Relatives
gathered to mourn the 62 victims of a passenger jet crash in southern Russia on
Sunday and officials warned an investigation could take weeks to determine the
cause of the downing.
At Rostov-on-Don airport about 400 people paid their respects to the 55
passengers and seven crew who died when the Boeing 737-800, operated by
Dubai-based budget carrier Flydubai, crashed in the early hours of Saturday.
Bereaved relatives laid red and white carnations on a growing pile of
flowers, candles and children's toys, framed by photos of the dead. "We
mourn," read an inscription listing the victims' names.
"What happened cannot be expressed with any words. I can’t
comprehend how the relatives of the victims will go on living," Rostov
resident Marina Bondar said.
"The whole world is expressing its condolences to us. But it is
impossible to forget this."
At the crash site, Russian workers finished their search of the
snow-covered wreckage, having sifted more than 200 pieces of the victims'
bodies scattered across the airfield, Russian TV reported.
Russia's airline regulator said work had started extracting information
from the doomed plane's flight recorders, which were badly damaged in the
crash.
"The received recorders are badly damaged mechanically,"
Russia's Interstate Aviation Committee (IAC) said in a statement on its
website, alongside a photo of a crumpled recorder.
"Specialists have started the inspection, opening and removing
the memory modules from their protective coverings for further work to restore
the cable connections and prepare to copy the data," the IAC said.
RIA news agency cited an IAC official as saying it could take one month
to decode information from the recorders.
STRONG WINDS
Under international aviation rules, the investigation will be led by
Russia's air safety investigation agency with representatives from the United
States, where the jet was made, and the United Arab Emirates, where the airline
is based.
Flydubai's CEO Ghaith al-Ghaith said on Saturday it was too early to
determine the cause of the crash, but officials have suggested it could have
been caused by pilot error, a technical problem or strong winds at the airport.
"The airport was open. It was good enough to operate and good enough
to land, as per the authorities," he added. "The weather conditions
were good enough for the flight."
Flydubai said in a statement it was organising hardship payments to
families of the victims amounting to $20,000 per passenger, in accordance with
its conditions of carriage.
The airline has not cancelled or delayed any flights because of the
crash, it added, and Russian Transport Minister Maxim Sokolov said the airport
would reopen on Monday morning.
Security services in the Middle East and Russia are on heightened alert
for militant threats to aviation following the Islamic State claim of
responsibility for downing a Russian passenger plane over Egypt's Sinai Peninsula in late October.
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