Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
International

AirAsia Crash: Plane Landed Safely On Water Before Sinking?

Darpan News Desk, 01 Jan, 2015 05:32 PM
    The AirAsia flight QZ8501 that met with disaster over the Java Sea on its way from Surabaya in Indonesia to Singapore Sunday, may have made a safe landing on water before being consumed by high waves, amid a raging storm, experts say.
     
    The Daily Mirror reported Thursday, citing aviation experts, that the absence of any crash transmission data meant that the experienced former air force pilot Captain Irianto might have executed a perfect emergency landing on sea.
     
    The Airbus A320-200 aircraft with 155 passengers and seven crew members on board went missing soon after taking off from Surabaya in Indonesia's East Java province early Sunday morning en route to Singapore's Changi airport. The debris was spotted Tuesday.
     
    While the hunt is on for the black boxes, several aviation experts believe that the absence of any usual crash transmission data means the plane could have touched down safely with all the people on board.
     
    The plane lost contact with the air traffic control over the Java Sea in Indonesian territory amid a thunderstorm raging in the area, but emergency transmissions that are made when a plane crashes or is submerged in water were never emitted.
     
    Hence, flight experts now believe that it is entirely possible that the pilot of the stricken plane may have succeeded in safely landing it on water, before it was overcome by high waves and sunk to the bottom of the sea.
     
     
    Dudi Sudibyo, a senior editor of aviation magazine Angkasa, said: "The emergency locator transmitter (ELT) would work on impact, be that land, sea or the sides of a mountain, and my analysis is it didn't work because there was no major impact during landing."
     
    "The pilot managed to land it on the sea surface," he said.
     
    Captain Irianto was cruising at an altitude of 32,000 feet when he requested permission to change course to avoid storms.
     
    However, in spite of being granted permission, he had to wait because of heavy air traffic and the plane vanished from radar screens minutes later.
    While a massive search operation is underway for the black boxes, it remains a mystery why there were no distress signals from the pilot.
     
    Eight bodies have been recovered from the Java Sea site where the ill-fated flight is believed to have gone down, at the end of search operations Thursday.
     
    Two of the first pieces of the plane's debris were an emergency exit door and an inflatable slide, which could suggest that the first passengers might have started to evacuate from the plane.
     
    A shadow of the plane believed to have been spotted on the seabed also showed that the plane might have been largely intact.
     
    Former Indonesia transport minister Jusman Syafii Djamal said that discovery of the exit door might mean "someone had opened it", according to the Daily Mirror report, which cited Channel News Asia.
     
    The full cause of the crash will remain unclear until search and rescue workers recover the black boxes that record every movement of the aircraft and conversation in the cockpit.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    6 injured, gunman dead in FedEx warehouse shooting in US

    6 injured, gunman dead in FedEx warehouse shooting in US
    A gunman Tuesday injured six people at a FedEx warehouse in the US state of Georgia before killing himself, local media reported.

    6 injured, gunman dead in FedEx warehouse shooting in US

    Sikh school in Britain reassures parents on pupils' safety

    Sikh school in Britain reassures parents on pupils' safety
    A Sikh school in Britain has reassured its students and their parents that its premises are completely safe after it was claimed that the school was constructed on contaminated soil, media reported Monday.

    Sikh school in Britain reassures parents on pupils' safety

    Labour party suspends Indian-origin candidate in Britain

    Labour party suspends Indian-origin candidate in Britain
    An Indian-origin man, who is running for a local election in Britain's West London next month, was suspended by the British Labour party as its candidate after it was found that he was embroiled in a court case.

    Labour party suspends Indian-origin candidate in Britain

    Corageous popes John XXIII, John Paul II are saints

    Corageous popes John XXIII, John Paul II are saints
    Popes John XXIII and John Paul II were canonised by Pope Francis Sunday in the Vatican City, the country's official news network News.VA said

    Corageous popes John XXIII, John Paul II are saints

    Sherpas, the people who make it possible to scale Everest

    Sherpas, the people who make it possible to scale Everest
    The death of 13 Sherpas and the disappearance of three more in an avalanche on Mount Everest has brought into sharp focus the danger faced by these guides who make climbing the highest mountain in the world possible.

    Sherpas, the people who make it possible to scale Everest

    Australian man denies hijacking Bali-bound flight

    Australian man denies hijacking Bali-bound flight
    The Australian man who sparked a hijack scare on a Bali-bound flight from Brisbane has denied that he was drunk and thought the cockpit door was the entrance to the toilet, a media report said Saturday.

    Australian man denies hijacking Bali-bound flight