As Egyptian authorities investigate the crash of EgyptAir Flight 804, there was a significant breakthrough: Searches detected an emergency signal from the wreckage, the Wall Street Journal wrote in an exclusive report Thursday. It could help searchers find the aircraft’s fuselage on the bottom of the Mediterranean Sea.
Until now, only small pieces of debris and human remains
were discovered. The remains are being tested at a forensic lab so they
can potentially be identified using DNA.
The deformed metal from the wreckage was also sent for
analysis, as it could reveal whether the flight broke apart midflight or
crashed into the sea in one piece. It also might reveal if any
explosives were used to down the aircraft.
The detection helped investigators zero in on a search zone,
which now has a radius of about three miles, investigator Capt. Ayman
Al Moqadem told Egypt newspaper Al Ahram. Before that, the search area
was much larger.
The black boxes have not yet been located, but investigators
are determined to keep looking. “There are many examples in similar air
accidents when 30 days passed without finding the box yet ... these
planes’ black boxes were found,” EgyptAir’s Deputy Chairman Ahmed Adel
said.
France and Italy reportedly
have sent a ship with instruments that could help detect wreckage 3,000
meters (10,000 feet) under the sea. “The objective is to go extremely
quickly so they can find the boxes that are probably in very deep
waters,” a source told the Guardian Wednesday. The U.S. Navy was not asked to help.
It’s unknown what (or who) caused the crash. For now,
nothing has been ruled out. There were 66 people aboard, including
passengers and crew, when the Airbus Group SE A320 aircraft traveling
from Paris to Cairo crashed May 19. There were 30 Egyptians and 15
French on the plane.
Post a Comment