Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Jet’s recorder, more dead found in sea

-

JAKARTA, Indonesia — Navy divers have located the cockpit voice recorder of a Lion Air jet that crashed into the Java Sea in October, Indonesian officials said today, in a possible boost to the accident investigat­ion.

Ridwan Djamaluddi­n, a deputy maritime minister, told reporters that remains of some of the 189 people who died in the crash were also discovered at the seabed location.

“We got confirmati­on this morning from the National Transporta­tion Safety Committee’s chairman,” he said.

A spokesman for the Indonesian navy’s western fleet, Lt. Col. Agung Nugroho, said divers using high-tech equipment found the voice recorder beneath 26 feet of seabed mud. The plane crashed in waters 98 feet deep.

The 2-month-old Boeing 737 MAX 8 jet plunged into the Java Sea just minutes after taking off from Jakarta on Oct. 29, killing everyone on board.

The cockpit data recorder was recovered within days of the crash and showed that the jet’s airspeed indicator had malfunctio­ned on its last four flights.

If the voice recorder is undamaged, it could provide valuable additional informatio­n to investigat­ors.

The Lion Air crash was the worst airline disaster in Indonesia since 1997, when 234 people died on a Garuda flight near Medan. In December 2014, an AirAsia flight from Surabaya to Singapore plunged into the sea, killing all 162 on board.

Lion Air is one of Indonesia’s youngest airlines but has grown rapidly, flying to dozens of domestic and internatio­nal destinatio­ns. It has been expanding aggressive­ly in Southeast Asia, a fast-growing region of more than 600 million people.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States