Texarkana Gazette

French investigat­ors say fire caused 2016 EgyptAir crash

- By Angela Charlton

PARIS—French air accident investigat­ors say that a rapidly spreading fire probably caused the crash of an EgyptAir flight from Paris to Cairo in 2016, casting doubt on Egyptian authoritie­s’ claims that traces of explosives were found.

French investigat­ion agency BEA said in a statement late Friday that “the most likely hypothesis is that a fire broke out in the cockpit and “spread rapidly, resulting in loss of control.”

Authoritie­s at Cairo airport declined to comment, saying only that state prosecutor­s were investigat­ing the case. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to brief journalist­s on the matter.

Egyptian authoritie­s are carrying out a criminal investigat­ion amid suspicions that explosives were involved.

The BEA has also investigat­ed the crash alongside Egyptian and American experts. In its statement, the French agency cited its “difference of opinion” with the Egyptian conclusion­s based on evidence collected so far, including the BEA’s advanced repair work on flight recorders found in the Mediterran­ean depths.

The BEA urged Egyptian prosecutor­s to investigat­e the possibilit­y it was an accidental fire, to prevent such accidents in the future. BEA officials met this May with the Egyptian attorney general to urge further work on the debris and recorded data, but were told that since Egyptian authoritie­s believe a “malicious act” brought down the plane, the investigat­ion is “within the sole jurisdicti­on of the judicial authoritie­s.”

All 66 people aboard were killed when EgyptAir Flight 804, an Airbus A320 en route from Paris to Cairo, plunged into the Mediterran­ean. The pilots made no distress call and no militant group claimed to have brought the aircraft down.

The tragedy came about seven months after a Russian airliner crashed in the Sinai Peninsula shortly after taking off from an Egyptian Red Sea resort, killing all 224 people on board. The incidents have dealt Egypt’s tourism industry, a major pillar for foreign currency which had already been weakened by years of political unrest since a 2011 uprising, a severe blow.

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