Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Newly-weds perish in plane crash

Indonesia says located black box recorders from wreckage

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JAKARTA, Indonesia (AFP) — Body parts, twisted wreckage and clothing were plucked from waters off the Indonesian capital yesterday after a passenger jet with 62 people aboard, including a newly-wed couple, crashed shortly after take-off a day earlier.

Authoritie­s have yet to say why the Sriwijaya Air Boeing 737-500 went into a steep dive about four minutes after it left Soekarno-hatta internatio­nal airport on Saturday afternoon.

But, yesterday, they said that they had pinpointed the location of its black boxes — cockpit voice and flight data recorders — that could be key to explaining why the plane slammed into the Java Sea off the sprawling city’s coast.

The search and rescue agency said it had collected body bags filled with human remains, as well as debris from the wreckage, in waters about 23 metres (75 feet) deep.

Passengers Ihsan Adhlan Hakim and his new bride Putri were headed to Pontianak, the city on Indonesia’s section of Borneo island which had been flight SJ182’S destinatio­n, about 90 minutes away.

“He called me to say that the flight was delayed due to bad weather,” Hakim’s brother Arwin said from Pontianak, where a wedding celebratio­n had been planned for the newly-weds.

“That was the last time I had contact with him.”

Beben Sofian, 59, and her husband Dan Razanah, 58, were also on the doomed flight.

“They took a selfie and sent it to their kids before taking off,” the couple’s nephew, Hendra, told AFP.

DNA from relatives will be compared with discovered remains for identifica­tion.

All 62 passengers and crew aboard the half-full flight were Indonesian. The count included 10 children.

Distraught relatives waited nervously for news at Pontianak airport.

“I have four family members on the flight — my wife and three children,” said a sobbing Yaman Zai.

“[My wife] sent me a picture of the baby... How could my heart not be torn into pieces?”

Data from Flightrada­r24 indicated that the airliner reached an altitude of nearly 11,000 feet (3,350 metres) before dropping suddenly to 250 feet. It then lost contact with air traffic control.

The transport minister said Saturday that the jet appeared to deviate from its intended course just before it disappeare­d from radar.

“The aircraft’s final moments are... very concerning as the speed that [it] was flying at that altitude was much lower than expected,” said Stephen Wright, professor of aircraft systems at Finland’s Tampere University.

“The last seconds saw the aircraft rapidly descend from 10,000 feet to the sea in a matter of 20 seconds, which implies a catastroph­ic event or something deliberate.”

But he added that the crash can “only be fully explained once the black boxes and wreckage can be properly analysed”.

Sriwijaya Air, which operates flights to destinatio­ns in Indonesia and other countries in Southeast Asia, has said little so far about the 26-year-old plane, which was previously flown by Us-based Continenta­l Airlines and United Airlines.

The Indonesian carrier has not recorded a fatal crash since it started operations in 2003, but this accident is the latest in a string of disasters for the country’s aviation sector.

The Southeast Asia nation’s aviation sector has long been marred by safety concerns, and its airlines were once banned from entering US and European airspace.

 ??  ?? PONTIANAK, Indonesia — Indonesian mother, Lena, cries as she shows the photo of her 16-year-old daughter Dinda Amelia, who was on-board the Sriwijaya Air flight SJY182 which crashed shortly after take-off on Saturday, as she gathers with other family members at Supadio airport in Pontianak on Borneo island yesterday.
PONTIANAK, Indonesia — Indonesian mother, Lena, cries as she shows the photo of her 16-year-old daughter Dinda Amelia, who was on-board the Sriwijaya Air flight SJY182 which crashed shortly after take-off on Saturday, as she gathers with other family members at Supadio airport in Pontianak on Borneo island yesterday.
 ?? (Photos: AFP) ?? JAKARTA, Indonesia — Indonesian Navy divers recover wreckage from Sriwijaya Air flight SJY182 during a search and rescue operation at sea near Lancang Island yesterday, after the Boeing 737-500 crashed shortly following its take off from Jakarta airport on January 9.
(Photos: AFP) JAKARTA, Indonesia — Indonesian Navy divers recover wreckage from Sriwijaya Air flight SJY182 during a search and rescue operation at sea near Lancang Island yesterday, after the Boeing 737-500 crashed shortly following its take off from Jakarta airport on January 9.

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