Tuesday 27 January 2015

Air asia crashed recovery effort is sttoped

AirAsia QZ8501: Indonesia's military reportedly pulls out of recovery effort for crashed jet

Indonesia's military has reportedly withdrawn from search and recovery efforts a month after an AirAsia passenger jet crashed into the sea killing all 162 people on board, navy officials say.
The Airbus A320 vanished from radar screens during bad weather on December 28, less than half way into a two-hour flight from Surabaya, Indonesia's second-biggest city, to Singapore. There were no survivors.
A multinational search and recovery operation found 70 bodies in the Java Sea and had hoped to find more after locating the fuselage of the plane.
But days of rough weather and poor underwater visibility hampered navy divers' efforts.
"The operation has been ongoing for 30 days so the joint team has been pulled out," Rear Admiral Widodo, head of the navy's western fleet, told reporters in Pangkalan Bun, the base for the search effort.
"We apologise to the families of the victims, we tried our best to look for the missing victims."
The civilian National Search and Rescue Agency said it may press on with the search for bodies.
But its efforts will be hampered by the loss of the military's large vessels and heavy recovery equipment.
"Perhaps we will do regular operations with help from fishermen and communities near the coast to find other victims," Tatang Zaenuddin, the agency's deputy of operations, said.
Divers have recovered both the cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder from the sea floor.
Imam Sampurno, who lost four family members on Flight QZ8501, none of whom has been found, said he was resigned to their fate.
"We can only hope they will continue to search, but if it's stopped there is nothing I can do about it," he said.
"I am resigned to it."

Preliminary report will not include analysis of flight recorders

Indonesia's National Transportation Safety Committee will submit its initial findings on the crash this week to the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO).
The preliminary report, which the ICAO requires within 30 days of an accident, will include "information on the plane, the number of passengers and other information like that", NTSC investigator Suryanto said.
But it will not include analysis of the two flight recorders.
Data from radar and the aircraft's two "black box" flight recorders will provide investigators with a clearer picture of what occurred during the final minutes of the flight.
But investigators said they had yet to start their analysis as they had been compiling other data for the inquiry.
Transport Minister Ignasius Jonan told a parliamentary hearing last week that, based on radar data, the plane had climbed faster than normal in its final minutes, and then stalled.
Investigators have found no evidence of foul play.
The NTSC will hold an annual media conference this week on its work over the past year but it is not expected to discuss details of its investigation of the AirAsia crash, said NTSC head Tatang Kurniadi.
The final report on the crash, which is expected to be made public, must be filed within a year.

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