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

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”.