Times of Suriname

Six bodies from Lion Air crash found in sea off Jakarta, Indonesia

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JAKARTA Rescue workers have retrieved six bodies from the site where an Indonesian passenger plane crashed into the sea close to the capital Jakarta on Monday 13 minutes after takeoff. The Lion Air flight JT 610 had been carrying 189 people, including one child and two infants, when it disappeare­d from radar during a short flight from Jakarta to Pangkal Pinang on the Indonesian island of Bangka, according to Basarnas, Indonesia’s national search and rescue agency. The plane, a new Boeing 737 MAX 8, was carrying 181 passengers, as well as six cabin crew members and two pilots. The recovered bodies have been taken to a hospital in east Jakarta, said Bambang Suryo Aji, director of operations for Basarnas.

Aji told a news conference that rescue workers had found debris appearing to be the plane’s tail. The main wreckage had still not been located. Search and rescue teams were working against high waves and strong currents, in an area spanning 150 nautical miles, added Aji. Underwater robots were being used in the search effort. The flight made a request to air traffic control to return to base about 12 miles out from takeoff, but did not indicate there was any emergency, Yohanes Sirait, spokesman for AirNav Indonesia, the agency that oversees air traffic navigation, told CNN. The spokesman added that the aircraft would have been given priority landing upon such a request, but that air traffic controller­s lost contact with the plane shortly after. The plane had not turned back, according to the radar.

The plane had reported problems the night before on a flight from Denpasar to Jakarta, Lion Air’s CEO Edward Sirait told local media TV1 in an interview. Sirait said engineers had checked and repaired the problem and reported that the plane was ready to fly. The Lion Air CEO added that the carrier was preparing two aircraft to fly victims’ family members from Pangkal Pinang to Jakarta. The captain of the plane, Bhavye Suneja, an Indian national, had more than 6,000 flight hours, and his copilot, named Harvino, had logged more than 5,000, according to a statement posted by Lion Air.

Speaking to reporters at the carrier’s headquarte­rs in Jakarta, Sirait said the plane was “airworthy” and that the pilot had carried out all preflight inspection­s according to procedure. He added that the pilots had passed mandatory drug screening. (CNN)

 ??  ?? Members of a rescue team line up body bags at the port in Tanjung Priok, North Jakarta. Rescue workers have retrieved six bodies from the site where the Lion Air flight JT 610 reportedly crashed. (Photo: Getty Images)
Members of a rescue team line up body bags at the port in Tanjung Priok, North Jakarta. Rescue workers have retrieved six bodies from the site where the Lion Air flight JT 610 reportedly crashed. (Photo: Getty Images)

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