Business Day

No hope for Lion Air survivors

Search continues for passengers aboard Boeing-737 MAX aircraft

- Agency Staff /AFP

All 189 passengers and crew aboard a crashed Indonesian Lion Air jet were likely killed in the accident, rescue officials said on Monday, as they announced they had found human remains and would continue the grim search through the night.

The Boeing-737 MAX, which went into service just months ago, vanished from radar 13 minutes after taking off from Jakarta, plunging into the Java Sea moments after it had asked to return to the Indonesian capital. Websites that display flight data showed the aircraft speeding up as it suddenly lost altitude in the minutes before it disappeare­d, with authoritie­s saying witnesses saw the jet plunge into the water.

“My prediction is that nobody survived because the victims that we found, their bodies were no longer intact and it’s been hours so it is likely 189 people have died,” search and rescue agency operationa­l director Bambang Suryo Aji said.

Some 40 divers are part of about 150 personnel at the scene, authoritie­s said, with the plane wreckage some 30m40m deep in the water.

Video footage apparently filmed at the scene of the crash showed a slick of fuel on the surface of the water and what appeared to be an emergency slide and bits of wreckage bearing Lion Air’s logo.

“It’s really a mystery what could have happened,” said Greg Waldron, Asia managing editor of industry publicatio­n Flightglob­al. “Hopefully they will be able to locate the [cockpit] voice data recorders.”

The aeroplane had been en route to Pangkal Pinang city, a jumping-off point for tourists on nearby Belitung island.

One Italian national was aboard the aircraft that was flown by an Indian pilot, the transporta­tion ministry said.

Images filmed at Pangkal Pinang’s main airport showed families of passengers crying and hugging one another, with some calling out to god.

“This morning he called asking about our youngest son,” said a sobbing Ermayati, referring to her husband Muhammed Syafii, who was on board.

At Jakarta’s main airport, Zainal Abidin waited desperatel­y for news about his daughter. “If my daughter is dead, I just wish she’ll be buried properly.”

Indonesia’s National Transporta­tion Safety Committee (NTSC) said there were 178 adult passengers, one child, two infants, two pilots and six cabin crew on board flight JT 610. About 20 finance ministry employees were on the aircraft, including six colleagues of Sony Setiawan, who missed check-in for a flight he took weekly due to bad traffic. “I know my friends were on that flight,” he said.

Setiawan said he was only informed about his lucky escape after he arrived in Pangkal Pinang on another flight. “My family was in shock and my mother cried, but I told them I was safe, so I’m grateful.”

Lion Air said the plane had only gone into service in August.

The pilot and co-pilot had more than 11,000 hours of flying time between them and had recent medical check-ups and drug testing, it said.

Lion Air chief Edward Sirait said the plane had an unspecifie­d technical issue fixed in Bali before it was flown back to Jakarta. “Engineers in Jakarta received notes and did another repair before it took off” on Monday, he said.

US-based Boeing said it was “deeply saddened” by news of the crash.

Boeing, just days out from its first commercial delivery of the 737 MAX in May 2017, reportedly suspended the aircraft’s release due to an engine issue, according to airline safety and product review site airlinerat­ings.com.

 ?? /AFP ?? Watery graves: Debris from the Lion Air accident floats in the Java Sea on Monday.
/AFP Watery graves: Debris from the Lion Air accident floats in the Java Sea on Monday.

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