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Indonesia’s Batik Air faces probe after pilots fell asleep during 2½-hour flight

  • A pilot and co-pilot were both asleep for around 28 minutes during a journey from Sulawesi to the capital Jakarta in January
  • A report found one of the pilots did not have sufficient rest the night before the flight, raising questions about the airline’s fatigue risk policy

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A Batik Air jet in Indonesia. Photo: Shutterstock

Indonesia’s transport ministry has said it would open an investigation into local airline Batik Air after two of its pilots were found to have fallen asleep during a recent flight.

A pilot and co-pilot were simultaneously asleep for around 28 minutes during a flight from southeast Sulawesi to the capital Jakarta on January 25, a preliminary report by the National Transportation Safety Committee (KNKT) said.

The incident resulted in a series of navigation errors, but the Airbus A320’s 153 passengers and four flight attendants were unharmed during the 155-minute domestic flight.

The transport ministry “strongly reprimands” Batik Air over the incident, air transport director-general M. Kristi Endah Murni said, calling on airlines to pay more attention to their air crew’s rest time.

“We will carry out an investigation and review of the night-flight operation in Indonesia related with Fatigue Risk Management for Batik Air and all flight operators,” Kristi said in a statement.

Batik Air said in a statement on Saturday that it “operates with adequate rest policy” and it was “committed to implement all safety recommendations”.

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