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Probe into deadly Russian military plane crash finds no evidence of explosion

Click to play video: 'Russian plane wreckage lifted from Black Sea'
Russian plane wreckage lifted from Black Sea
WATCH ABOVE: Russian officials say search teams have completed the bulk of efforts to recover bodies and debris from a Russian military plane crash that has killed all 92 people on board – Dec 29, 2016

MOSCOW – Flight recorders revealed no evidence of an explosion on board a Russian plane that crashed, killing all 92 on board, but investigators haven’t ruled out a deliberate mechanical impact to down the plane, a military official said Thursday.

Russian air force Lt.Gen. Sergei Bainetov, who heads the Defence Ministry commission conducting the crash probe, said that a cockpit conversation recorder contained the captain’s words that indicated a “special situation” that began unfolding on board the plane.

WATCH: Russian investigators study black box from Black Sea plane crash

Click to play video: 'Russian investigators study black box from Black Sea plane crash'
Russian investigators study black box from Black Sea plane crash

Bainetov wouldn’t elaborate on what may have led to the crash, but noted that it likely had been caused by several factors.

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The Tu-154 of the Russian Defence Ministry crashed into the sea early Sunday, moments after taking off in good weather from the city of Sochi. It was carrying members of the Alexandrov Ensemble, widely known as the Red Army Choir, to a New Year’s concert at a Russian military base in Syria.

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READ MORE: Second flight recorder recovered from Black Sea crash site

Bainetov said that the plane crashed 70 seconds after takeoff from an altitude of 250 metres (820 feet) while it was travelling at a speed of 360-370 kilometres per hour (224-230 miles per hour).

“After deciphering the first flight recorder we have made a conclusion that there was no explosion on board,” Bainetov said at a news conference.

But asked if that means that investigators have ruled out a terror attack, Bainetov said “we aren’t ruling that version yet.”

“A terror attack doesn’t always involve an explosion,” he said. “Along with an explosion on board, there could have been some mechanical impact.”

He wouldn’t offer any details, saying that Russian law-enforcement agencies are working on the case.

Bainetov’s words appeared to contradict a previous statement from Russia’s top domestic security and counter-terrorism agency, the FSB, which has said it found “no indications or facts pointing at the possibility of a terror attack or an act of sabotage.”

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READ MORE: Crashed Russian jet fragments pulled from Black Sea

It said investigators were looking into whether the crash might have been caused by bad fuel, pilot error, equipment failure or objects stuck in the engines.

Investigators have taken samples from a fuel tank used to fill the plane, which flew from Moscow’s Chkalovsky military airport and stopped in Sochi for refuelling .

VIDEO: Russia mourns after military plane carrying 92 aboard crashes into Black Sea

Click to play video: 'Russia mourns after military plane carrying 92 aboard crashes into Black Sea'
Russia mourns after military plane carrying 92 aboard crashes into Black Sea

In an apparent attempt to downplay Bainetov’s statement, Russian Transport Minister Maxim Sokolov emphasized that “the version of a terror attack isn’t being considered as the main version.”

Sokolov said search teams have completed the bulk of efforts to recover bodies and debris from the crash site. He said 19 bodies and more than 230 body fragments have been recovered, adding that 13 big fragments of the plane and about 2,000 smaller fragments also have been pulled from the seabed.

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Bainetov said that flights of the military’s Tu-154s have been suspended during the investigation but said they will likely resume after the investigation is over.

The Tu-154 is a Soviet-built three-engine airliner designed in the late 1960s. Russian airlines decommissioned the noisy, fuel-guzzling aircraft years ago, but the military and other government agencies continue using the plane, which is still loved by crews for its manoeuvrability and sturdiness.

The plane that crashed Sunday was built in 1983 and underwent factory checkups and maintenance in 2014, and earlier this year. Investigators have taken relevant documents from the plant that did the job.

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