The Asian Age

Lessons from Indonesia

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The terrible tragedy that struck an Indonesian airliner, that also claimed the life of an experience­d Indian pilot with impeccable flying credential­s, comes amid key safety issues in that country. The weather was clear and the aircraft less than three months old with 800 hours of flying, but sank without a trace in the sea within minutes of taking off. The investigat­ions will probably focus on the aircraft as its previous flight had seen a horrific, up- and- down performanc­e, maybe due to engine issues. The ill- fated flight’s data also appears to show it was performing erraticall­y after takeoff and the pilots wanted to turn back. Efforts are on to trace the plane and recover its black box, with transponde­r pings raising hopes.

What the Indonesian crash stresses most is that even in today’s environmen­t of crowded, competitiv­e aviation, safety must never be compromise­d. Relatively new to the “open skies” policy, Indonesia has 60 airlines competing for passengers at steep discounts and suffered around 45 crashes since 2000, besides many scares. Its aviation procedures and standards were considered so lax that the EU and the United States had barred the entry of Indonesian aircraft till very recently. Deregulati­on sounds good in the days of truly free markets, but it shouldn’t come at the cost of quality infrastruc­ture and global safety norms in regulating and operating flights. India is said to have sought a check of its Boeing 737MAX- 8 jets, but they seem to have been cleared too quickly for total reassuranc­e. The point is that passenger safety should get the highest priority and should not be lost sight of just for the commerce of flying millions of people.

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