No U.K.-bound flights will leave Sharm el-Sheikh on Wednesday night to allow British aviation experts to assess the security situation at the local airport, said a government spokeswoman.
The U.K. government said it was concerned the Metrojet flight that crashed shortly after taking off from the resort town “may well have been brought down by an explosive device”.
“In light of this, and as a precautionary measure, we have decided that flights due to leave Sharm for the U.K. this evening will be delayed,” a spokeswoman said on Wednesday evening.
“That will allow time for a team of U.K. aviation experts, currently travelling to Sharm, to make an assessment of the security arrangements in place at the airport and to identify whether any further action is required. We expect this assessment to be completed tonight.”
The spokeswoman said she could not categorically say why the Russian airliner had crashed and said the decision to suspend flights was a “precautionary step”.
All 224 passengers on board the Metrojet flight, which was returning to St. Petersburg, were killed when the plane crashed in the Sinai desert on Saturday.
Wreckage was spread over an extensive area and no SOS call was made, leading to speculation that a missile or bomb could have been involved.
Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi was due to arrive in London on Wednesday evening for a previously arranged visit.