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Families wait for answers to missing EgyptAir plane

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There are conflicting reports over whether debris found by Greek authorities in the sea belong to the EgyptAir plane which went missing while travelling from Paris to Cairo.

The , passenger jet was flying at 37,000ft with 66 people on board when it disappeared on Thursday immediately after entering Egyptian airspace, EgyptAir said.

Greek authorities found “floating material” as well as life jackets in the southern Mediterranean Sea, Egypt’s civil aviation ministry reported earlier.

The airline has released toll-free numbers for relatives of the passengers who were on board: 0800 7777 0000 from any landline in Egypt and +20 2259 89320 for international callers.

Greek defence sources reported the discovery of two large plastic objects 80km south of Crete, just hours after flight MS804 travelling went missing.

“Prevailing northern winds of 20-50km per hour might have carried debris from MS804 that far during the day,” Al Jazeera’s John Psaropoulos reported from Athens citing officials.

“Egyptian authorities have undertaken the salvage operation.”

EgyptAir said the plane disappeared from radar with 56 passengers and 10 crew members on board.

The airliner made “sudden swerves” mid-air and plunged before dropping off radars in the southern Mediterranean, Greece’s defence minister said.

Sherif Fathi, Egypt’s aviation minister, said the possibility of a “terrorist attack was stronger” than a technical failure.

No theories confirmed

French authorities have not confirmed any possible theories so far, Al Jazeera’s Jacky Rowland reported from Paris.

“The French are not making a call on the Egyptian aviation minister’s statements,” she said.

“They are completely reserving judgement until more information is available.”

An informed source at EgyptAir earlier said flight MS804, which departed from Paris’ Charles De Gaulle Airport at 23:09 (CEST), was headed for Cairo when it disappeared from radar.

“At 4:26am, rescue teams affiliated with the Egyptian armed forces have received an SOS message from the emergency unit of the missing plane,” EgyptAir said on Twitter.

The AFP news agency said the Egyptian army later denied detecting any distress signal from the missing airliner.

EgyptAir says 30 of the passengers were Egyptian, 15 French and 11 from 10 other nationalities.

There were two infants and one child.

There were also seven crew members and three security staff.

The Greek Air Force radar caught Flight MS804 spinning out of control and plummeting to earth in the early hours of Thursday.

In comments made to journalists, Panos Kammenos, Greece’s defence minister, described what is currently the flight’s last known location, about 240km southeast of the island of Karpathos.

Athens air traffic controllers realised something was wrong when they attempted to contact flight MS804 to inform the pilot that he was leaving Athens flight information region at 3:27am.

They hailed the aircraft repeatedly on regular and emergency frequencies, without luck.

An air force spokesman said the drop took place in under one minute, suggesting that the plane was in free fall and pilots had lost all control.

Military radar operates at lower altitudes than civil radar systems, and was able to capture the spiral.

A statement from Airbus, the aircraft’s manufacturer, said it had delivered the plane to EgyptAir in 2003. Since then the jet had logged approximately 48,000 flight hours.

[Source: Al-Jazeera]
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