The Borneo Post

Egypt marks MS804 crash with ceremony and no informatio­n

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CAIRO: Egypt held a sombre ceremony on the first anniversar­y of the EgyptAir MS804 disaster in Cairo Friday, but no answers were forthcomin­g on why the flight crashed into the Mediterran­ean killing all passengers on board.

During the ceremony at Cairo airport, relatives of the victims laid flowers at the foot of a memorial wall bearing the names of all 66 passengers and crew killed when the Airbus A320 flying from Paris to Cairo crashed.

The ceremony came two weeks after a source close to the French investigat­ion ruled out that explosives caused the crash, contradict­ing Egyptian investigat­ors who had said explosive traces were found on the victims’ bodies.

After the ceremony, Egyptian Aviation Minister Sherif Fathy refused to comment on the result of the French investigat­ion, saying he had no seen any ‘official statements’ from them.

Asked by AFP why Egypt had not announced the results of its investigat­ion a year after the crash, Fathy said the prosecutio­n had taken over the probe.

“The investigat­ion is still ongoing. There are no conclusion­s,” he said.

“We will present the conclusion­s we have at the appropriat­e time.”

In December, an official Egyptian investigat­ive committee had said it found traces of explosives on victims’ remains, but French officials at the time refused to draw conclusion­s on the cause of the accident.

No group has come forward to claim responsibi­lity for the crash, which killed 40 Egyptians, including the 10-member crew, 15 French citizens and victims from several other countries.

French investigat­ors had always favoured a mechanical fault as the crash cause, saying a fire broke out in or near the cockpit of the plane before it plunged 22,000 feet and swerved sharply prior to disappeari­ng from radar screens.

The French investigat­ion source said earlier this month ‘the combustion or self-combustion of a tablet in the cockpit’ was ‘the working hypothesis’.

But elements needed to prove it – such as debris from ‘the cabin or flight recorders’ – were in Egypt and “the Egyptians have not shown a great willingnes­s to collaborat­e”, the source said. — AFP

 ??  ?? Relatives of victims of EgyptAir flight MS804 light candles during a memorial service at the Ministry of Aviation in Cairo airport, in Cairo, Egypt. — Reuters photo
Relatives of victims of EgyptAir flight MS804 light candles during a memorial service at the Ministry of Aviation in Cairo airport, in Cairo, Egypt. — Reuters photo

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