
Body parts, 
seats and luggage have been found floating in the Mediterranean in the 
hunt for doomed EgyptAir flight MS804, it emerged today. 
The
 announcement by the Greek defence minister will be a devastating blow 
to relatives who are holding out a glimmer of hope their loved ones may 
have survived.
The
 Egyptian military said it discovered wreckage around 180 miles north of
 the coastal city of Alexandria and was sweeping the area for the 
plane's black box recorders, which could solve the mystery of the 
crash. 
Egyptian
 President Adbel Fattah al-Sisi, meanwhile, offered condolences to 
families of those on board, amounting to Cairo's official confirmation 
of their deaths.
 
 
Although
 fingers pointed towards Islamist militants who blew up another airliner
 over Egypt just seven months ago, no group had claimed responsibility 
more than 24 hours after the disappearance of flight MS804, an Airbus 
A320 that was flying from Paris to Cairo. 
 
 
Three
 French investigators and a technical expert from Airbus arrived in 
Cairo early on Friday to help investigate the fate of the missing plane,
 airport sources said.
Egyptian
 Prime Minister Sherif Ismail said yesterday that it was too early to 
rule out any explanation for the disaster, but the country's aviation 
minister said a terrorist attack was more likely than a technical 
failure. 
 
Friday's 
announcement that debris had been found followed earlier confusion about
 whether wreckage had been located. Greek searchers found some material 
on Thursday, but the airline later said this was not from its plane.
While
 there was no official explanation of the cause of the crash, suspicion 
immediately fell on Islamist militants who have been fighting against 
Egypt's government since Sisi toppled an elected Islamist leader in 
2013. 
In
 October, the Islamic State group claimed responsibility for blowing up a
 Russian jetliner that exploded after taking off from an Egyptian 
tourist resort. Russian investigators blamed a bomb smuggled on board.


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