Cape Breton Post

Previous flight of crashed jet terrified passengers

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Relatives numbed by grief provided samples for DNA tests to help identify victims of the Lion Air plane crash that killed 189 people in Indonesia, as accounts emerged Tuesday of problems on the jet’s previous flight including rapid descents that terrified passengers.

Hundreds of rescue personnel searched seas where the plane crashed, sending more than three dozen body bags to identifica­tion experts, while the airline flew dozens of grieving relatives to the country’s capital, Jakarta.

The 2-month-old Boeing 737 MAX 8 jet plunged into the Java Sea early Monday, just 13 minutes after taking off from Jakarta for an island off Sumatra. Its pilot requested clearance to return to the airport 2-3 minutes after takeoff, indicating a problem, though the cause is still uncertain.

Aircraft debris and personal belongings including ID cards, clothing and bags found scattered

in the sea were spread out on tarps at a port in north Jakarta and sorted into evidence bags. The chief of the police’s medical unit, Arthur Tampi, said it has received dozens of body parts for identifica­tion and is awaiting results of DNA tests, expected to take 4-8 days.

The disaster has reignited concerns about safety in Indonesia’s fast-growing aviation industry, which was recently

removed from European Union and U.S. blacklists.

Two passengers on the plane’s previous flight from Bali to Jakarta on Sunday described issues that caused annoyance and alarm.

Alon Soetanto told TVOne the plane dropped suddenly several times in the first few minutes of its flight.

“About three to eight minutes after it took off, I felt like the plane was losing power and unable to rise. That happened several times during the flight,” he said. “We felt like in a roller coaster. Some passengers began to panic and vomit.”

His account is consistent with data from flight-tracking sites that show erratic speed, altitude and direction in the minutes after the jet took off. A similar pattern is also seen in data pinged from Monday’s fatal flight.

Safety experts cautioned, however, that the data must be checked for accuracy against the plane’s “black boxes,” which officials are confident will be recovered.

Lion Air president Edward Sirait said there were reports of technical problems with the flight from Bali but they had been resolved in accordance with the plane manufactur­er’s procedures. The airline didn’t respond to requests to verify a document purporting to be a Lion Air maintenanc­e report, dated Sunday, that described inaccurate airspeed and altitude readings after takeoff.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? A rescuer shows passports recovered from the area where a Lion Air plane crashed, at Tanjung Priok Port in Jakarta, Indonesia, Tuesday.
AP PHOTO A rescuer shows passports recovered from the area where a Lion Air plane crashed, at Tanjung Priok Port in Jakarta, Indonesia, Tuesday.

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