Tag: missing

  • No Room In Airspace For QZ8501 To Change Altitude Before Contact Lost

    No Room In Airspace For QZ8501 To Change Altitude Before Contact Lost

    SURABAYA: The plane sought permission to climb above threatening clouds. Air traffic control couldn’t say yes immediately — there was no room. Six other airliners were crowding the airspace, forcing AirAsia Flight QZ8501 to remain at a lower altitude.

    Minutes later, the jet carrying 162 people was gone from the radar without ever issuing a distress signal. The plane is believed to have crashed into Indonesia’s Java Sea, but broad aerial surveys on Monday turned up no firm evidence of the missing Airbus A320-200.

    Searchers spotted two oily patches and floating objects in separate locations, but no one knew whether any of it was related to the plane that vanished on Sunday halfway into what should have been a two-hour hop from Surabaya, Indonesia, to Singapore. Officials saw little reason to believe the flight met anything but a grim fate.

    Based on the plane’s last known coordinates, the aircraft probably crashed into the water and “is at the bottom of the sea,” Indonesia search-and-rescue chief Henry Bambang Soelistyo said. Still, searchers planned to expand their efforts onto land on Tuesday.

    The last communication from the cockpit to air traffic control was a request by one of the pilots to climb from 32,000 feet (9,754 meters) to 38,000 feet (11,582 meters) because of the rough weather. The tower was not able to immediately comply because of the other planes, said Bambang Tjahjono, director of the state-owned company in charge of air traffic control.

    When planes confront storms, they generally veer left or right, said Sarjono Joni, a former pilot with a state-run Indonesian carrier. A request to climb would most likely come if the plane were experiencing heavy turbulence, he said, and heavy traffic is not unusual for any given airspace.

    The twin-engine, single-aisle plane was last seen on radar four minutes after the final communication from the cockpit.

    At least 15 ships, seven aircraft and four helicopters were looking for the jet, Indonesian search-and-rescue spokesman Jusuf Latif said. Most of the craft were Indonesian but Singapore, Malaysia and Australia contributed to the effort. Aircraft from Thailand were awaiting clearance to join the search.

    Those numbers do not include Indonesian warships taking part in the search. Many fishermen from Belitung island also joined in, and all vessels in that area have been alerted to watch for anything that could be linked to the plane.

    Jakarta’s air force base commander, Rear Marshal Dwi Putranto, said an Australian Orion aircraft had detected “suspicious” objects near an island about 100 miles (160 kilometers) off central Kalimantan. That’s about 700 miles (1,120 kilometers) from where the plane lost contact, but within Monday’s greatly expanded search area.

    “However, we cannot be sure whether it is part of the missing AirAsia plane,” Putranto said. “We are now moving in that direction.”

    Air Force spokesman Rear Marshal Hadi Tjahnanto told MetroTV that an Indonesian helicopter spotted two oil patches in the Java Sea east of Belitung island, much closer to where the plane lost contact. He said oil samples would be collected and analyzed.

    An Associated Press photographer flew in a C-130 transport carrier with Indonesia’s Air Force for 10 hours Monday over a large section of the search area between Kalimantan and Belitung. The flight was bumpy and rainy at times. It flew low, at 1,500 feet, easily spotting waves, ships and fishermen, but there was no sign of the plane.

    The suspected crash caps an astonishingly tragic year for air travel in Southeast Asia, and Malaysia in particular. Malaysia-based AirAsia’s loss comes on top of the still-unexplained disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 in March with 239 people aboard, and the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 in July over Ukraine, which killed all 298 passengers and crew.

    “Until today, we have never lost a life,” AirAsia group CEO Tony Fernandes told reporters. “But I think that any airline CEO who says he can guarantee that his airline is 100 percent safe, is not accurate.”

    The airline has “carried 220 million people up to this point,” he said. “Of course, there’s going to be some reaction, but we are confident in our ability to fly people.”

    Indonesian President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo ordered an immediate review of all aviation procedures.

    Nearly all the passengers and crew are Indonesians, who are frequent visitors to Singapore, particularly on holidays.

    Ruth Natalia Puspitasari, who would have turned 26 on Monday, was among them. Her father, Suyanto, sat with his wife, who was puffy-eyed and coughing, near the family crisis center at Surabaya’s airport.

    Suyanto remembers the concern his daughter showed for the families of the MH370 tragedy. Puspitasari once told him how sad it must be for the victims’ relatives who were left waiting for their loved ones with no certainty.

    “I don’t want to experience the same thing with what was happened with Malaysia Airlines,” he said as his wife wept. “It could be a long suffering.”

    Few believe this search will be as perplexing as the ongoing one for Flight 370, where what happened onboard remains a total mystery. Authorities suspect the plane was deliberately diverted by someone on board and ultimately lost in a remote area of the Indian Ocean with notoriously deep water. Flight 8501 vanished over a heavily traveled sea that is relatively shallow, with no sign of foul play.

