Black boxes of Indonesian jet located

Published January 11, 2021
INDONESIAN navy personnel on Sunday prepare for rescue of Sriwijaya Air flight which crashed into the sea, off the Jakarta coast, on Saturday. Security forces carry pieces of debris recovered from the crash site. A woman cries as she shows the photo of her daughter who was on board the ill-fated flight.—Reuters / AFP
INDONESIAN navy personnel on Sunday prepare for rescue of Sriwijaya Air flight which crashed into the sea, off the Jakarta coast, on Saturday. Security forces carry pieces of debris recovered from the crash site. A woman cries as she shows the photo of her daughter who was on board the ill-fated flight.—Reuters / AFP

JAKARTA: Indonesian authorities on Sunday located the black boxes of the Sriwijaya Air jet that crashed into the sea soon after taking off from the capital Jakarta, as human body parts and pieces of the plane were retrieved.

The Boeing 737-500 with 62 passengers and crew was headed on a domestic flight to Pontianak in West Kalimantan on Saturday before it disappeared from radar screens four minutes after take-off.

Indonesia National Transport Safety Committee (KNKT) chief Soerjanto Tjahjono said the locations of Flight SJ 182’s two black boxes had been identified.

“Hopefully, we can retrieve them soon,” said military chief Hadi Tjahjanto, without giving an estimated timeframe.

Search will continue into the night, a search and rescue official said, but efforts will be limited to sonar scans by boats.

There were no clues yet as to what caused the crash, the first major aircrash in Indonesia since 189 passengers and crew were killed in 2018 when a Lion Air Boeing 737 Max in 2018 also plunged into the Java Sea soon after take-off from Soekarno-Hatta International Airport.

Even before the latest crash, more people had died in air cashes in Indonesia than in any other country over the past decade, according to Aviation Safety Network’s database. Pieces of wreckage were brought to Jakarta port by rescuers, including the plane’s altimeter radar, emergency chute and a piece that was suspected to have come off of the bottom part of the plane’s tail, official Nurcahyo Utomo said.

Published in Dawn, January 11th, 2021

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