The Scotsman

Second flight recorder found by firefighte­rs after China plane crash

- By KEN MORITSUGU

The second "black box" from a crashed China Eastern Boeing 737-800 has been found.

This has raised hopes that light might shed on why the passenger plane nosedived into a remote mountainou­s area in southern China last week, killing all 132 people on board.

Firefighte­rs taking part in the search found the flight data recorder on a mountain slope approximat­ely 130 feet from the point of impact and five feet undergroun­d, according to state media.

Experts confirmed it was the second black box.

The impact of the crash created a 65-foot deep pit in the side of the mountain and scattered debris widely.

Searchers had been looking for the data recorder after finding the cockpit voice recorder four days ago. The two black boxes should help investigat­ors determine what caused the plane to plummet from 29,000 feet about one hour into the flight and shortly before it would have begun its descent.

The remote setting and rainy and muddy conditions have complicate­d the search for the black boxes and wreckage.

Images posted by CGTN, the internatio­nal arm of CCTV, showed an official holding an orange cylindrica­l object on site with the words "Flight Recorder" and "Do Not Open" written on it. It appeared slightly dented but intact.

The search was paused for a three-minute silence for the 123 passengers and nine crew members. Emergency workers took off their helmets and police and soldiers their caps. Standing in groups in formation, they bowed their heads as sirens blared.

Flight MU5735 crashed on Monday while flying from the city of Kunming in southeaste­rn China to Guangzhou, a major city and export manufactur­ing hub near Hong Kong.

An air traffic controller tried to contact the pilots several times after seeing the plane's altitude drop sharply but received no reply, officials have said.

The cockpit voice recorder, also an orange cylinder, was found on Wednesday. It has been sent to a Beijing lab for examinatio­n and analysis, and the flight data recorder was also being sent to the Chinese capital for decoding.

Search teams have been combing the site outside the city of Wuzhou for days with shovels and other hand tools. Constructi­on excavators have been brought in to remove earth and clear wider passage ways to the site, and pumps are being used to drain collected water from the rain.

Officials announced late on Saturday that there were no survivors. DNA analysis has confirmed the identities of 120 of the people on board, they said. Searchers have found ID and bank cards belonging to the victims.

Boeing said in a statement that a technical team is supporting the US national transporta­tion safety board and the civil aviation administra­tion of China, which will lead the investigat­ion into the crash.

China Eastern, one of China's four major airlines, and its subsidiari­es have grounded all of their Boeing 737-800s, a total of 223 aircraft.

The carrier said the grounding was a precaution, not a sign of any problem with the planes.

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