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Boeing and US National Transportation Safety Board officials have joined the Indonesian team in sifting through twisted metal plane parts and piles of passengers’ torn clothing, shoes, wallets and phones. Photo: AFP

Passengers’ belongings scattered among the debris and twisted metal recovered after Lion Air crash

  • The accident, which killed 189 people, has resurrected concerns about Indonesia’s poor air safety record, which led to bans from EU and US airspace
  • Transport ministry says it has found ‘minor’ faults in two other Boeing 737-MAX 8 jets
Aviation

Chairs, wheels and other parts of a crashed Indonesian Lion Air jet were hauled from the depths on Friday, as authorities analysed black box data that may explain why the new plane plummeted into the Java Sea, killing 189 people.

Search teams have been scouring the seabed for the fuselage of the Boeing-737 MAX 8, which plunged into the waters off Indonesia’s northern coast shortly after take-off on Monday despite only having been in service a few months.

“Today we will start diving [again] at the spot where we think the plane crashed,” said Isswarto, commander of the Indonesian navy’s search-and-rescue division. “There is a lot of little debris, plane wheels, and chairs – all totally destroyed and in pieces.”

Divers were searching an area about 25-35 metres deep, but have been finding fewer body parts than earlier in the week.

“They’re scattered everywhere and some may have been washed away by the current,” Isswarto said.

Dozens of body bags containing remains have been recovered from the crash site so far. Television images showed divers tying ropes to twisted plane parts scattered along the sea floor.

‘My body also has these parts’: Lion Air rescuers discuss their grim task

On Thursday, authorities said they had recovered one of the plane’s black boxes, which airlines are required to install in jets, as well as parts of its landing gear.

The black box could offer investigators their best chance of discovering why such a new jet crashed. The devices help explain nearly 90 per cent of all crashes, according to aviation experts. The devices record information about the speed, altitude and direction of the plane as well as flight crew conversations.

Relatives comfort each other at the Lion Air flight JT610 crisis centre. Photo: Bloomberg

The single-aisle Boeing plane, en route from Jakarta to Pangkal Pinang city, is one of the world’s newest and most advanced commercial passenger jets.

Boeing and US National Transportation Safety Board officials have joined the Indonesian team in sifting through twisted metal plane parts and piles of passengers’ torn clothing, shoes, wallets and phones.

Pilots warned Lion Air of airspeed fault on doomed plane on Sunday. It crashed on its next flight

Passengers’ remains are being sent to hospital for DNA identification, with the first funeral for one of the passengers held on Thursday. But many other victims have yet to be found and there are hopes more can be recovered in the bulk of the wreckage, including those who may still be strapped to their seats.

Lion Air’s admission that the jet had a technical issue on a previous flight – as well as its abrupt fatal dive – have raised questions about whether it had mechanical faults such as a speed-and-altitude system malfunction.

Indonesia’s transport ministry said later on Friday that it had found “minor” faults in two other Boeing 737-MAX 8 jets, including a cockpit indicator display problem which an analyst said may be similar to one reported in the crashed Lion Air Jet.

The ministry is inspecting 10 of the newly released jets owned by Lion and flagship carrier Garuda.

Officials displaying part of the ill-fated Lion Air flight JT 610's black box. Photo: AFP

The accident has 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. Indonesia has had nearly 40 fatal aviation accidents in the past 15 years, according to the Aviation Safety Network.

Lion Air, Indonesia’s biggest budget carrier, has been involved in a number of incidents including a fatal 2004 crash.

In 2014, an AirAsia crash in the Java Sea during stormy weather killed 162 people.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Many jet crash victims still not found, search goes on
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