Black box from crashed Indonesian jet
retrieved from debris on sea floor
Send a link to a friend
[November 01, 2018]
By Cindy Silviana
JAKARTA (Reuters) - Indonesian divers on
Thursday retrieved a black box from a Lion Air passenger jet that
crashed into the shallow sea off the coast of the capital, Jakarta,
killing all 189 people onboard.
The device should provide clues to what went wrong after the plane lost
contact with ground staff just 13 minutes after taking off early on
Monday from Jakarta, on its way to the tin-mining town of Pangkal
Pinang.
"We dug and we got the black box," a diver, identified as Hendra, told
broadcaster Metro TV on board a search vessel, the Baruna Jaya,
describing how his team found the orange-colored box intact in debris on
the muddy sea floor.
The diver said he had seen only "small pieces" of the aircraft, and the
search had closed in on the black box because of the "ping' signals it
emitted.
The device, identified as the flight data recorder, would be handed over
to Indonesia's transportation safety committee (KNKT), authorities said.
The plane's black boxes should help explain why the almost-new Boeing
737 MAX 8 jet went down.
It could take up to three weeks to download data from the black boxes
and up to six months to analyze it, Soerjanto Tjahjono, the head of a
national transport safety committee (KNKT), said on Wednesday.
Haryo Satmiko, deputy chief of the national transport safety panel, told
Reuters earlier an underwater drone had detected an object suspected to
be part of the fuselage in waters about 30 meters (98 feet) deep not far
from the site where the aircraft lost contact.
With media speculating on the airworthiness of the aircraft, the
transport ministry suspended for 120 days Lion Air's maintenance and
engineering director, fleet maintenance manager and the release engineer
who gave the jet permission to fly on Monday.
Lion Air will also be subject to more intensive "on ramp" inspections
compared with other airlines. Regulators will check 40 percent of its
flights at random, compared with 10-15 percent for other airlines,
minister Budi Karya Sumadi said.
SAFETY REVIEW
President Joko Widodo had also ordered a review of all regulations
relating to flight safety, Sumadi said.
[to top of second column]
|
Chief of National Search and Rescue Agency Muhammad Syaugi shows a
part of the black box of Lion Air's flight JT610 airplane, on Baruna
Jaya ship, in the north sea of Karawang, Indonesia, November 1,
2018. Antara Foto/Muhammad Adimaja via REUTERS
The government was also considering reviewing airfares and may
increase ticket prices charged by low-cost carriers, he said,
without providing details.
Privately owned Lion Air, founded in 1999, said the aircraft had
been in operation since August, adding that it had been airworthy
and the pilot and co-pilot had 11,000 hours of flying time between
them.
But according to the transport safety committee, the plane had
technical problems on its previous flight on Sunday, from the city
of Denpasar on the resort island of Bali, including an issue over
"unreliable airspeed".
Lion Air chief executive Edward Sirait has acknowledged reports of
technical problems with the aircraft, but said maintenance had been
carried out "according to procedure" before it was cleared to fly
again.
Investigators are looking into why the pilot had asked to return to
base shortly after take-off, a request that ground control officials
had granted, although the flight crashed soon after.
Strong currents have hampered efforts to find the fuselage of the
plane, with efforts complicated by the presence of energy pipelines
in the area.
(Reporting by Jakarta bureau; Writing by Fergus Jensen and Ed
Davies; Editing by Clarence Fernandez, Robert Birsel)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|