Saturday, January 3, 2015

Update on AirAsia plane: 'Two huge objects' are discovered in search for lost AirAsia plane as it's revealed doomed jet should not have been flying deadly route on the day of the crash

Search teams hunting for the wreckage of AirAsia Flight QZ8501 have had a breakthrough after discovering two big parts of the aircraft
Recovery teams have found two big parts of AirAsia Flight 8501, which crashed into the sea last weekend with 162 people on board, Indonesia's top search official said Saturday. 
News of the discovery came after Indonesia's transport ministry said the plane had been flying on an unauthorised schedule when it crashed, and the airliner has now been suspended from flying the route from the city of Surabaya to Singapore. 
The parts of the plane were found in the Java Sea off the island of Borneo late Friday night, raising hopes that the remaining bodies and the black boxes, crucial to determining the cause of the crash, will soon be located. 
'With the discovery of an oil spill and two big parts of the aircraft, I can assure you these are the parts of the AirAsia plane we have been looking for,' search and rescue agency chief Bambang Soelistyo told reporters.
The director general of air transport, Djoko Murjatmodjo, said AirAsia's permit to fly the route of Flight 8501 had been frozen because the plane had been on an unauthorised schedule.
'It violated the route permit given, the schedule given, that's the problem,' Murjatmodjo told AFP, adding that the permit for the route would be suspended until investigations were completed.
A statement from transport ministry spokesman J.A. Barata said AirAsia had not been permitted to fly the Surabaya-Singapore route on Sundays and had not asked to change its schedule.
It was unclear how the airliner, which has yet to officially respond to the ministry's statement, had been able to fly without the necessary authorisation.
Earlier on Friday, recovery teams pulled 21 bodies from the Java Sea but are struggling to locate the plane's black box recorder.
The total is the largest of the search so far, more than tripling the number of bodies recovered from nine to 30, as dive teams say some were found still strapped into their seats. 

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