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Terrorists 'boasted' to Isil leaders about bombing plane

Only 1,500 Britons of the total 20,000 in Sharm el Sheikh returned over the weekend as restrictions were placed on flights

Russian tourists trying to get home will be given priority treatment after President Vladimir Putin reportedly struck a deal Egyptian counterpart Abdel Fattah al Sisi

The New York Times reports that The FBI has agreed to help the Russian government with its investigation into the deadly crash of a Russian charter plane in the Sinai Peninsula in Egypt.

Some American officials said van cleef and arpels bracelet alhambra copy that the Russians want help doing a forensic analysis to determine what brought down the Airbus A321 200, while other officials said that the request from the Russians was more general. Although most of the debris is scattered over nearly eight square miles in the desert, some parts of the plane were taken to Russia for analysis.

Cheers of relief in Manchester

The first plane of holidaymakers to return to Manchester since the crisis has touched down to cheers of relief from those onboard. The Manchester Evening News reports that passengers had been on the plane waiting to fly on Wednesday when flights were suspended.

Chelsea Benson, 27, is six months pregnant and had found the ordeal stressful.

She said: "I was out in Egypt on a last minute break and my husband was back here so I found that a worry.

"Today has been the worst because we left the hotel at 11.30am and then the flight was delayed so it's been a very long day.

"It's such a massive relief to be home, I'm just glad about that now, but there are still passengers out there."

British tourists returning home tell of 'chaos'

PA has the latest on passengers arriving back in the UK. Some said security at the airport was "terrible".

Marc Standen and his partner Emily Alfeo were due to fly home on Thursday after a week in the resort but arrived back only last night.

Mr Standen, 28, a car salesman from Westgate, Kent, said security guards at the airport wearing bullet proof vests checked under vehicles with mirrors as they waited in lengthy queues for the airport, but did not check car boots or speak to passengers.

He said: "It was madness. They did a semi pat down inside and we took our shoes off. I don't think it was very thorough. It was madness. Their security is terrible and they are completely overwhelmed."

Bags taken on board were not checked adequately, he said, and at one point around 400 people tried to squeeze through two glass doors to get to a final security check, leaving some hurt as they got trampled.

Mr Standen, who travelled with Thomas Cook, added: "It is the lack of information that is probably the big problem, but the airport is only going to get worse. They don't have it under control. We have left our two bags behind in a pile in the middle of the terminal, and I honestly don't know if we will see them again."

He added: "We are glad van cleef arpels alhambra replica bracelet to be home. I am honestly not the sort of person who would normally worry about things, but it was not a good experience."

"Game changer" for Isil

The unconfirmed reports of the possible involvement of British Jihadists in the attack comes after British intelligence was out in front of the rest of the world in concluding that a bomb most likely took down the plane.

The picked up by intelligence agencies appears to include a series of communications between the Sinai terrorist group, affiliated to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, and its leadership based in Syria.

Prior to the explosion last Saturday, US intelligence agencies also intercepted a message from alhambra bracelet van cleef replica the terrorists in Sinai that warned of big in the area

It is understood that details about how the plane was brought down were also intercepted, but the officials have thus far refused to go into detail.

Security analysts described the latest developments as a changer for Isil.

Mokhtar Awad, at the Centre for American Progress which specialises in studying Islamist extremism, said: we had seen so far were IS inspired lone wolves, but this attack appears to be the result of close, consistent operational support.

The Wall

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