AirAsia crash: Indonesian officials to end search for victims

Flight QZ8501 crashed on December 28th with loss of all 162 people on board

A section of the tail of AirAsia Flight QZ8501 on the deck of a rescue ship  on January 11th. Indonesia is to halt the search for victims of the crash on Sunday, with 56 people still unaccounted for. Photograph: Reuters/Darren Whiteside/Files
A section of the tail of AirAsia Flight QZ8501 on the deck of a rescue ship on January 11th. Indonesia is to halt the search for victims of the crash on Sunday, with 56 people still unaccounted for. Photograph: Reuters/Darren Whiteside/Files

Indonesia will on Sunday end a search for the bodies of 56 people missing from an AirAsia jet that crashed in the Java Sea in December, a national rescue agency official said.

AirAsia flight QZ8501 lost contact with air traffic control during bad weather less than halfway into a two-hour flight from Surabaya in Indonesia to Singapore on December 28th.

All 162 people on board the Airbus A320 were killed. A multi-national rescue effort, led by the Indonesian military and often hampered by bad weather and strong currents, recovered 106 bodies, with 56 unaccounted for.

Yusuf Latif, a spokesman for the search and rescue agency, said: "Some of our ships and personnel have been pulled back already and some remain on standby, but officially the operation will be finished on Sunday."

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The flight data and black boxes were recovered two weeks after the crash. Large pieces of the fuselage were also found on the sea floor.

Few details of the analysis of the flight recorders have been made public.

The National Transportation Safety Committee has revealed that the French first officer was at the controls of the jet just before the accident.

Sources said the captain of was out of his seat conducting an unusual procedure when his co-pilot apparently lost control, but Indonesian authorities said there was no evidence of that.

The AirAsia crash was the latest in a string of accidents to hit Indonesia’s aviation industry, which is among the fastest-growing in the region, and has stepped up pressure on the government and airlines to improve safety.

The final result of the investigation is due in about six months, an investigator said.

Reuters