Metrojet Flight 9268: Recording of Russian plane's final seconds to be analyzed abroad, Egypt says
Egypt's civil aviation minister says the final seven seconds of the cockpit voice recording from the Russian plane that crashed on Oct. 31 in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula will be sent to a country that has the capabilities to analyze it.
Hossam Kamal tells state-run newspaper Al-Ahram in an interview published Friday that a copy of the recording needs to be analyzed with technology "unavailable in most countries." The investigation team has said the recordings include a last-second noise.
- ISIS has international ambitions if behind Metrojet bombing, says terrorism expert
- Russian officials believe Sinai plane brought down by bomb: U.S. sources
- Metrojet Flight 9268: Plane was 'likely' brought down by a bomb on board, say investigators
- Metrojet Flight 9268: Noise heard on cockpit recording just before crash
Kamal says the original tape will not be transported out of Egypt, which is leading the investigation alongside representatives from Russia, France, Germany, and Ireland. He didn't identify the country.
All 224 people on the plane, most of them Russian tourists, were killed.