Special report: Indonesian passenger plane
missing
 |
|
An undated file photo downloaded on Adam
Air company website shows an Adam Air Boeing 737 airliner taking off in
Jakarta. (Xinhua Photo/AFP) Photo Gallery
>>> |
JAKARTA, Jan. 3 (Xinhua) -- Indonesian authorities
Wednesday deployed ships and aircraft to resume searching for a passenger plane
that went missing Monday with 102 people onboard, after confirmation that
initial reports of finding the wreckage turned out to be false.
The Navy was involved in the search over possibility
that the Boeing 737-400 belonging to low-cost carrier Adam Air might have fallen
to the sea.
Three Cassa planes were deployed to comb the coastal
areas along Sulawesi island where the ill-fated plane last made contact with
airport controllers, a spokesman with the naval base in East Java was quoted by
the national Antara news agency as saying.
"There was a possibility that the plane had crashed
into the sea," said Lie. Col. Toni Syaiful.
From the South Sulawesi capital of Makassar, the Air
Force sent a Boeing 737-200 equipped with radar and tracking equipment to search
above the coastal areas.
The Adam Air plane was on its two-hour journey from
Surabaya in East Java to Manado in North Sulawesi when it disappeared from the
radar screen.
Authorities said Tuesday morning the wreckage of the
plane was found in the mountainous area in West Sulawesi, adding that 90 people
were killed and 12 others survived the accident.
In the evening, an embarrassed Minister of
Transportation Hatta Rajasa made an admission that the stories of the wreckage
and the survivors were incorrect.