Toronto Star

Russian experts dispatched to Egypt

Plane probably brought down by a bomb, U.S. and British intelligen­ce officials say

- BRIAN ROHAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CAIRO— Internatio­nal passengers departing Egypt’s Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh continued to line up for flights on Sunday, as the first of three teams of Russian inspectors was dispatched to the country to examine airport security following the Oct. 31 airline disaster.

The Russian flight’s crash in the Sinai Peninsula that killed all 224 people on board continues to generate fallout, after Islamic State claimed responsibi­lity for its downing and U.S. and British officials say intelligen­ce shows it was probably brought down by a bomb on board.

Britain and several airlines have stopped normally scheduled flights to the resort, while Russia has suspended all flights to Egypt because of security concerns.

U.S. lawmakers weighed in on the issue Sunday. Rep. Adam Schiff of California, the top Democrat on the House intelligen­ce committee, told ABC’s This Week if it’s confirmed the plane was brought down by an Islamic State bomb, then “ISIS has now fully eclipsed Al Qaeda as the gravest terrorist threat in the world.”

Russian Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich did not give details on what specific security issues the inspection­s teams would be examining.

Dvorkovich said 11,000 Russians were flown home from Egypt on Saturday and an even larger number were expected to leave Sunday, according to Russian news agencies.

Security officials at the Sharm elSheikh airport have told The Associated Press that the facility has long had gaps in security, including a key baggage scanning device that often is not functionin­g and lax searches at an entry gate for food and fuel for the planes.

One security official said drugs and weapons slip through security checks at the airport because poorly paid policemen monitoring X-ray machines can be bribed.

A spokesman for Egypt’s Aviation Ministry, Mohamed Rahma, dismissed the accounts of inadequate security, saying “Sharm el-Sheikh is one of the safest airports in the world,” without elaboratin­g.

Egyptian authoritie­s have bristled at the allegation­s of lax security, with some blaming an anti-Egypt bias in the foreign media. Those sensitivit­ies were on display Sunday as foreign camera crews were prevented from filming inside the Sharm el-Sheikh airport, along the city’s main tourist strip in Naama Bay or in other public spaces.

Despite strong government denials, the suggestion­s of a major security breach at Sharm el-Sheikh airport have gained traction among some Egyptians. On Saturday, an Associated Press reporter at Cairo airport witnessed several passengers yelling at security personnel to pay more attention to the X-ray scanner, with one man repeatedly shouting, “This is what happened in Sharm!”

In Russia, more than a thousand mourners packed into the landmark St. Isaac’s Cathedral in St. Petersburg for a memorial service for the victims. Attendees lit candles and stood in silence as the cathedral bells rang 224 times to remember each victim.

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