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Post by redcase on May 19, 2016 8:30:57 GMT
Ridiculous. Another one.
In this day and age, with satellite imagery and surveillance, GPS tracking down to the centimeter, how does a plane go missing . Not to mention, it disappeared in the vicinity of a region torn by war and under military scrutiny. How can it be possible nobody knows where it's gone? I'll never understand. This is ghastly for the families of those involved.
Reports coming in that the plane crashed off the coast of a Greek island now. Jesus.
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Post by WhatsTheMata on May 19, 2016 12:56:39 GMT
Some reports say they've emitted an emergency alert but the army Egyptian army denied it.
Human failure perhaps?
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Post by CaajScot on May 19, 2016 13:20:20 GMT
EgyptAir crash: Plane 'made sharp turns before plunge' 20 minutes ago | Middle EastAn EgyptAir flight from Paris to Cairo made two sharp turns before plunging into the Mediterranean Sea, Greece's defence minister says.
Panos Kammenos said the Airbus A320 had "turned 90 degrees left and a 360-degree turn to the right" and dropped more than 6,700m (20,000ft) before disappearing from radar.
Sixty-six people were on board, most of them from Egypt or France.
A major search is under way in seas south of the Greek island of Karpathos.
Greek and Egyptian armed forces are involved in the effort, and France has offered to send boats and planes.
Egypt's Civil Aviation Minister Sherif Fathi told a news conference it was too early to rule out either terrorism or a technical failure as the reason behind the plane's disappearance.
He added that no wreckage had yet been found.
. Live updates . What we know Of those on board, 56 were passengers, seven were crew members and three were security personnel. A Briton was among those on board. Flight MS804 left Charles de Gaulle airport in Paris at 23:09 local time on Wednesday (21:09 GMT) and was scheduled to arrive in the Egyptian capital soon after 03:15 local time on Thursday. EgyptAir said the plane had been flying at 11,300m (37,000ft) when it disappeared from radar shortly after entering Egyptian airspace. Greek aviation officials**** say air traffic controllers spoke to the pilot when he entered Greek airspace and everything appeared normal. They tried to contact him again at 02:27 Cairo time, as the plane was set to enter Egyptian airspace, but "despite repeated calls, the aircraft did not respond". Two minutes later it vanished from radar. More..........
www.ypa.gr/news/aigyptiako-aeroskafos****www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-36333992
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Post by redcase on May 19, 2016 13:49:47 GMT
That's messed up .
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