Gulf News

EgyptAir crash was an accident

Investigat­ors say no traces of explosives were found on remains of French victims

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No traces of explosives were found on the remains of French victims from an EgyptAir plane that crashed into the Mediterran­ean in May 2016, a source close to the French investigat­ion told AFP on Friday.

The revelation, the source said, “closes the door” on a theory advanced by Egypt that the Airbus A320 was blasted out of the sky as it made its way from Paris to Cairo, killing all 66 people on board.

EgyptAir MS804 disappeare­d from radar over the Mediterran­ean on May 19, crashing into the water between Crete and the coast of northern Egypt.

“There were no explosive charges” aboard the plane, the source said, because “no traces of powder were found” by police in samples taken from the remains of eight of the 15 French nationals killed.

Egyptian authoritie­s handed the remains to families in January.

According to the source, the long-awaited results were “recently” reported to the three investigat­ing judges in charge of the case in Paris. had their

The findings “only serve to confirm the theory by French investigat­ors since the beginning, that this was an accident and not an act of terror”, the source said, adding that “this definitive­ly closes the door on the claim of terrorism”.

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 also came forward to claim responsibi­lity for the crash.

French investigat­ors have 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 before disappeari­ng from radar screens.

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