No new signal from EgyptAir jet since day of crash, search intensifies

Saturday 28-05-2016 07:07 AM

Funeral mass held in Cairo, Egypt May 21, 2016 for Yara Hani, a cabin crew member on board EgyptAir flight MS804 who was killed when the Airbus A320 plane plunged into the Mediterranean Sea on May 19, 2016.

CAIRO/PARIS (Reuters) - No new radio signal has been received from an EgyptAir jet since the day it crashed in the Mediterranean last week, sources close to the investigation said on Friday.

Media reports on Thursday suggested that a new signal had allowed officials to further home in on where the black box recorders might be located.

But the sources told Reuters that nothing new had been detected since a radio signal picked up on the day of the crash from the plane's emergency locator transmitter (ELT) that allowed officials to determine a broadly defined search zone of 5 km (3 miles) in radius.

"There has been nothing since day one," one of the sources said.

More than a week after the Airbus A320 crashed on May 19 with 66 people on board, including 30 Egyptians and 15 from France, investigators have no clear picture of its final moments.

Search teams were working against the clock to recover the two flight recorders that will offer vital clues on the fate of flight 804. The acoustic signals that help locate them in deep water stop transmitting after about 30 days.

Egypt's ministry of civil aviation signed a memorandum of understanding on Friday with the Mauritius-based Deep Ocean Search to help with the search and retrieval process, according to a ministry statement. It did not specify when it would join the search.

France's BEA air crash investigation agency said French naval survey vessel Laplace had left Corsica on Thursday and was heading toward the search zone north of the Egyptian port of Alexandria.

A French official said the vessel would arrive on Sunday or Monday.

The vessel contains equipment from ALSEAMAR, a subsidiary of French industrial group Alcen, which can pick up black-box pinger signals over long distances up to 5 km (3 miles), according to the company's website.

These are separate from the signals transmitted by the ELT, which sends a radio signal upon impact that is not designed to continue emitting once the plane is submerged underwater, said one of the sources close to the investigation.

The French vessel will conduct a deepwater search in "four or five" areas within the 5 km search zone believed to contain the two black boxes, with the possibility of expanding the zone should nothing be detected, said another of the sources. 

(Additional reporting by Andrew Callus; Writing by Eric Knecht; Editing by Angus MacSwan, Pravin Charm, Toni Reinhold)

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