Indonesia’s transport ministry said on March 31 it had recovered the cockpit voice recorder (CVR) of a Sriwijaya Air jet that crashed into the Java Sea shortly after take-off on January 9, killing all 62 people on board.
The National Search and Rescue Agency (Basarnas) of Indonesia on January 21 terminated the search operation for the bodies of passengers and debris of the crashed Sriwijaya Air Flight SJ-182 after a period of 13 days, according to Antara news agency.
Indonesia's National Search and Rescue Agency (Basarnas) on January 18 decided to extend the search for the bodies of passengers and debris of the crashed Sriwijaya Air Flight SJ-182 for another three days.
Indonesia on November 23 wrapped up the task of identifying victims of the Lion Air jet crash that killed 189 people aboard, according to local authorities.
Indonesia called off the search for passengers of a Lion Air plane on November 10, almost two weeks after the jetliner with 189 people on board plunged into the Java Sea.
Indonesia’s National Transportation Safety Committee (NTSC) said on November 5 that a Lion Air plane that crashed into the Java Sea last week, killing all 189 onboard, had an air speed indicator problem on its fatal flight and on three previous journeys.
Indonesia authorities plan to launch a special investigation into Lion Air's operations after its flight JT610 crashed last week, killing all 189 people onboard, a government official said on November 5.
The flight data recorder, or black box, from the Myanmar army plane that crashed into the Andaman Sea two weeks ago has been recovered, Myanmar authorities announced on June 18.
Indonesian rescue forces retrieved the second flight data recorder of the passenger plane that crashed in the easternmost province of Papua on August 16, the country’s Transport Ministry said.
Indonesia on February 28 announced the end of the search operation for
bodies and wreckage of the crashed AirAsia QZ8501 plane following the
retrieval of the final major part of the fuselage of the plane from the
sea.
An expert team of 15 Indonesian divers explored the main hull of the
AirAsia jet that crashed last month, hoping to recover the bulk of the
disaster's victims, on January 15, a day after it was finally located by
a navy ship.
The Indonesia National
Transportation Safety Committee (NTSC) has completed downloading the
information from the flight data recorder and the cockpit voice recorder
of the crashed AirAsia plane QZ8501.
Search efforts have detected crashed Flight QZ 8501’s second and final
black box containing the cockpit voice recorder, said Mardjono
Siswosumarno, Indonesian chief of the National Transport Safety
Committee (NTSC), on January 12.
Indonesian divers have found one of the two black boxes from an AirAsia
airliner that crashed into the Java Sea two weeks ago, according
to Chief of the Indonesian Search and Rescue Agency (Basarnas) Bambang
Soelistyo.
The flight data recorder of a Lao Airlines plane that plunged into the
Mekong River killing all 49 people on board was discovered at
9.40am local time on October 31, the Lao national news agency KPL has
said.