Rescuers
scoured the Java Sea for an AirAsia plane carrying 162 people which went
missing in bad weather Sunday en route from Indonesia to Singapore, the third
crisis for a Malaysian carrier this year.
Air
traffic controllers lost contact with the Airbus A320-200 around an hour after
it left Juanda international airport at Surabaya in east Java, at 5:20am (2220
GMT Saturday).
It was
scheduled to arrive in Singapore at 8:30am (0030 GMT).
Shortly
before disappearing, the plane asked permission from Jakarta air traffic
control to deviate from its flight plan and climb above bad weather in an area
noted for severe thunderstorms.
The
pilots requested “deviation due to enroute weather before communication with
the aircraft was lost while it was still under the control of the Indonesian
Air Traffic Control”, AirAsia said in a statement on its Facebook page.
The airline
said 156 of those on board Flight QZ8501 were Indonesians, with three South
Koreans and one person each from Singapore, Malaysia and France.
There
were 138 adult passengers, 16 children and an infant, in addition to five cabin
crew and the pilot and co-pilot, who is believed to be French.
The
Indonesian air force said two of its planes had been sent to scour an area of
the Java Sea, southwest of Pangkalan Bun in Kalimantan province — around
halfway along the flight’s expected route.
“The
weather is cloudy and the area is surrounded by sea. We are still on our way so
we won’t make an assumption on what happened to the plane,” said air force
spokesman Hadi Cahyanto.
A
Singaporean C-130 military transport aircraft was also on the way to the area,
after Indonesia accepted help from its Southeast Asian neighbour.
– Anxiety
builds –
The
twin-engine aircraft was operated by AirAsia Indonesia, a unit of
Malaysian-based AirAsia which dominates Southeast Asia’s booming low-cost
airline market.
AirAsia’s
flamboyant boss Tony Fernandes, a former record industry executive who acquired
the then-failing airline in 2001, said he was on his way to Surabaya, where
most of the passengers are from.
“My only
thought (sic) are with the passengers and my crew,” he added on his Twitter
page.
With hard
details few and far between, panicked relatives gathered at Singapore’s Changi
airport.
In
Surabaya hundreds of Indonesians descended on the terminal, hoping for news of
the missing jet.
A
45-year-old woman told AFP that she had six family members on the plane.
“They
were going to Singapore for a holiday,” she said.
“They
have always flown with AirAsia and there was no problem. I am shocked to hear
the news, and I am very worried that the plane might have crashed.”
Indonesia,
a vast archipelago with poor land transport infrastructure, has seen an
explosive growth in low-cost air travel over recent years.
But the
air industry has been blighted by poor safety standards in an area that also
experiences extreme weather.
AirAsia
said the missing jet last underwent maintenance on November 16. The company has
never suffered a fatal accident.
It
swiftly replaced its distinctive bright red logo with a grey background on its
social media pages.
An
official from Indonesia’s transport ministry said the pilot asked to ascend by
6,000 feet to 38,000 feet to avoid heavy clouds.
“The
plane is in good condition but the weather is not so good,” Djoko Murjatmodjo
told a press conference at Jakarta’s airport, addressing reports of severe
storms in the area where the jet went missing.
Climbing
to dodge large rain clouds is a standard procedure for aircraft in these
conditions.
“There is
nothing wrong to do that. What happens after that is a question mark,”
according to Indonesian-based aviation analyst Dudi Sudibyo.
Malaysia
and Australia joined aircraft manufacturer Airbus in pledging help in the
investigation.
The White
House said US President Barack Obama had been briefed on the disappearance and
it was monitoring the situation.
The
plane’s disappearance comes at the end of a disastrous year for Malaysian
aviation.
Malaysia
Airlines Flight MH370, carrying 239 people, vanished in March after
inexplicably diverting from its Kuala Lumpur-Beijing course. No trace of it has
been found.
Another
Malaysia Airlines plane went down in July in rebellion-torn eastern Ukraine,
killing all 298 aboard. It was believed to have been hit by a surface-to-air
missile.
AirAsia
has seen spectacular success and aggressive growth under Fernandes’ low-cost,
low-overheads model.
While its
rival Malaysia Airlines faces potential collapse after the two disasters this
year, AirAsia this month confirmed its order of 55 A330-900neo passenger planes
at a list price of $15 billion.
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