Russia finds air crash explosive

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 From the BBC  http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/3604134.stm

Traces of explosive have been found amid the wreckage of one of two Tupolev
airliners that crashed on Tuesday, say Russian officials.

The FSB security service said at least one of the almost simultaneous
crashes was a "terrorist act".

Details of the discovery came after an Islamic group claimed responsibility
for the crashes in a website statement.

Investigators are still working to decode the flight data recorders from
the crashes, which left 89 people dead.

Russian aviation officials have confirmed that one of the planes, a Sibir
Airlines Tu-154, sent out a hijack alert just before it crashed, Russian
media report.

The Tu-154 and a Tu-134 jet crashed within minutes of each other over
southern Russia, coming down about 800km (500 miles) apart.

Claim

The FSB says the traces of explosive were found amid the debris of the
Tu-154, which was flying to the Black Sea resort of Sochi when it
disappeared from radar shortly after the pilot pressed the SOS button.

  The same explosive, hexogen, was apparently used in a series of apartment
bombings in 1999 that killed around 200 people.

In a website statement on Friday, a group called the Islamic Brigades said
it had five people on board each aircraft. It warned this act would be
followed by others "until the killings of our Muslim brothers in Chechnya
cease".

The crashes came just days before a presidential election in war-ravaged
Chechnya, where separatists recently stepped up attacks on Russian forces
and their local allies.

Transport Minister Igor Levitin, who heads the government commission
investigating the crashes, said on Thursday that more time was needed to
decode the "black box" flight data recorders.

"Not all the flight recorders are in a condition that would allow them to
be read immediately," he said before flying to Tula Region, where one of
the planes crashed.

"Today and tomorrow we will work on them in order to bring the tape to a
condition that will allow us to read what happened."


Last Updated: Friday, 27 August, 2004, 10:24 GMT 11:24 UK
E-mail this to a friend         Printable version
Russia finds air crash explosive
In both cases debris was scattered over a wide area
Traces of explosive have been found amid the wreckage of one of two Tupolev
airliners that crashed on Tuesday, say Russian officials.

The FSB security service said at least one of the almost simultaneous
crashes was a "terrorist act".

Details of the discovery came after an Islamic group claimed responsibility
for the crashes in a website statement.

Investigators are still working to decode the flight data recorders from
the crashes, which left 89 people dead.

Russian aviation officials have confirmed that one of the planes, a Sibir
Airlines Tu-154, sent out a hijack alert just before it crashed, Russian
media report.

The Tu-154 and a Tu-134 jet crashed within minutes of each other over
southern Russia, coming down about 800km (500 miles) apart.

Claim

The FSB says the traces of explosive were found amid the debris of the
Tu-154, which was flying to the Black Sea resort of Sochi when it
disappeared from radar shortly after the pilot pressed the SOS button.


1. Domodedovo Airport
1735: A Sibir Airlines Tu-154 bound for Sochi departs
1815: A Volga-Aviaexpress Tu-134 leaves for Volgograd
1856: Contact lost with Tu-134
1859: Contact lost with Tu-154
2. Tula region
Wreckage from Tu-134 found near the village of Buchalki soon after contact
is lost
3. Rostov-on-Don
0400 (approx): Wreckage from Tu-154 found
(All times in GMT)

In pictures: Plane crashes
The same explosive, hexogen, was apparently used in a series of apartment
bombings in 1999 that killed around 200 people.

In a website statement on Friday, a group called the Islamic Brigades said
it had five people on board each aircraft. It warned this act would be
followed by others "until the killings of our Muslim brothers in Chechnya
cease".

The crashes came just days before a presidential election in war-ravaged
Chechnya, where separatists recently stepped up attacks on Russian forces
and their local allies.

Transport Minister Igor Levitin, who heads the government commission
investigating the crashes, said on Thursday that more time was needed to
decode the "black box" flight data recorders.

"Not all the flight recorders are in a condition that would allow them to
be read immediately," he said before flying to Tula Region, where one of
the planes crashed.

"Today and tomorrow we will work on them in order to bring the tape to a
condition that will allow us to read what happened."

See more about the two Tupolev planes

President Vladimir Putin's envoy to southern Russia told reporters that the
black boxes had "practically switched off immediately".

Vladimir Yakovlev said this was "probably more confirmation... that
something had happened very quickly".

Investigators have continued to sift through the wreckage scattered over
fields in Tula and Rostov Region.

Mystery passenger

Russian flags flew at half-mast on Thursday and light entertainment was
withdrawn from theatre and television schedules as part of a day of
national mourning.  Passenger lists indicate that all the victims were
Russian, apart from one Israeli.

The vast majority appear to have been ethnic Russians while there has been
some speculation that a woman passenger aboard the Tu-154 may have been a
Chechen.

"We have no information that she was a terrorist," said Mr Levitin, adding
that investigators wanted to know why no one had come to claim her body.

Russia's newspapers have largely poured scorn on the official line that the
cause of the crashes was probably technical or human error.

"Despite the titanic efforts of state television, we are not all imbeciles
just yet," said an editorial in Moskovsky Komsomolets.

"Now Russia has its own 11 September," said the headline in Nezavisimaya
Gazeta.

The victims' families are to receive 112,000 roubles ($3,800) each in
compensation - unless it is proven that terrorism was to blame, in which
case they would receive less.

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