More
bodies recovered in search for AirAsia 8501
(Vatican Radio/Reuters) Ships and aircraft criss-crossed the
seas off Borneo on Friday hunting for the wreck of an Indonesia AirAsia
passenger jet, but bad weather was again hindering the search for the plane and
the black box flight recorders that should reveal why it crashed.
Officials said more
than 20 bodies have now been recovered, along with pieces of the broken-up
plane, in the Indonesian-led search for Flight QZ8501 that is concentrated on
1,575 square nautical miles of the northern Java Sea.
Strong winds and heavy
seas have stopped divers from looking for the fuselage of the Airbus A320-200,
which plunged into the water on Sunday while en route from
Indonesia's second-biggest city Surabaya to Singapore with 162 people on
board.
"The waves could
reach five metres this afternoon. Higher than yesterday," said air force
Puma helicopter pilot Flight Captain Tatag Onne, who has been flying missions
to recover bodies and debris from the sea.
The multinational
search operation based in Pangkalan Bun, the town in southern Borneo closest to
the search area, was bolstered on Friday by experts from France's BEA
accident investigation agency, which attends all Airbus crashes.
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét