
Search teams last night found the wreckage of a passenger jet which crashed in the Sahara desert with 116 people on board.
Debris from the Air Algerie plane was spotted in a remote area of Mali, close to the border with Algeria.
Malis President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita revealed the news.
There were no reports of survivors.
The
McDonnell Douglas MD-83 crashed as it battled through heavy rainstorms
sweeping across the Sahara early yesterday heading for Algiers.
Flight AH5017 disappeared about 50 minutes after it took off from the capital of Burkina Faso, Ouagadougou
Radar
contact was lost shortly after the pilot was asked to change course in
poor visibility to avoid the risk of a collision with another aircraft.
Algerias Prime Minister Abdelmalek Sellal said every possibility was being explored, including terrorism.
French troops are in Mali fighting al-Qaedas Islamist militants.
But a senior official said it was unlikely rebels had the capacity to shoot down a plane.
There were 50 French passengers on the flight.
Foreign minister Laurent Fabius described the incident as a tragedy which had touched the whole of France.
Among
others on the passenger list were 24 from Burkina Faso, eight Lebanese,
six Algerians, five Canadians, four Germans and six Spanish crew.
The flight was operated by Spanish airline Swiftair for Air Algerie.
It
was feared Mariela Castro, the daughter of Cuban President Raul Castro
and niece of former communist leader Fidel, was on the plane.
But later the 51-year-old mother of three said in Havana: Im alive and kicking.
Until 2008, the aircraft was used as a private jet by Real Madrid to fly its players to European away games.
The MD-83 is part of a series of long-range jets built by McDonnell Douglas since the early 1980s.
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