News

DATE=11/1/1999 TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT TITLE=EGYPT / CRASH REACT (L) NUMBER=2-255699 BYLINE=SCOTT BOBB DATELINE=CAIRO CONTENT= VOICED AT: /// EDS: THE FIRST FLIGHT IS DUE TO LEAVE CAIRO AROUND 0000 UTC, OR 7 P-M WASHINGTON TIME. WATCH FOR UPDATES TO THE INTRO /// INTRO: In Egypt, grieving relatives of some of the 217 people killed in Sunday's crash of Egypt Air flight 990 are preparing to leave (EDS: have left) for the United States to help identify the bodies. They will be accompanied by a group of Egyptian officials who are to participate in the investigation. V-O-A Correspondent Scott Bobb reports from Cairo there is a somber mood in the country, although life for most continues normally. TEXT: Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak (Monday) sent condolences to those who lost loved ones in the crash and told the nation he was shocked and saddened by the tragedy. In an interview broadcast on Egyptian television, he said he did not believe the accident was due to any criminal act. /// MUBARAK ACT /// We are waiting until the investigation can come to an end. I cannot just invent a reason. We will wait and see. But, I could tell you that I have no thinking that it is sabotage or anything like that, because they have very strict inspections in New York. /// END ACT /// // Opt /// Officials at Cairo's international airport Monday closed the crisis center, carrying away trash bags full of paper cups, food wrappers and cigarette butts. /// End opt /// The airport's terminal saw scenes of intense emotion and grief Sunday, as family members learned about the crash. Egypt Air officials say they are sending about 100 family members to the United States to help identify victims. Diplomats at the U-S Embassy here said they have issued 75 visas so far. Although no official period of mourning has been declared, religious leaders say there will be special prayers throughout Egypt for the victims and their families in mosques Friday and churches on Sunday. /// REST OPT /// Egypt Air flight 990 disappeared from radar screens shortly after taking off from New York City early Sunday morning. Rescue teams have found documents from the plane in a debris field 100 kilometers off the coast of the northeastern state of Massachusetts. Air traffic officials say the plane fell thousands of meters in seconds, indicating it was probably downed by what they call a massive mechanical failure. Eighty Egyptians and more than 100 Americans were on board, including two large groups of tourists on vacation. Other passengers included citizens of Syria, Sudan, Chile and Canada. Egypt's national air carrier is one of the oldest airlines in the Middle East. It experienced a number of accidents in the 1960s and 1970s, but had a good safety record over the past 20 years. Egyptian officials are worried this disaster will hurt tourism, which is just beginning to recover from a series of terrorist attacks a few years ago. Tourism is one of the country's top foreign exchange earners. Despite the loss, life goes on here. People went to work and school normally today and the first Egypt Air flight from New York City since the tragedy arrived in Cairo on schedule. (SIGNED) NEB/SB/GE/LTD/JO 01-Nov-1999 11:41 AM EDT (01-Nov-1999 1641 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .