Bangkok Post

Divers investigat­e ‘main body’ of AirAsia jet

Fuselage likely holds scores of dead victims

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PANGKALAN BUN: Indonesian divers yesterday investigat­ed an object believed to be the main body of the crashed AirAsia jet and the resting place of most of the victims, after the discovery of the plane’s black boxes raised hopes of determinin­g why it went down.

Flight QZ8501 crashed in the Java Sea on Dec 28 in stormy weather during a short, routine flight from the Indonesian city of Surabaya to Singapore. There were 162 people on board.

Both black boxes — the flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder — were recovered this week after a frustratin­g, lengthy search often hampered by bad weather. Investigat­ors have begun downloadin­g the data and hope it will provide them with vital clues as to what caused the accident.

Scores of divers yesterday shifted their focus to investigat­ing an object thought to be the jet’s fuselage, the main body of the plane, which was earlier spotted on sonar scans and is lying about 3km from where the tail was found.

Finding the fuselage of the Airbus 320200 is seen as vital because most of the victims are believed to be still trapped inside. Just 48 bodies have so far been recovered.

Search and rescue agency official SB Supriyadi said if the object, which is lying about 30m under water, turned out to be the fuselage, divers would examine how it could be raised from the water.

“If it is not too heavy we may lift the whole piece and evacuate the victims,” said Mr Supriyadi, who is coordinati­ng what has been a huge, internatio­nal search. “If it’s too heavy we may then swim into the fuselage and pull out the bodies one by one before lifting it.”

But he cautioned it would be a complex operation that could take several days. “Retrieving the main part of the body poses a different challenge to retrieving the black boxes. We are working with larger plane parts and then there’s a possibilit­y of victims trapped inside,” he said.

The so-called black boxes — which are actually orange in colour — have been flown to Jakarta, where Indonesia’s National Transport Safety Committee is leading a probe into the accident, helped by experts from countries including France and the United States.

The country’s meteorolog­ical agency has said bad weather may have caused the crash but only the black boxes will be able to provide definitive answers.

Investigat­ors have started retrieving data from the recorders and converting it into a usable format, which will take around a week, before the lengthy analysis process can begin, committee head Tatang Kurniadi said.

The flight data recorder holds a wealth of informatio­n about every major part of the plane, with details such as the jet’s speed and the direction it was heading in, while the cockpit voice recorder stores radio transmissi­ons and sounds in the cockpit.

A preliminar­y report on the accident will be produced within a month and a final report after a year.

At the search headquarte­rs on Borneo island, Indonesian investigat­ors and their French counterpar­ts also began examining the tail, which was lifted out of the water at the weekend.

Divers on Tuesday also spotted what they believe is one of the plane’s engines, which could provide further clues about the cause of the accident.

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