Egyptian rescue teams were looking Sunday for more victims of a Russian passenger plane crash in Sinai, widening the search after finding bodies scattered across eight square kilometers a day after the incident.
Egyptian rescue teams were looking Sunday for more victims of a Russian passenger plane crash in Sinai, widening the search after finding bodies scattered across eight square kilometers a day after the incident.
A military officer helping with the search told AFP that rescuers had found 163 bodies out of a total of 224 people who were on board the Airbus 321, which crashed after taking off from a Red Sea beach resort.
The plane was carrying 214 Russian and three Ukrainian passengers, along with seven crew members.
Rescuers have decided to widen the search perimeter to 15 square kilometers (six square miles), the officer added.
"We found a three-year-old girl eight kilometers from the scene" of the main wreckage, he told AFP from military base in El-Hasana, around 60 kilometers from the crash site.
Many of the bodies were missing limbs, said the officer, who requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to media.
Meanwhile Russian investigators have arrived in Cairo and will be given access to the scene of the wreckage in a remote part of the restive Sinai Peninsula, the official MENA news agency reported.
Investigators had recovered the plane's black box and the government said its contents were being analyzed to determine the cause of the incident.
Egyptian and Russian officials have expressed skepticism about a claim by a branch of the so-called 'Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant' (ISIL) takfiri group in Egypt that it downed the plane.
The militants operate in the north of the peninsula, where they have waged an insurgency that killed hundreds of policemen and soldiers since 2013.