As
the search for the missing EgyptAir flight that went off the radar intensifies,
a new revelation has been made abut possible insider roles.
Samar
Ezz Eldin, a flight stewardess feared dead after an EgyptAir jet crashed into
the Mediterranean posted the bizarre image below of a plane crash on her
Facebook page.
The
image appears to show a female flight attendant emerging from the sea with the
wreckage of a plane crash behind her.
It
was shared by Samar Ezz Eldin who is thought to have been one of the crew
members onboard the doomed airliner.
Experts
fear it crashed into the sea while travelling from Paris to Cairo following a
terror attack.
The
image shows a plane with its nose in the water and an air stewardess walking
unfazed from the sea with her luggage.
All
66 passengers and crew are believed to have died when the EgyptAir plane
crashed. There was no distress call before the jet vanished off the radar while
flying in clear weather.
A
leading aviation expert has now raised concerns that the EgyptAir plane could
have been downed following an inside job by a member of staff.
Mike
Vivian, who is the former head of flight operations for the Civil Aviation
Authority, said concerns that somebody on the plane or at the airport helped
launch a devastating terror attack was “a major worry”.
His
comments come as officials in France focus on whether a possible breach of
security happened at Paris' Charles de Gaulle airport.
Speaking
on Good Morning Britain, Mr Vivian was asked if it could be "an inside
job".
He
replied: "Well, that is a really interesting question and it is a worry
that has been in security minds for a long time now.
"It
is a major worry and I do not think it is insignificant that lots of people at
Paris Charles de Gaulle lost their airside pass because of radicalisation.
"The
question has to be how did they get their in the first place and what sort of
screening is going on vis-a-vis these airport employees."
Mr
Vivian said he believe the plane could have been downed because of a hijack
situation or a struggle.
He
also admitted that despite security around cockpits hardening since 9/11,they
are not completely secure.
About Unknown
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