Lion Air search ends

Lion Air search ends

Rescue team members bring bodies recovered from the Lion Air crash site onto a vessel at Tanjung Priok Harbour in Jakarta. (EPA-EFE Photo)
Rescue team members bring bodies recovered from the Lion Air crash site onto a vessel at Tanjung Priok Harbour in Jakarta. (EPA-EFE Photo)

JAKARTA: Indonesian national rescue authorities on Saturday ended their search for victims of the Lion Air plane that crashed into the Java Sea two weeks ago, while those trying to locate the cockpit voice recorder face a new challenge as its electronic signal fades.

The task of finding victims or their remains has been left to local teams, Muhammad Syaugi, head of the National Search and Rescue Agency, said in a statement on Saturday.

Separately, a new underwater locator with better sensitivity to detect the ping from the so-called black box is ready for deployment to help the search.

“The ping sound is getting hard to detect and is disappearing,” Haryo Satmiko, deputy chief of the National Transportation Safety Committee, said in a text message Saturday. “We suspect the cockpit voice recorder is covered by mud because the flight data recorder, when it was found, was about a half-metre deep buried in the mud.”

If the new locator fails, the safety committee will deploy a ship with mud-suction ability to try to recover the voice recorder.

The recovery of the voice recorder would help investigators piece together the final moments before flight JT610 dove into the sea with 189 people on board on Oct 29. Preliminary findings based on information from the data recorder, which has been recovered, indicated a technical snag related to faulty airspeed reading.

That prompted Boeing, the maker of the plane, to alert operators of the 737 MAX aircraft worldwide that the airflow sensor can provide false readings in certain circumstances.

Indonesia’s domestic airline market has boomed in recent years to become the fifth-largest in the world. Local air traffic more than tripled between 2005 and 2017 to 97 million people, dominated by the flag carrier PT Garuda Indonesia and Lion Air Group.

Local carriers have struggled with safety issues, partly as a result of the pace of that expansion, as well as issues intrinsic to a region of mountainous terrain, equatorial thunderstorms and often underdeveloped aviation infrastructure.

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