BFF-09 Indonesian Lion Air plane crashes into sea with 188 passengers, crew

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INDONESIA-ACCIDENT-AIRCRAFT

Indonesian Lion Air plane crashes into sea with 188 passengers, crew

JAKARTA, Oct 29, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – An Indonesian Lion Air plane carrying
188 passengers and crew crashed into the sea Monday, officials said, moments
after it had asked to be allowed to return to Jakarta.

The jet vanished from radar just 13 minutes after taking off from the
Indonesian capital, plunging into the ocean.

Search and Rescue Agency spokesman Yusuf Latif said authorities were still
searching for the remains of the plane, which lost contact with air traffic
control around 6.30 am (2330 GMT), en route to Pangkal Pinang on the island
of Bangka.

“The plane crashed into water about 30 to 40 metres deep,” he told AFP.

Sindu Rahayu, directorate general of Civil Aviation at the transport
ministry, said the aircraft was carrying 178 adult passengers, one child and
two babies, with two pilots and five flight attendants.

“The plane had requested to return to base before finally disappearing from
the radar,” he added in a statement.

The Flightradar website tracked the plane — which it said was a Boeing 737
— and showed it looping south on take-off and then heading north before the
flight path ended abruptly over the Java Sea, not far from the coast.

– Poor safety record –

Indonesia relies heavily on air transport to connect its thousands of
islands but has a poor aviation safety record and has suffered several fatal
crashes in recent years.

A 12-year-old boy was the sole survivor of a plane crash that killed eight
people in mountainous eastern Indonesia in August.

In August 2015, a commercial passenger aircraft operated by Indonesian
carrier Trigana crashed in Papua due to bad weather, killing all 54 people on
board.

In 2014, an AirAsia plane crashed with the loss of 162 lives.

Indonesian investigators’ final report showed a chronically faulty
component in a rudder control system, poor maintenance and the pilots’
inadequate response were major factors in what was supposed to be a routine
flight from the Indonesian city of Surabaya to Singapore.

Lion Air, a low-cost airline, has been involved in a number of incidents.

Last year one of its Boeing jets collided with a Wings Air plane as it
landed at Kualanamu airport on the island of Sumatra, although no one was
injured.

In May 2016, two Lion Air planes collided at Jakarta’s Soekarno-Hatta
airport, while a month earlier a plane operated by Batik Air — part of the
Lion Group — clipped a TransNusa plane.

In 2013 a Lion Air jet with a rookie pilot at the controls undershot the
runway and crashed into the sea in Bali, splitting the plane in two. Several
people were injured in the crash, although no one was killed.

Indonesia’s air travel industry is booming, with the number of domestic
passengers growing significantly over the past decade, but it has acquired a
reputation for poor regulation.

Last year the Indonesian air traffic controllers association revealed that
the rate of take-off and landings in Jakarta allowed by state-run air
navigation company AirNav was more than the airport could handle, increasing
the chance of accidents.

The country’s carriers have in the past faced years-long bans from entering
European Union and US airspace over their safety records.

BSS/AFP/MSY/1038 hrs