Relatives react after a Russian airliner with 217 passengers and seven crew aboard crashed, as people gather at Russian airline Kogalymavia’s information desk at Pulkovo airport in St. Petersburg, Russia, on Saturday. (AP Photo/Dmitry Lovetsky)
CAIRO: Ambulances have reached the site where the Russian airliner Kogalymavia’s Flight KGL-9268 had crashed and have began evacuating “casualties,” officials and state media reported on Saturday.
The wreckage was found in a mountainous area roughly 100 kilometers (60 miles) south of the North Sinai town of El-Arish, Egyptian officials said.
State television reported that Prime Minister Ismail Sharif was headed to the site of the accident.
“Military planes have discovered the wreckage of the plane… in a mountainous area, and 45 ambulances have been directed to the site to evacuate dead and wounded,” a cabinet statement said.
People gather at the airline information desk at of Russian airline Kogalymavia’s desk at Pulkovo airport in St. Petersburg, Russia, on Saturday, after a Russian airliner with 217 passengers and seven crew aboard crashed in Egypt’s Sinai Desert. (AP Photo/Dmitry Lovetsky)
MENA news agency said the “casualties” were being transferred to nearby hospitals, without elaborating on their condition.
Egyptian and Russian officials have earlier said the plane with 224 people on board crashed in a mountainous part of Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula early Saturday after departing Sharm el-Sheikh.
The plane took off at 5:51 a.m. Egyptian time (0351 GMT) from the southern Sinai resort bound for Saint Petersburg in Russia but communication was lost 23 minutes after departure, officials said.
On board the plane were 217 passengers, including 17 children, and 7 crew members.
At Saint Petersburg’s Pulkovo airport, anxious family members awaited news of their loved ones.
“I am meeting my parents,” said 25-year-old Ella Smirnova, a tall young woman seemingly in shock. “I spoke to them last on the phone when they were already on the plane, and then I heard the news.”
“I will keep hoping until the end that they are alive, but perhaps I will never see them again.”
A senior Egyptian aviation official said the plane was flying at an altitude of 30,000 feet when communication was lost.
“Communication was lost today with the Airbus 321 of Kogalymavia which was carrying out flight 9268 from Sharm el-Sheikh to Saint Petersburg,” Sergei Lzvolsky, an official with the Russian aviation agency Rosaviatsia told Russian television networks.
The contents of the plane’s last communication with ground crews were not immediately disclosed.
The last major commercial airliner crash in Egypt happened in 2004, when a Flash Airlines Boeing 737 plunged into the Red Sea after taking off from Sharm el-Sheikh.
The 148 people aboard that flight, most of whom were French, were killed.
Millions of tourists, many of them Russian, visit the resort town, one of Egypt’s major draws for tourists looking for pristine beaches and scuba diving.
The resort, and others dotting the southern Sinai Red Sea coast, are heavily secured by the military and police as an Islamist militant insurgency rages in the north of the restive peninsula, which borders Israel and the Gaza Strip.
Militants in the north who pledged allegiance to the Daesh group have killed hundreds of soldiers and policemen since the army ousted Islamist president Muhammad Mursi in 2013.