Russian transport authorities today ordered the airline whose jet crashed in Egypt, killing all 224 on board, to check all its Airbus 321 planes as part of an urgent safety review.
Rostransnadzor, the country's transportation watchdog, "issued an order to Kogalymavia" giving it until Monday to carry out the checks, said Anastasiya Dombrovskaya, an official for the agency.
Contacted by AFP, Kogalymavia said they received the instructions but denied that this amounted to a de-facto grounding of the company's remaining fleet of six A321 airliners.
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The order instructs the company to "halt use of its planes one by one, to perform hour- or two-hour -long checks and assess the risks," a Kogalymavia representative told AFP. "The company's operations are not being stopped."
The Russian air transport agency meanwhile said it had started a snap month-long inspection of Kogalymavia.
Russian investigators have launched two probes into the crash and a team of criminal experts are working at the crash site, together with air transport officials and rescue workers.
The spokesman of Russia's Investigative Committee, an equivalent of the FBI, Vladimir Markin, said Sunday that investigators had questioned Kogalymavia service workers who had examined the aircraft in the Russian airport of Samara on the Volga river before it flew for Egypt on Friday.
Investigators from France -- where Airbus is headquartered -- were also to travel to Egypt with six experts from the aerospace giant to aid an international probe into the crash.
Some bodies from the wreckage in a remote part of the restive Sinai Peninsula were to be flown to Russia from Cairo morgues on Sunday evening, emergency ministry officials said.