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DATE=1/21/2000 TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT TITLE=EGYPT AIR SITREP (L) NUMBER=2-258299 BYLINE=NICK SIMEONE DATELINE=WASHINGTON CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Nearly three months into the investigation of the October crash of EgyptAir flight 990, U-S air safety investigators still have no evidence suggesting the New York-to-Cairo flight was brought down by mechanical failure. Correspondent Nick Simeone brings us up to date on the search for clues to a crash that took the lives of all 217 people on board. TEXT: Most of the wreckage of the Boeing 7-67 has now been recovered from waters off the Massachusetts coast. But the National Transportation Safety Board still has no evidence suggesting equipment failure caused the crash. In fact, one N-T-S-B official says all evidence points to a plane that was in fine working condition. It is still relatively early in the investigation, judging by the fact that other crash probes -- such as T-W-A 800 -- have dragged on for years. Still, aviation experts say an old theory may have to be revisited -- that an EgyptAir pilot - for some unknown reason - may have decided to take the plane down in a suicidal mission that took the lives of everyone on board. /// OPT /// Law enforcement sources had told reporters early in the case that prayer-like remarks heard in Arabic on the cockpit voice recorder may have been the final words of a suicidal relief pilot alone in the cockpit at the time. /// END OPT /// William Waldock teaches an accident investigation course at Arizona's Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University. /// WALDOCK ACT /// From everything that I've seen, it looks at this point like mechanical failure is not going to be an issue and of course the only other real plausible causal element would have to be human factors. /// END ACT /// The Egyptian government, which owns EgyptAir, refuses to accept pilot sabotage as the cause of the crash, citing cultural reasons and concerned about legal implications. But some experts say U-S investigators may end up turning the case over to Egypt to draw the conclusion on its own. /// REST OPT /// Michael Barr is director of aviation safety programs at the University of Southern California. /// BARR ACT /// It's best that we allow the Egyptians to finish the investigation. Now we have two cultures in conflict. And I think probably in my opinion the best thing that could happen is that we did our part of the investigation. We brought the evidence up. We presented the evidence to the Egyptians. Now the Egyptians are going to have to come up with a conclusion for that event and Americans will not even come into the conclusions. /// END ACT /// Until then, families of the 217 people killed in the crash continue to wait for answers. (SIGNED) NEB/NJS/JO 21-Jan-2000 14:19 PM EDT (21-Jan-2000 1919 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .