BFF-34 Indonesia to probe Lion Air after deadly plane crash

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Indonesia to probe Lion Air after deadly plane crash

JAKARTA, Nov 5, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Indonesia is to launch a “special audit”
of Lion Air’s operations in the wake of last week’s deadly crash that killed
189 people, the government said Monday.

The budget carrier has been a regular target of complaints about poor
service, unreliable scheduling and safety issues, including a fatal 2004
crash.

That safety record has been under the microscope since a new Boeing 737-Max
8 plunged into the Java Sea just 12 minutes after taking off from Jakarta
last Monday.

“We will…conduct a special audit of the crews’ qualifications and staff
communication,” transportation minister Budi Karya Sumadi told reporters
Monday.

“This is a preventative measure…(The accident) is a very expensive lesson
for us.”

Civil Aviation authorities in the United States and Europe were also being
consulted for their help in the probe, he added.

Meanwhile, authorities have extended their search as they collect more body
parts and shattered debris from the spot where the plane crashed during a
routine one-hour flight from Jakarta to Pangkal Pinang.

Scores of body bags filled with remains have been collected and sent for
DNA testing, but so far just 14 people have been identified.

Search and rescue agency head Muhammad Syaugi tearfully apologised Monday
as relatives’ clamour for answers grew louder, with accusations that the pace
of recovery is lagging.

“We are not perfect human beings,” he said, sobbing. “We have flaws, but we
doing the best we can.”

The Lion Air investigation comes after Indonesia’s government ordered an
inspection of all Boeing 737 Max 8 planes in the country.

All were found to be airworthy although two required repairs for “minor”
problems.

The ministry had previously removed several Lion Air executives and
technicians, saying they were needed to help authorities in the
investigation.

A week after the disaster, there is still no answer as to what caused the
crash.

Divers have pulled the plane’s flight data recorder from the water, but are
still hunting for the cockpit voice recorder — a key device that could
provide clues to what caused the almost brand-new plane to plunge into the
sea.

Lion Air’s admission that the doomed jet had a technical issue on a
previous flight — and the captain’s request to turn back to the airport
minutes before its fatal dive — have raised questions about whether it had
faults specific to one of the world’s newest and most advanced commercial
passenger planes.

But the accident has also resurrected concerns about Indonesia’s poor air
safety record, which until recently saw its carriers facing years-long bans
from entering European Union and US airspace.

BSS/AFP/IJ/1532 hrs