A Russian airliner carrying 224 passengers and crew crashed in Egypt's Sinai peninsula on Saturday, the Egyptian civil aviation authority said, and a security officer who arrived at the scene said most of the passengers appeared to have been killed.
The Airbus A 321, operated by Russian airline Kogalymavia,was flying from the Sinai Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh to St Petersburg in Russia when it went down in a desolate mountainous area of central Sinai soon after daybreak, the aviation ministry said.
The wreckage was found in the Al Hassana area of central Sinai, about 50 kilometers (31 miles) from where Egyptian security forces have been waging a fierce campaign against militants in northern Sinai that have pledged allegiance to the Islamic State. An Egyptian investigation team has reached the crash site and started searching for the black boxes, civil aviation authorities said in a statement.
"I now see a tragic scene. A lot of dead on the ground and many who died whilst strapped to their seats," the officer, who requested anonymity, said.
"The plane split into two, a small part on the tail end that burned and a larger part that crashed into a rock. We have extracted at least 100 bodies and the rest are still inside."
Russia launched air raids against Syrian opposition groups including Islamic State on Sept. 30. Civil Aviation Minister Mohamed Hossam Kemal was quoted in a cabinet statement as saying it was too soon to determine the cause of the crash, but security sources said there was no indication the Airbus had been shot down or blown up.
The Airbus A321, operated by Russia’s Metrojet, was descending at about 6,000 feet per minute before communication with the flight was lost, 23 minutes after leaving Sharm El Sheik International Airport, according to Flightradar.com, which tracks flight routes. The plane had reached a cruising altitude of 31,000 feet, Egypt’s Civil Aviation Ministry said in an e-mailed statement on Saturday.
At that altitude, it is “very unusual for something to happen,” Paul Hayes, director of safety at Ascend Worldwide Ltd., a London-based company that gathers air data for insurers, said.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/10/31/us-egypt-crash-idUSKCN0SP06V20151031Sad news.