The Guardian (Charlottetown)

PLANE CRASH IN INDONESIA KILLS 189

Official says no survivors are likely

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Rescuers in inflatable boats retrieved human remains, pieces of aircraft and personal belongings from the Java Sea on Monday after a new-generation Boeing jet operated by an Indonesian budget airline crashed minutes after takeoff, killing all 189 people on board.

Distraught family members struggled to comprehend the sudden loss of loved ones in the crash of the 2-month-old Lion Air plane with experience­d pilots in fine weather.

They gathered at crisis centres set up by the authoritie­s at airports, hoping desperatel­y for a miracle. But a top search official, citing the condition of the remains recovered, said no survivors are expected.

The disaster is a setback for Indonesia’s airline industry, which just emerged from decadelong bans by the European Union and the U.S. over safety concerns.

President Joko Widodo ordered an investigat­ion and urged Indonesian­s to “keep on praying.”

The crash of the Boeing 737 Max 8 is the latest in a series of tragedies that have struck Indonesia this year, including earthquake­s and a tsunami that killed several thousand people.

An air transport official, Novie Riyanto, said the flight was cleared to return to Jakarta after the pilot made a “return to base” request two to three minutes after taking off.

It plunged into the sea about 10 minutes later.

Weather conditions were normal but the plane, which Lion Air received in August, had experience­d an unspecifie­d technical issue on its previous flight.

Relatives and friends wept, prayed and hugged each other as they waited at Jakarta’s airport and at Pangkal Pinang’s airport on Bangka island off Sumatra where the flight was headed. Some including Indonesian Finance Minister Sri Mulyani headed to the search and rescue agency’s headquarte­rs in Jakarta for informatio­n.

About 20 ministry staff were on the flight.

Latief Nurbana said he and his wife Yeti Eka Sumiati stayed up late Sunday talking to their 24-year-old son Lutfi Nuramdani, squeezing every moment they could from his weekend visit to Jakarta to catch up on his life in Pangkal Pinang.

Nurbana said they talked until falling asleep and Sumiati woke up early to take their son, a post office worker, to the airport.

“Last night, we were chatting together about his wife who is now seven months’ pregnant, his plans and his dreams with his own small family until we fell asleep,” he said as his wife wept and clung to him.

“Now he’s gone. We can’t believe that he left us this way, we can’t believe that his plane crashed. That’s something we only see on TV news, now it happened to my son,” Nurbana said.

“We want to see his body, his face, his remains.”

More than 300 people including soldiers, police and fishermen are involved in the grim search, retrieving aircraft debris and personal items.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? A member of Indonesian Search and Rescue Agency inspects debris recovered from near waters where a Lion Air passenger jet crashed off Tanjung Priok Port in Jakarta Monday.
AP PHOTO A member of Indonesian Search and Rescue Agency inspects debris recovered from near waters where a Lion Air passenger jet crashed off Tanjung Priok Port in Jakarta Monday.

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