Imperial Valley Press

Divers recover crashed Indonesian plane’s data recorder

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JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Indonesian navy divers searching the ocean floor on Tuesday recovered the flight data recorder from a Sriwijaya Air jet that crashed into the Java Sea with 62 people on board.

The device is expected to help investigat­ors determine what caused the Boeing 737-500 to nosedive into the ocean in heavy rain shortly after taking o from Jakarta on Saturday.

The 26-year-old jet had been out of service for almost nine months because of flight cutbacks caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic, o cials said. It resumed commercial flights last month.

TV stations showed divers on an inflatable raft with a large white container containing the flight data recorder heading to a Jakarta port.

Military chief Air Chief Marshal Hadi Tjahjanto said the plane’s other “black box,” the cockpit voice recorder, was likely to be found soon because its beacon was being emitted in the same area.

The devices were buried in seabed mud under tons of sharp objects in the plane’s wreckage, navy

Chief Adm. Yudo Margono said. He said at least 160 divers were deployed Tuesday in the search.

More than 3,600 rescue personnel, 13 helicopter­s, 54 large ships and 20 small boats are searching the area just north of Jakarta where Flight 182 crashed and have found parts of the plane and human remains in the water at a depth of 23 meters (75 feet).

So far, the searchers have sent 74 body bags containing human remains to police identifica­tion experts who on Monday said they had identified their first victim, 29-year-old flight attendant Okky Bisma.

His wife, Aldha Refa, who is also a flight attendant for Sriwijaya Air, shared her grief in a series of posts on social media.

“My husband is a loving, devout and super kind man,” she wrote on Instagram. “Heaven is your place, dear ... be peaceful there.”

Anguished family members have been providing samples for DNA tests, and the National Police disaster victim identifica­tion unit said it has identified three more victims, including the co-pilot.

The chairman of Indonesia’s National Transporta­tion Safety Committee, Soerjanto Tjahjono, ruled out a possible midair breakup after seeing the condition of the wreckage found by searchers. He said the jet was intact until it struck the water, concentrat­ing the debris field, rather than spreading it out over a large area as would be seen with a midair event.

Tjahjono said the plane continued to send altitude data until it descended to 250 feet (75 meters) above the water’s surface.

As in many countries, Indonesia’s aviation industry has been badly hit by the pandemic, with travel restrictio­ns and sharp declines in passengers. According to Transporta­tion Ministry data, the jet didn’t fly from March 23 to Dec. 19.

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administra­tion sent an airworthin­ess directive requiring operators of various Boeing 737 aircraft models, including the 737500, to carry out engine checks before they can be flown again after being out of service, Director General of Air Transporta­tion Novie Riyanto said in a statement.

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