The Borneo Post

Indonesia to send investigat­ors to Ethiopia to aid crash probes

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JAKARTA: Indonesia will send two investigat­ors to Ethiopia to assist in a probe and exchange data on two fatal crashes of Boeing 737 MAX jets since October, the head of the country’s air safety agency told Reuters yesterday.

Boeing’s top-selling airplane has been grounded worldwide since a March 10 disaster in Ethiopia killed 157 people, five months after a Lion Air 737 MAX crashed in Indonesia, killing 189 people on board.

Indonesian investigat­ors will travel to the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa on April 15, said Soerjanto Tjahjono, head of the National Transporta­tion Safety Committee ( KNKT).

“They will help in assisting Ethiopia. We will study the data to assess whether there are similariti­es or whether there is any new informatio­n from the accident,” Tjahjono said by telephone.

A preliminar­y report on the Ethiopian Airlines’ crash showed on Thursday that the doomed jet travelled at an excessive speed and was forced downwards by a wrongly- triggered automation system as pilots wrestled to regain control.

Tjahjono said it was too early to draw any conclusion­s from the Ethiopian report or determine any links between the crashes because it contained factual data without analysis.

“We have already observed some similariti­es ... but we cannot determine them exactly until after our investigat­ors go to Ethiopia when we will conduct a joint investigat­ion,” he said.

The two Indonesian investigat­ors would sign an agreement on their role under an Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organisati­on ( ICAO) protocol, he said.

A preliminar­y report into the crash of the Lion Air 737 MAX in Indonesia suggested pilots lost control after grappling with the MCAS software, a new automated anti-stall feature that repeatedly lowered the nose based on a faulty sensor data. — Reuters

They will help in assisting Ethiopia. We will study the data to assess whether there are similariti­es or whether there is any new informatio­n from the accident. Soerjanto Tjahjono, head of National Transporta­tion Safety Committee

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