More objects found in
AirAsia wreck hunt, but no sign of black box
BY WILDA ASMARINI
AND EVELINE DANUBRATA
JAKARTA , Indonesia Tue Jan 6, 2015 4:28pm
EST
Search
teams scouring the
ocean for the wreckage of an AirAsia jet found two new metal objects on
Tuesday, but nine days after the plane crashed officials say there is still no
sign of the crucial black box flight recorders.
Bad
weather continued to hamper
the search, and while conditions eased slightly on Tuesday, high waves and
strong currents prevented divers from going deep into the waters to look for
the plane's wreckage on the bottom of the Java Sea .
Indonesian
officials believe they may have located the tail and parts of the fuselage of the Airbus
A320-200 30 meters below the surface, but have been unable to properly
investigate the debris so far.
Flight
QZ8501 plunged into the water off Borneo
Island on Dec. 28, about 40 minutes
into a two-hour flight from Indonesia 's
second-biggest city of Surabaya to Singapore .
There were no survivors among the 162 people on board.
"Divers
were ready on the ship but the challenges were currents and waves," the
head of Indonesia 's search
and rescue agency, Fransiskus Bambang Soelistyo, told a news conference in Jakarta on Tuesday
evening.
He said a U.S. navy ship
located two more metal objects using sonar signals, though it is not known yet if they are part of
the missing plane. Those would add to the five large objects, believed to have
been part of the plane, detected so far.
Two more
bodies were also recovered from the sea, bringing the total found so far to 39.
Search and
rescue agency official Supriyadi, who is coordinating the operation from the
southern Borneo town of Pangkalan Bun, said there had been no "pings"
detected from the black box's emergency locator beacon, possibly because it was buried in the
seabed or the muddy water was impeding its signal.
"They
haven't found anything, maybe because the water is turbid and there is zero visibility,"
he said. "There's a possibility it is buried in mud."
The
captain of an Indonesian navy patrol vessel said on Monday his ship had found
what was believed to be the tail, a key find since that section of the aircraft
houses the cockpit
voice and flight data recorders. But Soelistyo said that could not yet be
confirmed.
Less than
a third of the bodies of the mostly Indonesian passengers and crew have been
recovered so far. Many more could still be trapped in the fuselage of the
aircraft.
AVIATION
CRACKDOWN
The crash
was the first fatal accident suffered by the AirAsia budget group, whose
Indonesian affiliate
has come under criticism from the authorities in Jakarta since the disaster.
The
transport ministry
has suspended Indonesia AirAsia's Surabaya-Singapore license, saying
the carrier only had permission to fly the route on Mondays, Tuesdays,
Thursdays and Saturdays. Flight QZ8501 took off on a Sunday, though the
ministry said this had no bearing on the accident.
"Flying
without license was not the cause of the accident," transport minister
Ignasius Jonan told reporters.
Indonesia
AirAsia, 49 percent owned by Malaysia-based AirAsia, has made little comment,
but said it would fully cooperate with investigations.
While the
cause of the crash is not known, the national weather bureau has said the
seasonal tropical storms common in the area were likely to be a factor. Last
week, the authorities questioned whether the pilot had followed proper weather
procedures.
On Monday,
the transport ministry said officials at the airport operator in Surabaya and air traffic
control agency who had allowed the flight to take off had been moved to other
duties while the accident investigation is completed.
It also
said it had issued a directive making it mandatory for pilots to be briefed face-to-face by
an airline flight operations officer on weather conditions and other
operational issues before every flight.
But its
safety record is chequered.
The European Commission banned all Indonesia-based airlines from flying to the
European Union in 2007 following a series of accidents. Exemptions to that ban have since been
granted to some carriers, including Garuda and AirAsia.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/01/06 /us-indonesia-airplane-idUSKBN0K900D20150106
Structure
of the Lead:
WHO-search
team
WHEN-Tuesday
WHAT-found
two new metal objects and
still no sign of the crucial black box flight
recorders
WHY-air
crash
WHERE-the
ocean
HOW-scour
the ocean
KEYWORD:
- scour 擦淨;洗擦
- hamper阻礙
- fuselage機身
- crackdown壓迫
- aviation航空
- reassign再分配
- patchy縫補的;拼湊的
- sonar聲納
- beacon烽火
- impede妨礙
- turbid混濁的
- cockpit駕駛員座艙
- affiliate使緊密聯繫
- ministry部
- insurer保險公司
- mandatory命令的
- chequered 有方格的
- Exemption免除