|
Multinational search
teams hunted Monday for any sign of an AirAsia plane missing off Indonesia with
162 people on board, but one top official warned it was likely at the bottom of
the sea. Australia, Singapore and Malaysia deployed planes and ships to assist
in the search as anguished relatives anxiously waited for news of their loved
ones more than a day after Flight QZ8501 disappeared over the Java Sea.
Prominent South East Asian businessman Fernandes, the
owner of English football club Queens Park Rangers, is the CEO of AirAsia. He
described the missing plane as his 'worst nightmare' on Twitter
|
AFP reports the Airbus
A320-200 lost contact en route from Surabaya in Indonesia's east Java to
Singapore on Sunday after the crew requested a change of flight plan due to
stormy weather, in the third crisis for a Malaysian carrier this year.
"Based on the
coordinates given to us and evaluation that the estimated crash position is in
the sea, the hypothesis is the plane is at the bottom of the sea,"
National Search and Rescue Agency chief Bambang Soelistyo told journalists.
"That's the preliminary
suspicion and it can develop based on the evaluation of the result of our
search," he said.
Currently search teams
are scouring an area where the sea is 40-50 metres (130-160 feet) deep, he
said, adding that Indonesia was coordinating with other countries to access any
equipment that may be needed to scour the sea bed.
"Due to the lack of
technology that we have, I have coordinated with our foreign minister so we
will borrow from other countries which have offered. They are the UK, France
and US," he said.
"It is not easy to
look for something underwater.... That will not break our spirit to continue
searching, no way."
- Hoping for news -
Distraught relatives
spent the night in Surabaya hoping for news of their loved ones as
international teams expanded their search area for the lost plane.
Vicky said he had not
given up hope of finding his two siblings who were on the flight, and
criticised an airline official who said he shared the families'
"sadness" at the plane's disappearance.
"What he said was
not appropriate at all. If they were sad it means there's death. But the flight
has not been found yet," he told AFP.
AirAsia said 155 of those
on board flight QZ8501 were Indonesian, with three South Koreans and one person
each from Singapore, Malaysia, Britain and France. The Frenchman was the
co-pilot.
Air traffic controllers
lost contact with the twin-engine aircraft around an hour after it left
Surabaya's Juanda international airport at about 5:35 am (2235 GMT Saturday).
Shortly before
disappearing, the pilot asked to ascend by 6,000 feet to 38,000 feet to avoid
heavy clouds, according to an Indonesian transport ministry official.
"But their request
to fly to 38,000 feet from 32,000 feet could not be approved at that time due
to traffic, there was a flight above, and five minutes later the flight
disappeared from radar," Djoko Murjatmodjo told a press conference Sunday.
The search is focused on
waters around the islands of Bangka and Belitung in the Java Sea, across from
Kalimantan on Borneo island, but the army has also been asked to carry out
ground searches, including in mountainous areas.
Soelistyo said the search
area had been expanded northwards in the waters between Sumatra and Kalimantan.
"We added three
sectors to the north of the (four) search areas we had yesterday," he
said.
"We are looking
around Bangka Belitung islands, Singkep, Karimata strait, as well as the land
area west of West Kalimantan."
Captain Iriyanto, pilot of the airline's missing
flight QZ8501, in a picture posted on social media by his daughter Angela
Ranastianis. His nephew has said Capt Irianto as 'a very caring person'
|
A Royal Australian Air
Force AP-3C Orion equipped with sophisticated search equipment took off from the
northern Australian city of Darwin while Singapore said it was deploying two
C-130 aircraft in addition to naval ships already dispatched.
- 'Praying for safety' -
The missing plane was
operated by AirAsia Indonesia, a unit of Malaysian-based AirAsia, which
dominates Southeast Asia's booming low-cost airline market.
Indonesia said it would
review the company's operations.
"We will do a ground
check as well as a review of AirAsia's operations in Indonesia to ensure that
all of its activities are better in the future," Transport Minister
Ignasius Jonan told reporters.
Indonesia, a vast
archipelago with poor land transport infrastructure, has seen explosive growth
in low-cost air travel over recent years.
But the air industry has
been blighted by poor safety standards in an area that also experiences extreme
weather.
AirAsia, which has never
suffered a fatal accident, said the missing jet last underwent maintenance on
November 16.
Its shares fell 12
percent at the open in Kuala Lumpur but recovered slightly to sit at 2.71
ringgit, down 7.82 percent.
The plane's disappearance
comes at the end of a disastrous year for Malaysian aviation.
|
Malaysia Airlines Flight
MH370 disappeared while flying from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing in March with 239
passengers and crew, and in July flight MH17 was shot down over troubled
Ukraine killing all 298 on board.
Indonesia's President Joko
Widodo said his nation was "praying for the safety" of those onboard.
Vice President Jusuf Kalla was due to visit Surabaya Monday afternoon to meet
relatives of those missing.
No comments:
Post a Comment