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Lion Air crash: Tragic find shocks distraught families

RESCUERS have made a grisly find as they search for the doomed Lion Air jet, leaving waiting families distraught.

Crashed Lion Air jet possibly found off Indonesia

RESCUERS in inflatable boats retrieved human remains, pieces of aircraft and personal belongings from the Java Sea yesterday after a new-generation Boeing jet operated by an Indonesian budget airline crashed minutes after takeoff, killing all 189 people on board.

Distraught family members struggled to comprehend how the Lion Air plane that was just two months old crashed in fine weather with experienced pilots.

They gathered at crisis centres set up by the authorities at airports, hoping desperately for a miracle.

But a top search official, citing the condition of the remains recovered, said no survivors were expected.

It’s understood no Australians were on board the doomed flight.

The disaster is a setback for Indonesia’s airline industry, which just emerged from decade-long bans by the European Union and the US over safety concerns.

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Discount carrier Lion Air was in the process of expanding aggressively in South-East Asia, a fast-growing region of more than 600 million people. Earlier this year it confirmed a deal to buy 50 new Boeing narrow-body aircraft worth an estimated $6.2 billion.

Indonesian President Joko Widodo has ordered an investigation into the crash, urging Indonesians to “keep on praying”.

The crash of the Boeing 737 Max 8 is the latest in a series of tragedies that have struck the country this year, including earthquakes and a tsunami which killed several thousand people.

An air transport official, Novie Riyanto, said the flight was cleared to return to Jakarta after the pilot made a “return to base” request two to three minutes after taking off.

It plunged into the sea about 10 minutes later.

Rescuers search for victims in the waters of Ujung Karawang, West Java. Picture: Achmad Ibrahim/AP
Rescuers search for victims in the waters of Ujung Karawang, West Java. Picture: Achmad Ibrahim/AP
Wreckage from the Lion Air flight. Picture: Ed Wray/Getty
Wreckage from the Lion Air flight. Picture: Ed Wray/Getty
A Lion Air plane, similar to the one that crashed yesterday. Picture: Adek Berry/AFP
A Lion Air plane, similar to the one that crashed yesterday. Picture: Adek Berry/AFP

Weather conditions were normal but the plane, which Lion Air received in August, had experienced an unspecified technical issue on its previous flight.

Relatives and friends wept, prayed and hugged each other as they waited at Jakarta’s airport and at Pangkal Pinang’s airport on Bangka island off Sumatra where the flight was headed. Some, including Indonesian Finance Minister Sri Mulyani, headed to the search and rescue agency’s headquarters in Jakarta for information.

About 20 ministry staff were on the flight.

Latief Nurbana said he and his wife Yeti Eka Sumiati stayed up late Sunday talking to their 24-year-old son Lutfi Nuramdani, squeezing every moment they could from his weekend visit to Jakarta to catch up on his life in Pangkal Pinang.

Nurbana said they talked until falling asleep and Sumiati woke up early to take their son, a post office worker, to the airport.

“Last night, we were chatting together about his wife who is now seven months’ pregnant, his plans and his dreams with his own small family until we fell asleep,” he said as his wife wept and clung to him.

“Now he’s gone. We can’t believe that he left us this way; we can’t believe that his plane crashed. That’s something we only see on TV news, now it happened to my son,” Nurbana said.

“We want to see his body, his face, his remains.”

More than 300 people including soldiers, police and fishermen are involved in the grim search, retrieving aircraft debris and personal items such as a crumpled phone, ID cards and carry-on bags from the seas northeast of Jakarta.

Personal items recovered after the crash. Picture: AFP/Pertamina Hulu Energy
Personal items recovered after the crash. Picture: AFP/Pertamina Hulu Energy
Debris from the ill-fated flight washes up. Picture: Adek Berry/AFP
Debris from the ill-fated flight washes up. Picture: Adek Berry/AFP

Search and Rescue Agency chief Muhammad Syaugi said he’s certain it won’t take long to locate the hull of the aircraft and its black box due to the relatively shallow 25-30m depths of the waters the plane plunged into.

Three specialised search ships, including one from Singapore, were headed to the crash location.

The jet, on a one-hour flight, was carrying 181 passengers, including one child, two babies, and eight crew members.

Lion Air said there were two foreigners on the plane: one of the pilots, Indian national Bhavye Suneja, and an Italian citizen.

Friends and relatives gathered at the pilot’s family home in New Delhi to comfort his immediate family.

“His father is stunned and not in a condition to talk or do anything. Sister and mother have not come out. They are distressed,” family friend Anil Gupta said.

The pilot of Flight 610 had more than 6000 flying hours while the co-pilot had more than 5000 hours, according to Lion Air.

Pilot Bhavye Suneja was flying the Lion Air plane. Picture: Supplied
Pilot Bhavye Suneja was flying the Lion Air plane. Picture: Supplied

The Transport Ministry said the plane took off from Jakarta at about 6.20am and crashed just 13 minutes later.

Data from FlightAware showed it had reached an altitude of only 5200 feet.

Boeing Co said it was “deeply saddened” by the crash and was prepared to provide technical assistance to Indonesia’s crash probe.

The 737 Max 8 was leased from China Minsheng Investment Group Leasing Holdings Ltd., according to the official China News Service.

Malindo Air, a Malaysian subsidiary of Lion Air, was the first airline to begin using the 737 Max 8 last year.

The Max 8 replaced the similar 800 in the Chicago-based plane maker’s product line.

Lion Air president-director Edward Sirait said the plane had a “technical problem” on its previous flight from Bali to Jakarta but it had been fully remedied.

He didn’t know the specifics of the problem when asked in a TV interview.

“Indeed there were reports about a technical problem, and the technical problem has been resolved in accordance with the procedures released by the plane manufacturer,” Mr Sirait said. “I did not know exactly but let it be investigated by the authorities.”

A forensic investigator looks through the remains of the Lion Air flight. Picture: Ed Wray/Getty
A forensic investigator looks through the remains of the Lion Air flight. Picture: Ed Wray/Getty

The crash is the worst airline disaster in Indonesia since an AirAsia flight from Surabaya to Singapore plunged into the sea in December 2014, killing all 162 on board.

Indonesian airlines were barred in 2007 from flying to Europe because of safety concerns, though several were allowed to resume services in the following decade.

The ban was completely lifted in June. The US lifted a decade-long ban in 2016.

Lion Air, one Indonesia’s youngest and biggest airlines, was taking advantage of the lifting of the ban, to dominate air space in South-East Asia.

In a record transaction, Lion Air signed a deal to buy 230 Boeing jets for $21.7 billion during a visit by then-President Barack Obama in November 2011.

Lion Air jet crashes in Indonesia

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Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/travel/travel-updates/incidents/lion-air-was-aggressively-expanding-before-horror-crash-that-killed-all-189-on-board/news-story/5d285af97dab70e0ff618122dee5ea9c