Jakarta, October 29, 2018: A Lion Air passenger plane that took off on October 29 from Jakarta crashed into the sea with 189 people on board, all of whom are feared dead in Indonesia’s worst air disaster in recent years.

Over 12 hours after the crash, no clear explanation had surfaced about what had caused the crash, which occurred shortly after takeoff. Skies were clear. The plane was almost brand new, having flown just 800 hours.

The aircraft’s pilot had asked to return to Jakarta’s airport shortly after takeoff, and his request was cleared by air traffic controllers. The plane then lost contact with controllers and plunged into the sea from 3,000 feet.

Authorities quickly launched a search-and-rescue mission but later said they do not expect to find any survivors. Throughout the day Monday, rescuers pulled debris out of the sea, including parts of the aircraft’s fuselage, ID cards and bags belonging to the passengers. Body parts were slowly being recovered as well.

People at an offshore refining facility nearby also found remnants of the aircraft, including plane seats, in the water. Officials said they have received no confirmation that anyone survived.

“My prediction is that no one has survived, because none of the victims have been found” intact and alive, said Bambang Suryo Aji, the national search-and-rescue agency’s director of operations. Nine body bags, filled with parts of the victim’s bodies, have been taken to the hospital.

Fifteen ships are on the lookout, working around the clock to find the plane’s main section and the victims, Indonesian President Joko Widodo said at an evening news conference Monday at Jakarta’s airport. More than 300 rescuers have been deployed from the search-and-rescue agency.

Among them are 30 divers plunging deep into the water to find the remaining parts of the fuselage and the bodies with the aid of underwater robots and sonar technology.

Lion Air Flight 610 lost contact with air traffic officials and fell about 13 minutes after takeoff, officials said. People on a nearby tugboat watched the plane descend. The air traffic websites FlightAware and Flightradar24 showed the plane climbing erratically, barely reaching above 5,000 feet, before quickly dropping and disappearing from radar.

In a news conference, Lion Air Group’s chief executive, Edward Sirait, said the plane, a new model from Boeing, had a technical issue on a previous flight that was resolved “according to procedure.” He did not give details.

“Let the authorities investigate what happened to it,” he added, refusing to speculate on the cause. “But I made sure that this plane was released to fly by our engineers.”

Among those on board were two pilots, six flight attendants and two babies, as well as 20 employees from Indonesia’s Finance Ministry. One of the passengers was Italian, and the rest were Indonesian nationals.

The pilot, Captain Bhavye Suneja, was from India and had more than 6,000 flight hours, and his co-pilot had more than 5,000 hours.

In New Delhi, the pilot’s grieving relatives gathered in the living room of his parents’ house on a narrow street in Mayur Vihar, a middle-class residential neighborhood in the eastern part of the city. Family members declined to speak to reporters.

Anil Gupta, a neighbor, said Suneja had moved abroad several years earlier but returned each fall to spend the Hindu festival of Diwali with his family. Suneja had “wanted to be a pilot since he was a child,” Gupta said. “There was so much love for him on this street.”

By Monday afternoon, distraught family members had begun streaming into a crisis center set up in Jakarta’s Soekarno-Hatta International Airport. Another was established at the plane’s never-reached destination at the Depati Amir Airport in Pangkal Pinang, a tin-mining region.

Many relatives had heard the news of the crash and rushed to the airport, fearing the worst.

Among them was Fitri Sagala, 47, whose brother-in-law, Mangatur Sihombing, boarded Flight 610 that morning. She was at the crisis center with her sister, Mangatur’s wife.

“I’m at a loss,” she said, explaining that she was a widow and that and her brother-in-law was her main provider. “I lost my husband, so he was caring for me and my children.”

James Sianturi, 57, fought back tears as he spoke about his son, 26-year-old Jandri, who was also on the ill-fated flight. He was on his way back to Pangkal Pinang, where he worked at a bank. Jandri moved his flight to Monday morning from Sunday to spend an extra day in the city with his fiancee, who works in Jakarta. They were due to marry in May 2019.

“Only God knows what his condition is, and hopefully, God grants a miracle to my son,” he said. “Because he’s my son, I had to relentlessly fight for his life until he became an adult.”

Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, a spokesman for Indonesia’s national disaster agency, shared a video on Twitter of rescuers on tugboats looking for debris off the coast of Karawang, an area in West Java close to Jakarta. He also shared photos of mangled cellphones and a torn bag that rescuers recovered.

By late Monday afternoon, rescuers had cleared debris from the water’s surface and begun diving into the sea, which has a depth of about 114 feet. Sonar scanners from naval ships have also been deployed to locate crucial wreckage, particularly the plane’s black box.

Speaking at a news briefing in Bali, where he was attending a conference on oceans, Widodo urged families to remain calm while officials continue to search for life among the debris.

“We are doing our best to find and save victims, and I continue to pray and hope that the victims can be found soon,” the Indonesian president said.

The aircraft, a Boeing 737 Max 8, was purchased this year by Lion Air, Southeast Asia’s second-largest low-cost airline. The plane is one of Boeing’s newest and had flown several hundred hours since Lion Air started operating it on Aug. 15. It departed at 6:21 a.m. local time and was scheduled to arrive about 7:20 a.m. at Pangkal Pinang, the largest city on the Indonesian island of Bangka.

“The Boeing Company is deeply saddened by the loss of Flight JT 610. We express our concern for those on board, and extend heartfelt sympathies to their families and loved ones,” the company said in a statement. “Boeing stands ready to provide technical assistance to the accident investigation.”

Aircraft makers and carriers have long prized Indonesia as one of the region’s fastest-growing aviation markets, with a rising middle class. Air travel is a necessity to dart across Indonesia’s large archipelago. Domestic passenger traffic has tripled over the past 12 years to 97 million in 2017. Lion Air controls over 50 percent of this market share, according to the Center for Aviation, an aviation market intelligence firm.

But the country has long received mixed reviews on airline safety, and all its airlines were removed from the European Union’s air safety list and deemed safe to travel only in June. Lion Air was allowed to fly in E.U. airspace in 2016.

Lion Air, established in 1999, is Indonesia’s largest budget airline. It has been involved in a number of incidents in recent years, but none with fatalities. One of its jets collided with a plane from another carrier, Wings Air, on the island of Sumatra last year, but no one was injured. In 2013, a Lion Air flight crashed into the sea after landing on the resort island of Bali. Several were injured, but no one was killed.

In 2004, a Lion Air plane skidded off the runway in heavy rains when it landed in the city of Solo, killing 31.

If all the passengers and crew on the aircraft have died, it would be the country’s second-worst disaster since 1997, when a Garuda airlines plane crashed close to the city of Medan, killing all 234 people on board.

(The Washingtonpost)