    The captain, Iryanto, who like many Indonesians uses a single name, had more than 20,000 flying hours, AirAsia said.

    “Papa, come home, I still need you,” Angela Anggi Ranastianis, the captain’s 22-year-old daughter, pleaded late Sunday in social-media comments that were widely quoted in the Indonesian press.

    Many recalled Iryanto as an experienced military pilot who flew F-16 fighters before shifting to commercial aviation. His French co-pilot, Remi Plesel, had been in Indonesia three years and loved to fly, his sister, Renee, told France’s RTL radio.

    “He told me that things were going well, that he’d had a good Christmas. He was happy. The rains were starting, the weather was bad. It was raining a lot,” she said.

     

    Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com

  • Bomohs Waiting For Official Invite To Assist in Search For QZ8501

    Bomohs Waiting For Official Invite To Assist in Search For QZ8501

    Bomohs or witch doctors have offered their assistance in the hunt for missing Flight QZ8501, claiming that they have managed to track down the Indonesia AirAsia plane’s location in the “supernatural” waters of Belitung.

    Mukhti Maarif, the leader of shamans in Indonesia’s Belitung, said the bomohs are merely waiting for the official invitation to start their “supernatural” search, confirming that no one has sought their assistance.

    “Have to wait for official request to prevent biased opinions about dukun (shamans),” Mukhti was quoted telling Indonesian news site Tempo today.

    “Until this moment, we have yet to be involved. We are ready to help,” the bomoh said.

    Mukhti claimed that a supernatural scouting by a number of bomohs has revealed the final resting place of the plane that went missing yesterday lies in the east Belitung area, but said specific rituals have to be performed to verify their discovery.

    “The aircraft fell because there was mechanical failure. At this moment, the aircraft is in the ocean near the corals, in the eastern waters of Pulau Nangka,” Mukhti was quoted saying by Tempo, reiterating that they were willing to work together with those equipped with advanced technology.

    “The district of Belitung, whether it is on land, in the sea or air, is filled with supernatural matters,” the bomoh added.

    In a separate report by Tempo, however, the Indonesian agency tasked with heading search operations turned down the offer.

    Indonesia’s National Search and Rescue Agency (Basarnas) communications director Sutono had received the offer for help, but said that that was not the standard method used by the search team.

    This is not the first time that bomohs have jumped in to help locate a missing aircraft.

    Shortly after Malaysia Airlines (MAS) MH370 mysteriously disappeared on March 8 this year, a local bomoh, Ibrahim Mat Zin led three other witch doctors to perform rituals using coconuts, among other things, to find the plane.

    Claiming to be “raja bomoh” or the king of witch doctors, Ibrahim had also said the jet carrying 239 people had purportedly travelled into the “alam bunian”, a Malay description for a spiritual realm inherited by supernatural beings.

    The event drew immediate ridicule from observers as well as Internet users who took to social media sites like Twitter and Facebook to deride the witch doctors searching for MH370, with some posting spoof pictures of them sitting on a supposed flying carpet that had gone viral.

    To date, no traces of MH370 have been found, with search efforts still continuing in the southern Indian Ocean.

    Search teams looking out for Flight QZ8501 have also yet to find the Airbus A320 plane, which was carrying 162 people on a Surabaya-Singapore flight.

     

    Source: www.themalaymailonline.com

  • QZ8501 May Have Travelled Too Slowly To Maintain Altitude In Storm

    QZ8501 May Have Travelled Too Slowly To Maintain Altitude In Storm

    KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 29 ― Missing Indonesia AirAsia Flight QZ8501 was possibly travelling too slow to maintain altitude in adverse weather conditions when it went missing, an Australian aviation experts has suggested

    Geoffrey Thomas, the editor of airlineratings.com, believes the flight QZ8501 pilot may have tried to fly over storm clouds the flight encountered but lost too much momentum and induced an aerodynamic stall similar to what happened in the Air France AF447 crash in 2009.

    Flight AF447, en route to Paris from Rio de Janeiro, crashed into the Atlantic Ocean after ice blocked off the pitot tubes needed for the aircraft to detect its airspeed and prevented the pilots from knowing their true velocity.

    “The QZ8501 was flying too slow, about 100 knots [or] about 160km/h too slow. At that altitude that’s exceedingly dangerous,” Thomas was quoted as saying by Australia’s Herald Sun.

    “If the radar return is correct, he appears to be going too slow for the altitude he is flying at.”

    Calling the A320 a sophisticated aircraft, Thomas said the slow speed could be due to extreme weather conditions and believed the plane could have been caught in a massive updraft or something similar.

    But he also added that the A320 was not equipped with the latest radar technology that could have prevented the pilots from flying into severe thunderstorms.

    The Herald Sun also quoted Strategic Aviation Solutions chairman Neil Hansford as saying it was not likely that the plane went down due to mechanical issues or engineering problems.

