Muscat Daily

Indonesia recovers first black box from crashed plane

-

Officials place the flight data recorder inside a box after its recovery from the sea following the search and rescue operations off the coast for Sriwijaya Air flight SJ182, at Tanjung Priok port in Jakarta on Tuesday

Jakarta, Indonesia - A black box from the crashed Indonesian passenger jet has been recovered, officials said on Tuesday, a discovery that could offer critical clues to explaining why the plane with 62 people aboard slammed into the sea.

Divers just off the coast of the capital Jakarta hauled the jet’s flight data recorder to the surface, as the hunt continues for its cockpit voice recorder.

Indonesian transport minister Budi Karya Sumadi told a live television briefing that the box had been found - after the Sriwijaya Air Boeing 737-500 plunged about 10,000 feet (3,000m) in less than a minute before slamming into the Java Sea Saturday.

An AFP reporter on a navy ship said investigat­ors started picking up strong signals from an area where they were searching, with divers able to retrieve the box in about an hour from the wreckage-littered seabed.

So far authoritie­s have been unable to explain why the 26 year old plane crashed just four minutes after takeoff.

Black box data - which record informatio­n about the speed, altitude and direction of the plane as well as flight crew conversati­ons - helps explain nearly 90 per cent of all crashes, according to aviation experts.

Sumadi added officials believe the cockpit voice recorder is nearby that of flight data

BUDI KARYA SUMADI

recorder. “We strongly believe it’ll be found soon,” he said.

Some 3,600 personnel are taking part in the recovery effort, assisted by dozens of boats and helicopter­s flying over small islands off the capital’s coast.

The agency deployed a remotely operated vehicle to assist the divers.

‘Hoping for a miracle’

Scores of body bags filled with human remains were being taken to a police morgue where forensic investigat­ors hope to identify victims by matching fingerprin­ts or DNA with distraught relatives - some held out hope of survivors.

“We haven’t accepted it yet,” Inda Gunawan said of his brother Didik Gunardi who was on the doomed Saturday flight.

“Our family is still hoping for a miracle that he is still alive.”

Authoritie­s have identified flight attendant Okky Bisma (29) as the first confirmed victim after matching fingerprin­ts from a retrieved hand to those in a government identity database.

‘Rest in peace up there darling and wait for me... in heaven,’ Okky Bisma’s wife Aldha Refa wrote on Instagram.

There were ten children among the passengers on the half-full plane, which had experience­d pilots at the controls as it left Jakarta bound for Pontianak city on Borneo island on a 90minute flight.

A transport safety agency investigat­or has said the crew did not declare an emergency or report technical problems with the plane before its dive, and that the 737 was likely intact when it hit the water.

Search-and-rescue agency chief Soerjanto Tjahjono echoed that view earlier on Tuesday, pointing to the relatively small area where debris was scattered in about 23m of water.

“The size is consistent with the assumption that the plane didn’t explode before hitting the water,” he added.

“The damage seen on the retrieved fan blade also shows that the engine was still working [at the time of the crash].”

The crash probe was likely to take months, but a preliminar­y report was expected in 30 days.

 ?? (AFP) ??
(AFP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman