Crashed site

the investigation relating to the crash of the Spanish Swiftair’s plane, chartered by Air Algerie on July 24 in Mali didn’t allow the investigators, for the moment, to achieve a “privileged track” explaining the accident, said Saturday the French Bureau of Enquiry and Analysis (BEA).
“For the moment, there is no privileged track,” said Bernard Boudeille, an official from BEA, while presenting in Bamako a first investigation report on the accident.
“Nothing can confirm or deny the terrorist track” in the elements collected by the investigators so far, said Boudeille, citing French news agency AFP.
The plane, which was flying from Ouagadougou to Algiers, crashed in the North of Mali 32 minutes after its takeoff with 116 passengers and crew members on board, all of them perished.