Egyptair crash: families of victims struggle to accept loss

Egyptair crash: families of victims struggle to accept loss


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As the families of the victims grieve, the cause of the crash remains a mystery and the plane's black box has not been discovered yet either. Relatives and friends of the cabin crew and


passengers, who were on board the EgyptAir plane that crashed in the Mediterranean, attend a mourning ceremony on May 22, 2016 Amal sits in the lobby of a hotel staring out at Cairo


airport. Face tight with exhaustion, eyes puffy. She is hoping her daughter Samar Ezzedine, a stewardess aboard an EgyptAir flight that crashed into the Mediterranean on Thursday, will walk


through the arrivals door. "She doesn't want to go home or move from the door," Samar's aunt, Mona, said. "She doesn't want to believe it... I told her to


switch off her phone, but she said, what if Samar calls?" The 27-year-old newlywed is among the 66 people thought to have been killed when the jet crashed on its way from Paris to


Cairo. Egypt said on Saturday the navy had found human remains, wreckage and the personal belongings of passengers floating in the Mediterranean about 290 km (180 miles) north of Alexandria.


But no bodies have yet to emerge or be identified. DNA tests are under way on the few remains that have so far been recovered. The cause of the crash remains a mystery and search crews have


yet to locate the black box flight recorders. EgyptAir has put up the families of dead passengers and crew members in two hotels near Cairo's airport but many have gone home to receive


condolences for the loss of their loved ones. Dozens of people dressed in black flocked to a mosque in western Cairo on Saturday night to express condolences to the family of Ismail Chabana


and his mother, Youmna Hamdy. Chatter filled the hall about the causes of the crash. Tears rolled down mourners faces. "I really hope the plane exploded, it doesn't matter if they


are in shreds, as long as they did not suffer for a long time," one woman said. Chabna, an engineer in his late 20s, was in France for a wedding, Nesma Khatib, his friend and


neighbour, said. He had recently gotten engaged. "I never thought this could happen to someone I know," Khatib said. "I was just talking to him; I can't believe he's


gone." The aircraft was carrying 56 passengers, including a child and two infants, and 10 crew. They included 30 Egyptian and 15 French nationals, along with citizens of 10 other


countries. French families have arrived in Cairo, but Egyptian officials are keeping them away from the media glare. Marwa Hamdy, a mother of three, who was on a business trip in France, was


another of those who on board the doomed flight. "My heart sank," her cousin Sherine Abdel Hamid told Reuters by phone, describing the first moment she learnt the plane had


crashed. Hamdy was 42, her youngest son only nine years old. He finally understood on Friday that his mother would not come home. "He has been very quiet since," her cousin said. 


But back in the hotel lobby, Amal, is refusing to accept condolences. "She is missing, who hosts a funeral for a missing person?" she murmurs.