Indonesia’s plane safety record under fresh spotlight after weekend crash kills 62

Indonesia’s plane safety record under fresh spotlight after weekend crash kills 62 | Secret Flying

Indonesia’s plane safety record still a concern.

 

Indonesia’s terrible air safety record is again in the spotlight after a Sriwijaya Air plane carrying 62 people crashed into the Java Sea minutes after take-off from Jakarta’s main airport on Saturday.

 

Relatives of the passengers and crew on board the ill-fated flight are now facing an agonising wait as authorities search for the wreckage.

 

Data from FlightRadar24 shows the plane had reached an altitude of nearly 11,000ft before dropping to 250ft in a matter of seconds. The pilots did not declare an emergency before the plane’s sudden descent.

 

“There has been a lot of noise made about the speed of its final descent,” said Geoff Dell, an air accident investigation expert based in Australia.

 

“It is indicative of what happened but why it happened is still in many ways a guess really. There are multiple ways you can get an aeroplane to go down at that pace.”

 

Over the last decade alone, excluding Saturday’s crash, there had been 697 fatalities in Indonesia including military and private planes, making it the deadliest aviation market in the world.

 

From 2007 to 2016, the United States lowered its Indonesia safety evaluation to Category 2 banning carriers from operating in the country because they were “deficient in one or more areas, such as technical expertise, trained personnel, record-keeping or inspection procedures.”

 

The European Union had a similar ban from 2007 until 2018.

 

The Sriwijaya flight, operated by a Boeing 737-500, follows the loss of a Lion Air Boeing 737 MAX in October 2018, which contributed to a global grounding of the model.