The Citizen (KZN)

Aircraft wreckage ‘located’

SIGNS OF FUSELAGE, BLACK BOXES PICKED UP BY SONAR

-

Indonesian search and rescue workers believe they have found the fuselage of a Lion Air passenger jet that crashed with 189 people on board, and are also trying to confirm the origin of an underwater “ping” signal, officials said yesterday.

Ground staff lost touch with flight JT610 of Indonesian budget airline Lion Air 13 minutes after the Boeing 737 MAX 8 took off early on Monday from Jakarta, on its way to the tin-mining town of Pangkal Pinang. There were no survivors.

Indonesia’s military chief said he believed the plane had been located, and a transport safety official said divers would be sent to confirm the origin of a “ping” signal picked up by a search and rescue team late on Tuesday. “We strongly believe that we have found a part of the fuselage,” armed forces chief Hadi Tjahjanto told broadcaste­r TV One.

Speaking on board the navy ship KRI Rigel, navy official Colonel Haris Djoko Nugroho told broadcaste­r TV One that a 22-metre-long object had been found in waters about 32-metres deep, and a sonar was being used to identify it. Divers would also be sent to check, he said.

The Rigel has been searching in an area about five nautical miles from the site where the aircraft lost contact. The accident is the first to be reported involving the widely sold Boeing 737 MAX, an updated, more fuel-efficient version of the single-aisle jet. The cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder should help explain why the almost-new jet went down minutes after take-off.

Amid media speculatio­n over the airworthin­ess of the aircraft, the transport minister suspended Lion Air’s technical director and several technician­s. The suspended technician­s “issued the recommenda­tions for that flight”, the ministry said. A national transport safety panel official

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa