­t presence in parts of Egypt’s Sinai peninsula.

Alexander Neradko, the head of the Russian aviation agency, also claimed Metrojet’s comments were ‘premature and not based on any real facts’.

He urged aviation experts ‘ to refrain from drawing conclusion­s’ until officials have studied the scattered fragments of the plane in Sinai and the content of its black boxes.

Confusion surroundin­g the cause of the crash and the safety of the area caused concerns for the 900,000 Britons who visit Egypt every year, many to enjoy winter sunshine in the Red Sea resorts of Sharm and Hurghada.

Several major airlines including Lufthansa, Air France-KLM and Qatar Airways said they would avoid flying over the Sinai peninsula while they waited for clarity on what brought the jet down.

British airlines that fly to Red Sea resorts said they do not fly over the affected parts of Sinai.

Mr Cameron told ITV’s This Morning: ‘If it’s not safe, if certain routes aren’t safe or certain things aren’t safe, of course we will act. But we must do it on the basis of evidence and not on speculatio­n.’

Asked if he would take his own family on a flight to the area, he said: ‘I would always follow the travel advice and the travel advice is very clear for that part of the world: We don’t advise travel to parts of Sinai, but actually to Sharm El Sheikh we haven’t changed the travel advice.’

A Russian cargo plane yesterday returned the first bodies of victims killed in the crash to St Petersburg, which is holding three days of mourning.

The plane carried 130 bodies that were taken to a morgue and a crematoriu­m, where forensic experts immediatel­y began working to try to identify the victims.

 ??  ?? Tears: Women watch the coffins arrive in St Petersburg
Tears: Women watch the coffins arrive in St Petersburg
 ??  ?? Clues: One of the black boxes
Clues: One of the black boxes

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