Indonesia deploys divers, 'pinger
locators' in hunt for doomed plane's cockpit recorders
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[October 30, 2018]
By Fathin Ungku and Yuddy Cahya
JAVA SEA, Indonesia (Reuters) - Indonesian
divers resumed a search on Tuesday for an airliner that crashed with 189
people on board, as "pinger locators" tried to zero in on its cockpit
recorders and uncover why an almost-new plane went down in the sea
minutes after take-off.
Indonesia, one of the world's fastest-growing aviation markets, has a
patchy safety record. With the now almost certain prospect of all on
board having died, the crash is set to rank as its second-worst air
disaster.
Ground staff lost contact with flight JT610 of budget airline Lion Air
13 minutes after the Boeing 737 MAX 8 aircraft took off early on Monday
from the airport in Jakarta, the capital, on its way to the tin-mining
town of Pangkal Pinang.
"Hopefully this morning we can find the wreckage or fuselage," Soerjanto
Tjahjono, the head of a national transport safety panel, told Reuters,
adding that underwater "pinger locators", including equipment from
Singapore, were being deployed to help find the aircraft's black boxes.
The priority is finding the cockpit voice recorder and flight data
recorder to help determine the cause of the disaster, safety experts
said.
Although divers stopped searching overnight, sonar vessels and an
underwater drone kept up the hunt for the wreckage, where many victims
were feared trapped, officials said.
Only debris and body parts have been found off the shore of Karawang,
east of Jakarta.
A Reuters witness on a boat at the crash site, saw teams of divers in
black rubber suits enter the slightly choppy water from six inflatable
boats.
"The visibility is not good as it's very overcast,” a special forces
officer said, noting the dive team had started just after dawn and been
down to a depth of 35 meters.
Underwater footage released by the national search and rescue agency
showed relatively poor visibility. In all, 35 vessels are helping to
search.
(For graphic on flight path of Indonesia’s Lion Air flight JT610, click
https://tmsnrt.rs/2OZPYBz)
DNA CHECKS
Yusuf Latif, the spokesman of the search and rescue agency, had said on
Monday finding survivors "would be a miracle", judging by the condition
of the recovered debris and body parts.
Lion Air said human remains were collected in 24 body bags after sweeps
of the site, in waters about 30 to 35 meters (98 to 115 ft) deep roughly
15 km (nine miles) off the coast.
Officers at Jakarta's port picked through personal belongings retrieved
from the sea, including wallets, backpacks and papers, in a bid to help
identify their owners.
Dozens of relatives gathered at a police hospital where body bags were
brought for forensic doctors to try to identify victims.
Police were taking saliva swabs from family members of the missing for
DNA tests and also seeking details on body markings like tattoos or
birthmarks on the passengers.
A tent has been set up next to the hospital building and a middle-aged
woman and a teenager sat together, sobbing and comforting each other.
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An Indonesian navy soldier jumps to dive at the location of the Lion
Air flight JT610 crash off the north coast of Karawang regency, West
Java province, Indonesia, October 30, 2018. REUTERS/Beawiharta
BOEING PROVIDING ASSISTANCE
The pilot of flight JT610 had asked to return to base shortly after
take-off about 6.20 a.m. Investigators are trying to determine why
the pilot issued the request, which was granted.
No distress signal was received from the aircraft's emergency
transmitter.
The aircraft suffered a technical problem on a flight from the
resort island of Bali to Jakarta on Sunday but it was "resolved
according to procedure", Edward Sirait, chief executive of Lion Air
Group, told reporters.
Sirait declined to specify the nature of the issue but said none of
the airline's other aircraft of that model had the same problem.
Lion had operated 11 Boeing 737 MAX 8s and it had no plan to ground
the rest of them, he said.
On Monday, the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) and
Boeing Co <BA.N> said they were providing assistance in the crash
investigation.
The accident is the first to be reported involving the widely sold
Boeing 737 MAX, an updated, more fuel-efficient version of the
manufacturer's workhorse single-aisle jet.
Two witnesses described the plane as swaying or rocking as it came
down, adding that the nose hit the water first and there was a tall
column of smoke afterwards.
The aircraft did not make a noise when it came down, they said.
"From a long way off, it was already leaning,” said Gauk, a
fisherman who uses one name.
Privately owned Lion Air, founded in 1999, said the aircraft, which
had been in operation since August, was airworthy, with its pilot
and co-pilot together having amassed 11,000 hours of flying time.
Indonesia's worst air disaster was in 1997, when a Garuda Indonesia
A300 crashed in the city of Medan, killing 234 people.
(Additional reporting by Agustinus Beo Da Costa, Fergus Jensen,
Fransiska Nangoy, Jamie Freed in SINGAPORE and Tim Hepher in HONG
KONG; Writing by John Chalmers and Ed Davies; Editing by Clarence
Fernandez, Robert Birsel)
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