USA TODAY US Edition

Russia, Egypt call bomb talk premature

U.S., Britain say jet could have had explosive aboard

- Doug Stanglin Contributi­ng: David Jackson

British Prime Minister David Cameron said Thursday there is a “strong possibilit­y” a terrorist bomb brought down a Russian jet over the Sinai Peninsula, even as Russia and Egypt dismissed the assertion as premature speculatio­n.

“I think there’s a possibilit­y that there was a bomb on board. And we’re taking that very seriously,” President Obama said Thursday.

“We’re going to spend a lot of time just making sure our own investigat­ors and own intelligen­ce community find out what’s going on before we make any definitive pronouncem­ents. But it’s certainly possible that there was a bomb on board,” Obama told KIRO in Seattle in a series of radio interviews.

France joined Britain and Ireland in suspending all flights to the Egyptian resort city of Sharm el-Sheik. The ill-fated Russian Metrojet left the resort’s airport Saturday morning before crashing into the Sinai Peninsula less than 30 minutes later, killing all 224 onboard.

Cameron’s office said flights to bring back stranded British tourists from Sharm el-Sheik will begin Friday. Additional security measures will be in place on the flights, and passengers will be allowed to bring only hand luggage.

As many as 20,000 Britons are in the Red Sea resort without air transport since flights were suspended, the BBC reported.

Britain “continues to advise against all but essential travel by air to or from Sharm el-Sheik airport, but we are continuing to work with the Egyptians to get back to normal service as soon as possible,” the statement from Cameron’s office said.

The director of the airport was fired Wednesday.

Metrojet blamed “external influence” for the crash, but the head of Russia’s aviation agency called such talk premature. Thursday, the airline said it suspended all flights of Airbus A321 jets in its fleet.

A Sinai affiliate of the Islamic State militant group claimed it brought down the jet in the Sinai, where Egypt is fighting an insurgency. Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who was on an official visit to London on Thursday, called the terrorist group’s pronouncem­ent “propaganda.”

Cameron emphasized that a final determinat­ion on the cause of the crash depends on the comple- tion of the investigat­ion in Egypt, the Associated Press reported. “We don’t know for certain that it was a terrorist bomb … ( but it’s a) strong possibilit­y,” Cameron said before his meeting with Sisi.

Cameron said the decision to suspend British flights was based on “intelligen­ce and informatio­n we had that gave us the concern that it was more likely than not a terrorist bomb.”

After his meeting with Cameron, Sisi said the two countries were “working intensivel­y together in a spirit of close cooperatio­n.”

In Moscow, Dmitry Peskov, a spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin, insisted that aviation investigat­ors were considerin­g all possible theories for the cause of the crash, and there are “no reasons to voice just one theory as reliable — only investigat­ors can do that,” according to the Russian Interfax news agency.

 ?? ANDY RAIN, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY ??
ANDY RAIN, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

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