    He said this was considering the age of the aircraft, at 6.3 years old, and the stricter conditions imposed by Indonesia’s aviation regulator in recent years, including higher training standards for Indonesian pilots.

    While he did not rule out engine failure, Hansford said the plane would still be able to fly after losing one engine.

    He also ruled out possible hijacking theories and pointed out that it disappeared under very different circumstances to Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 as the Airbus does not have the range to go very far for a major detour.

    Hansford questioned, however, the theory that QZ8501 went down in bad weather, saying what the flight encountered was not out of the ordinary.

    “It is the storm season but pilots fly in those sort of conditions all of the time,”Hansford reportedly said.

    This was contradicted by the safety editor of Flight Global, David Learmount, who said the weather conditions could be the key to the disappearance of the plane.

    He reportedly told UK daily The Guardian that storms can be powerful enough to rip a medium-sized aeroplane apart and that is why pilots will ask to divert around a massive storm.

    Another aviation expert and former air traffic controller, Doug MacLean, supported Learmount’s theory by stating that very large planes can be shifted up to 4,000ft by turbulence and that a thunderstorm usually extends far above a cloud.

    “Pilots are very wary of flying above the top of a storm because the air could be very violent.” he told The Guardian.

    Flight QZ8501, which carried one Malaysian on board, vanished from Jakarta’s radar at 6.18am local time yesterday amid stormy weather enroute to Singapore from Surabaya in Indonesia.

    On board Flight QZ8501 were 155 Indonesians, three South Koreans, one Malaysian, one Singaporean, one Frenchman and one Briton, comprising 155 passengers and seven crew members.

    Indonesia resumed search operations for the missing jet early this morning, whose last known position was between the Indonesian port of Tanjung Pandan and the town of Pontianak, in West Kalimantan on Borneo island.

     

    Source: www.themalaymailonline.com

  • BASARNAS Chief: QZ8501 Likely On Sea Floor

    BASARNAS Chief: QZ8501 Likely On Sea Floor

    JAKARTA: The AirAsia plane which went missing with 162 people on board en route for Singapore is likely at the bottom of the sea, Indonesia’s National Search and Rescue Agency (BASARNAS) chief said Monday (Dec 29).

    “Based on the coordinates given to us and evaluation that the estimated crash position is in the sea, the hypothesis is the plane is at the bottom of the sea,” Bambang Soelistyo told a press conference.

    “That’s the preliminary suspicion and it can develop based on the evaluation of the result of our search.”

    He said that locating the submerged plane will pose a big challenge, and that BASARNAS is getting assistance from other agencies and other countries with more sophisticated resources.

    One possibility is using submersibles from the UK, France or the US that are capable of reaching a greater depth underwater. So far, QZ8501 has not transmitted any emergency signal that could help pinpoint its whereabouts.

    The search area will be expanded eastward on Monday to the sea between Bangka island and Kalimantan. The operation involves dozens of ships and aircraft from BASARNAS, the Indonesian armed forces, Singapore and Malaysia. – AFP

     

    Source:www.theborneopost.com

  • Weather Around Java Sea Violent This Time Of Year

    Weather Around Java Sea Violent This Time Of Year

    Retired pilot Datuk Jalil Mat Dom said the weather could be violent during this time of year, The Star reported today.

    He said thunderstorms in the region could be quite intense and that pilots could ask for a change in their flight plans.

    “The intensity is quite big and also the area of the thunderstorm is widespread. I’m not sure how widespread the storm was, but it can affect the airways, which is why the pilot asked for a deviation,” he told the English daily.

    It also quoted Jalil as saying that pilots would know of the weather conditions before they flew because they would had been briefed by the meteorological departments in the areas concerned.

    The AirAsia Indonesia flight, en route from Surabaya to Singapore yesterday morning, disappeared and has not been found.

    Before it went missing at 7.24am, just a little more than an hour from reaching the Changi International Airport, the pilot had asked the air traffic control 12 minutes earlier to deviate from the flight path due to bad weather.

    The Star also quoted a Meteorological Department spokesman, who said the Java region had been having thunderstorms and rain since 6am. He said there was no change in the weather conditions there until noon.

    Universiti Teknologi Malaysia Associate Prof Salehuddin Muhammad said it was right for the pilot, Captain Iriyanto, to decide to deviate from the flight plan to avoid the storm.

    “A lot of things can happen to the aircraft (during a storm): turbulence, bouncing in and out of weather,” he said, citing Air France flight 447, which crashed in 2009 killing all 228 on board after its equipment gave nonsensical readings because of obstruction from ice that formed while flying through a storm.

    Salehuddin told the daily that not all aircraft had the ability to climb out of storms, adding that small aircraft could ascend to certain heights and that it was up to pilots on the next course of action. – December 29, 2014.

     

    Source: www.themalaysianinsider.com