10 January,2021 09:19 AM IST | Jakarta | IANS
Rescuers carry a bag of parts recovered from the crash site, in the port of Jakarta on January 10, 2021, after Sriwijaya Air flight SJY182 crashed after takeoff from Jakarta. Pic: AFP
Indonesia's Transportation Minister Budi Karya Sumadi has confirmed the crash of a Boeing 737-500 plane of Indonesian airlines with 62 people on board that lost contact with the air traffic controller.
At a virtual press conference held on Saturday evening, the minister said the Sriwijaya Air flight SJ-182 heading from capital city Jakarta to Pontianak city in West Kalimantan province crashed into the waters off the Seribu District in north of Jakarta, Xinhua news agency reported.
According to him, the plane was believed to have crashed near the district's Laki Island and Lancang Island, part of the Thousand Islands chain.
The plane departed from the Soekarno-Hatta international airport in Jakarta at 2.36 p.m. local time. According to Sumadi, the last contact with the plane was made by aviation authorities four minutes after its takeoff.
ALSO READ
Video shows NY officer fatally shooting 13-year-old
Mid-Day Top News: Maharashtra assembly polls likely only after Diwali and more
Congress: Centre insensitive to statehood restoration demand, will be poll issue
Yunus accuses Sheikh Hasina of destroying Bangladesh's institutions
Harris scared to do an interview on her own: Donald Trump's election campaign
Search and rescue operations underway were hampered by the bad weather. Workers of Indonesia's National Search and Rescue Agency (Basarnas) have found debris and cables suspected to be of the ill-fated aircraft.
Boats and aircraft from various Indonesian agencies were involved in the search.
Sumadi said that President Joko Widodo has instructed rescue workers to maximize searching efforts.
Basarnas spokesman Yusuf Latief told Xinhua that about 100 rescue workers were at the location, and his agency has sent its ship equipped with a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) to search for the wreckage of the aircraft at the sea floor.
An investigation into the plane crash was launched by the Transportation Ministry.
Earlier, Captain EKo Surya Hadi, commander of Trisula coast guard ship, told a local TV that human body parts and debris of the plane were discovered.
"We found body parts, life jackets, avtur (aviation turbine fuel) and debris of the plane," he said.
Sumadi said that aboard the Boeing plane were 50 passengers including seven children and three babies, and 12 crew members.
On October 29, 2018, all 189 people aboard were killed after a Boeing 737 Max plane of Indonesia's Lion Air crashed into the Java Sea shortly after taking off from Jakarta.
In December 2014, an AirAsia plane crashed into sea en route from Indonesia's second biggest city Surabaya to Singapore, killing all 162 people aboard.