Business Insider First victim of Egypt plane crash laid to rest in Russia Five days after a Russian jetliner broke apart high above the Sinai, Russia and Egypt on Thursday dismissed Western suggestions that a terrorist bomb may have caused the crash that killed 224 people, saying the speculation was a rush to judgment. British Prime Minister David Cameron, who spoke to the presidents of both countries in the very public dispute, said he had grounded all British flights to and from the Sinai Peninsula because of "intelligence and information" indicating a bomb was the probable reason a Metrojet Airbus A321-200 plane had crashed Saturday in the desert. British and U.S. officials, guided primarily by intelligence intercepts and satellite imagery, have suggested gingerly it might have been the work of the extremist Islamic State group and its affiliates in the Sinai. Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/ap-first-victim-of-egypt-plane-crash-laid-to-rest-in-russia-2015-11 CNBC UK tourists stranded in Egypt as Kremlin defies warnings The U.K.'s Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond has said that flights from the U.K. to Sharm el-Sheikh in Egypt could be resumed by Friday, as security is stepped up at the airport amid safety concerns. Around 20,000 British nationals are thought to be in the Egyptian coastal resort. Flights to and from the resort were suspended by the British government on Wednesday as a precaution after a Russian plane crash was thought to have been caused by terrorists. U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron said that it was "more likely than not" that a bomb downed the Russian jet and discussed the situation with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday, Reuters reported. Read more: http://www.cnbc.com/2015/11/05/uk-tourists-stranded-in-egypt-as-kremlin-defies-warnings.html