An EgyptAir flight carrying
66 passengers and crew on a flight from Paris to Cairo disappeared from radar
over the Mediterranean Sea, Egypt's national airline said.
Officials with the airline
and the Egyptian civil aviation department told Reuters they believed the
Airbus A320 had crashed into the sea.
Egypt Air said the plane
sent an emergency signal - possibly from an emergency beacon attached to the
plane - at 04:26 a.m., two hours after it disappeared from radar screens.
In water crashes, an
underwater locator beacon attached to the aircraft's flight recorders starts to
emit a signal or ping. This helps the search and rescue teams to locate the
boxes, and the location of the crash.
The aircraft was carrying 56
passengers, including one child and two infants, and 10 crew, EgyptAir said.
They included 30 Egyptian and 15 French nationals, along with nationals from 10
other countries.
“The theory that the plane
crashed and fell is now confirmed after the preliminary search and after it did
not arrive at any of the nearby airports," said a senior aviation source,
who declined to be identified.
"All causes for the
disaster are open, whether it is a major technical fault or a terrorist action
or any other circumstance. This will be ascertained when we inspect the plane’s
wreckage and transcribe its black boxes.”
'NOTHING UNUSUAL'
Families of passengers and
the Egyptian prime minister rushed to Cairo International Airport shortly after
dawn while the Egyptian and Greek military scrambled aircraft and boats to
search for the plane.
The airline said on its
Twitter account that Flight MS804, departed Paris at 23:09 (CEST). It
disappeared at 02:30 a.m. at an altitude of 37,000 feet (11,280 meters) in
Egyptian air space, some 280 kms (165 miles) from the Egyptian coastline,
before it was due to land at 03:15 a.m., the airline said.
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