Yahoo – AFP,
Levi Cunding, 18 Aug 2015
A plane that crashed in eastern Indonesia was Tuesday found "completely destroyed" with the bodies of all 54 passengers and crew strewn amid the wreckage in a fire-blackened jungle clearing, officials said.
Indonesian
rescuers search through wreckage of the Trigana Air ATR 42-300
twin-turboprop
plane at the crash site in the mountainous area of Oksibil on
August 18, 2015
(AFP Photo/STR)
|
A plane that crashed in eastern Indonesia was Tuesday found "completely destroyed" with the bodies of all 54 passengers and crew strewn amid the wreckage in a fire-blackened jungle clearing, officials said.
Rescuers
finally reached the debris of the Trigana Air plane, which went down Sunday in
Papua province during a short flight in bad weather, after abandoning search
efforts a day earlier due to mountainous terrain, thick fog and rain.
The black
box flight data recorders, which could provide clues about the cause of the
crash, were retrieved. Money -- some of it burnt -- was also found among the
wreckage of the plane, which had been transporting 6.5 billion rupiah
($470,000) in cash.
"The
plane has crashed, it is completely destroyed," Bambang Soelistyo, head of
the country's search and rescue agency, said of the ATR 42-300 plane after
teams reached the site in the morning.
"Everything
was in pieces and part of the plane is burnt."
It is just
the latest air accident in Indonesia, which has a poor aviation safety record
and has suffered major disasters in recent months, including the crash of an
AirAsia plane in December with the loss of 162 lives.
Photos of
the site showed a fire-blackened clearing in thick jungle strewn with debris.
The twin-turboprop plane was carrying 54 people -- 49 passengers and five crew
-- and officials said all the bodies had been found.
The team of
about 100 rescuers, including soldiers and police, who reached the crash site
found some bodies were not intact while others were badly burnt. All those on
board were believed to be Indonesians.
Authorities
were planning to airlift the bodies from the site by helicopter but efforts
were suspended on Tuesday afternoon due to thick fog, Soelistyo told reporters
in Jayapura, Papua's capital.
A fresh
attempt would be made Wednesday.
'Unpredictable weather'
The money
on the plane, which was being carried in four bags by postal officials, was
government social assistance funds to be distributed to poor families in the
remote community of Oksibil where the plane had been heading.
The
wreckage from a Trigana Air ATR 42-300 twin-turboprop scattered among
trees in
the mountainous area of Oksibil district, in Indonesia's Papua province
(AFP
Photo/Basarnas)
|
Soelistyo
did not say how much cash had been found, but he told reporters: "I have
instructed the team there to secure all the items, including the money, to be
handed over to the authorities as evidence."
The plane
had set off from Jayapura on what was supposed to be a 45-minute flight to
Oksibil.
But it lost
contact with air traffic control about 10 minutes before reaching its
destination, soon after the crew requested permission to start descending in
heavy cloud and rain to land.
Captain
Beni Sumaryanto, Trigana Air's service director of operations, said
"unpredictable weather and mountainous terrain" had likely caused the
accident, adding that the plane was in good condition and the pilot
experienced.
View
galleryGrieving relatives of passengers on board the
ill-fated …
Grieving
relatives of passengers on board the ill-fated Trigana Air ATR 42-300 plane
wait for inform …
Small
aircraft are commonly used for transport in remote and mountainous Papua and
bad weather has caused several accidents in recent years.
Last week a
Cessna propeller plane crashed in Papua's Yahukimo district, killing one person
and seriously injuring the five others on board. Officials suspect that crash
was also caused by bad weather.
Indonesian
rescuers hold wreckage fragments from the Trigana Air ATR 42-300
twin-turboprop
plane from the crash site in the mountainous area of Oksibil on
August 18, 2015
(AFP Photo/STR)
|
Trigana
Air, a small domestic Indonesian airline, has experienced a string of serious
incidents and is banned from flying in European Union airspace.
Last year's
AirAsia crash was one of two major air accidents that Indonesia has suffered in
the past year alone.
In June an
Indonesian military plane crashed into a residential neighbourhood in the city
of Medan, exploding in a fireball and killing 142 people.
The
aviation sector in Indonesia is expanding fast but airlines are struggling to
find enough well-trained personnel to keep up with the rapid growth in the
archipelago of more than 17,000 islands.
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