The Citizen (KZN)

Memorial for jet crash victims

- Jakarta

– One year on from the Lion Air plane crash that killed 189 people, relatives and friends of victims held prayer vigils and cast flower petals into the Java Sea at the site where the budget carrier’s Boeing 737 MAX jet went down beneath the waves.

The almost new Boeing aircraft had been flying from Jakarta to the town of Pangkal Pinang, on the Bangka-Belitung islands off Sumatra, when it crashed, just minutes after take-off.

Yesterday’s commemorat­ion came days after Indonesian investigat­ors issued a final report into the disaster, setting out Boeing’s failure to identify risks in the design of cockpit software and recommendi­ng better training for Lion Air’s pilots.

Some members of victims’ families were taken by boat to the crash site off the West Java town of Karawang to throw petals into the sea, an act of tribute relatives also performed on November 8 last year.

In Pangkal Pinang, employees at the town’s tax office held special prayers for seven of their colleagues who died in the crash, according to tax office spokespers­on.

A tribute video made by friends and colleagues included a slide show with photos of the victims in happier times.

“When the loved ones are gone, only memories remain. These memories will remain in our hearts,” read a message near the end of the video.

The fatal crash, followed within five months by another at Ethiopian Airlines, led to a global grounding of the Boeing 737 MAX and a crisis for the world’s biggest plane maker, which last week ousted its commercial airplanes chief.

Indonesian regulators criticised the design of the 737 MAX’s antistall system, known as MCAS, which automatica­lly pushed the plane’s nose down, leaving pilots fighting for control.

Investigat­ors attributed the Lion Air crash to a number of factors, including design flaws and inadequate regulatory oversight, as well as errors by Lion Air pilots and engineers.

In a statement placed in Indonesian newspapers yesterday, Boeing president and chief executive Dennis Muilenburg said: “We are deeply sorry and grieve for the loss of life.”

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