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Irina Semyonova said her friend Natasha last called her from the Egyptian resort of Sharm El Sheikh to say she'd bought her a present of perfume from the airport's duty-free shop.
"She was vacationing there with a friend," Semyonova said blankly, showing a picture on her phone of a smiling swimsuit-clad young woman, her blonde hair in a long plait.
Semyonova was one of a crowd of people gathered in Pulkovo airport in Saint-Petersburg, Russia's second largest city, who were left reeling after news broke that the plane they had been waiting for had crashed shortly after takeoff in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula.
Like many Russians, Semyonova's friend had gone on holiday to one of Egypt's Red Sea resorts which are especially popular during the winter when people try and escape the long months of cold and dark in search of warmer climes.
Many of those who came to pick up friends or relatives were in denial as reports trickled about the fate of the 224 people who had been onboard the Airbus 321 operated by the Russian carrier Kogalymavia.
Airport officials tried to keep things calm with a tannoy announcement asking all those waiting to meet those on board the ill-fated Sharm El Sheikh flight to "come to the information stand."
They were then ushered onto buses and taken to a hotel where psychologists and doctors were waiting at an impromptu crisis centre which has already asked family members to provide DNA samples for identifying remains.
"My wife was on that plane," said Nail, a grief-stricken 60-year-old with tears in his eyes. "She was on vacation with our children but thank God, the children had come back two days earlier. "I had a bad dream today, she was in it," he said. "At 6am she sent me a text message that she was going to the airport, and that was it."
Confusion and fear also gripped passengers who had been due to fly out to Egypt on holiday as their plane, operated by Kogalymavia but chartered by a Moscow-based tour operator Brisco, failed to show up. "Nobody came out to talk to us yet, we don't know what plane we'll be on," a passenger called Anzhelika told the Rossiya-24 channel. "If it's Kogalymavia, we don't want to fly," she said. No representative of the airline could be found at the airport and nobody at the company was answering the phones.
Russia has a dismal air safety record, with charter flights often under pressure to book to capacity on ageing jets in a bid to cut costs. Kogalymavia is a small regional carrier which flies mostly international charter services.
Regional airlines in Russia are especially notorious and the crash is likely to raise renewed concerns about the safety of air travel in a country where experts have sounded the alarm over the nation's ageing fleet of passenger jets. - AFP
Two years ago, Russian lawmakers called for a ban on planes built more than 20 years ago after a 23-year-old Boeing 737 operated by a regional airline crashed, killing all 50 people on board.
Russia has already announced a probe into possible safety violations in Saturday's crash and a high-level delegation of rescue workers and investigators, including two ministers, was slated to fly out to the crash site.
The Kremlin has designated November 1 as a day of national mourning.
"I am meeting my parents," said 25-year-old Ella Smirnova, a tall young woman with a shock-induced smile on her face, waiting by Pulkovo's information stand.
"I spoke to them last on the phone when they were already on the plane, and then I heard the news."
"I will keep hoping until the end that they are alive, but perhaps I will never see them again," she told AFP.
Shortly afterwards, the Russian embassy in Egypt issued a statement saying there were no survivors. - AFP
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