publish time

05/11/2015

author name Arab Times

publish time

05/11/2015

A man lights a candle in memory of the plane crash victims at Dvortsovaya (Palace) Square in St Petersburg, Russia on Nov 3. Mourners continue to come to St Petersburg’s Pulkovo Airport and Dvortsovaya Square on Tuesday to lay flowers and leave paper planes and soft toys at the arrivals hall. (AP) A man lights a candle in memory of the plane crash victims at Dvortsovaya (Palace) Square in St Petersburg, Russia on Nov 3. Mourners continue to come to St Petersburg’s Pulkovo Airport and Dvortsovaya Square on Tuesday to lay flowers and leave paper planes and soft toys at the arrivals hall. (AP)

CAIRO, Nov 4, (Agencies): Islamic State’s Egyptian affiliate dismissed in an audio message on Wednesday doubts that it had downed a Russian passenger plane over Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula, killing all aboard, and said it would tell the world how it did so in its own time.

The Russian-operated Airbus A321M crashed on Saturday shortly after taking off from the Red Sea resort of Sharm al-Sheikh on its way to St Petersburg, killing all 224 people on board. Sinai Province, an Egyptian group loyal to Islamic State, said in a statement the same day that it had brought down the airliner “in response to Russian air strikes that killed hundreds of Muslims on Syrian land”. The claim was dismissed by Russian and Egyptian officials. Security experts and investigators have said the plane is unlikely to have been struck from the outside and Sinai-based militants are not believed to possess the technology to shoot down a jet from a cruising altitude above 30,000 feet.

Russian officials have, however, said the plane probably broke up in the air, leaving open the prospect of some kind of explosion on board. Asked to comment on those remarks and local press reports that the black box voice recorders had picked up unusual sounds before it crashed, Civil Aviation Minister Hossam Kemal said the facts had yet to be established. “This is all speculation. There is nothing definitive until the investigation commission completes its probe,” he said.

In an audio message posted on a Twitter account used by the group, Islamic State’s Egyptian affiliate insisted it was behind the crash. The claim could not immediately be authenticated. “We say to the deniers and the doubters: Die from your frustration. We, with God’s grace, are the ones who brought it down, and we are not obliged to disclose the mechanism of its demise,” the speaker said. “So go to the wreckage, search, bring your black boxes and analyse, give us the summary of your research and the product of your expertise and prove that we did not bring it down or how it came down,” he said.

“We will disclose the mechanism of its demise at the time that we want and in the way that we want.” Russia, an ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, launched air raids against opposition groups in Syria including Islamic State on Sept. 30.

The hardline group has called for war against both Russia and the United States in response to their air strikes in Syria. Islamic State backers in Iraq issued a video on Tuesday congratulating their Egyptian colleagues and warning Russian President Vladimir Putin that more was to come. They handed out sweets to celebrate the crash. Sinai-based militants have killed hundreds of Egyptian soldiers and police in recent years and have also attacked Western targets.

Egypt has carried out air strikes on them. Islamic State websites have in the past claimed responsibility for actions that have not been conclusively attributed to them. Officials say there is no evidence to suggest so far that a bomb brought down the plane. Meanwhile, the number of plane crash victims identified by grief-stricken Russian families rose to 33 on Wednesday as rescue teams in Egypt combed the Sinai desert for more remains and parts of the plane’s fuselage.

The Metrojet Airbus A321-200 carrying Russian vacationers from Sharm el- Sheikh in Egypt back to Russia’s secondlargest secondlargest city of St. Petersburg crashed over the Sinai Peninsula early Saturday, killing all 224 people on board. Only one body has been released to a Russian family for burial so far. Relatives have identified 33 bodies and the paperwork is close to ready on 22 of those, meaning the families should get the bodies shortly, Igor Albin, deputy governor of St Petersburg, said in a televised conference call. Russians were still seen sobbing in grief Wednesday at the unruly pile of flowers, photos and stuffed animals at the entrance to St. Petersburg’s Pulkovo Airport.