An arrival information board
displaying the status of Air Asia flight QZ8501 at Changi airport in
Singapore. Photograph: Xinhua News Agency/REX
An AirAsia passenger jet with 162 people on board has disappeared
during a flight between Indonesia and Singapore, prompting an
international search and rescue operation.
AirAsia flight QZ8501, an Airbus 320-200 passenger jet that took off
from the Indonesian city of Surabaya at 5:27am, lost all contact with
air control at 7:24 am as it travelled along its regular flight path,
according to the flight tracking website FlightRadar24.
The aircraft had earlier requested to deviate from the path “due to
en route weather”, according to a statement on AirAsia’s Facebook page.
It did not send out a distress signal.
The pilot requested that he turn left and rise from 34,000 to
38,000ft, Djoko Murjatmodjo, the acting director general of air
transport at Indonesia’s Ministry of Transportation, told reporters. “At
the moment, we don’t know where the exact location is, except that this
morning at 0617, we lost contact,” he said.
On Sunday afternoon, AirAsia changed the colour of its logo on social
media sites to gray, and the company’s CEO, Tony Fernandes, tweeted
that he was travelling to Surabaya, home of many of the jet’s
passengers. “Providing information as we get it,” he wrote. Relatives of passengers on board AirAsia flight QZ8501 at Juanda international airport, Surabaya.Photograph: Beawiharta/Reuters
Those on board included two pilots, five cabin crew members and 155
passengers. Among them, 156 were from Indonesia, three from South Korea,
and one each from Singapore, France and Malaysia. The UK Foreign Office
said that there was one Briton on board. The passenger list included 16
children and one infant. Relatives of passengers and crew have gathered
for news briefings in Surabaya and Singapore.
Airbus said in a statement that the aircraft was delivered to AirAsia
“from the production line” in October 2008, and had accumulated
approximately 23,000 flight hours during 13,600 flights. The statement
said: “At this time, no further factual information is available”.
Indonesia’s army and national search and rescue agency have launched a
search effort for the plane’s wreckage, focusing on an area of the Java
Sea near Belitung, an island off of the east coast of Sumatra. They
have dispatched three aircraft including a surveillance plane, according
to Air Force spokesman Hadi Tjahjanto. Malaysia and Australia have also
offered their help, and Singapore has dispatched a C130 turboprop plane
for assistance. Relatives of a
flight attendant who was travelling on missing Air Asia Flight QZ 8501
gather at their home in Palembang, South Sumatra.Photograph: Abdul Qodir/AFP/Getty Images
“My only thought are with the [passengers] and my crew,” Fernandes
wrote in a later tweet. “We put our hope in the SAR operation and thank
the Indonesia, Singapore and Malaysian governments.”
China’s foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said at a press
briefing that China was “deeply concerned” for the safety of the jet’s
passengers and crew. President Barack Obama, on holiday in Hawaii, has
been briefed on the jet’s disappearance, according to White House
spokesperson Eric Schultz. South Korean government officials, responding
to the news that three South Korean citizens were on board the plane,
have called an emergency meeting at the country’s foreign ministry in
Seoul. Journalists at
the waiting area for next-of-kin and relatives of passengers on board
AirAsia flight QZ8501 at Changi airport in Singapore.Photograph: EDGAR SU/REUTERS
The UK’s Foreign Office said in a statement: “We are aware of an
incident regarding AirAsia flight QZ8501. Our thoughts are with the
passengers’ families as they await further news. We have been informed
by the local authorities that one British national was on board. Their
next of kin has been informed, and we stand ready to provide consular
assistance.”
AirAsia is a budget airline with its headquarters near Kuala Lumpur,
Malaysia. Sunday’s incident marks the third sudden disappearance of a
Malaysian carrier this year. On 8 March, Malaysia Airlines flight 370
vanished while carrying 239 people from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing;
although investigators suspect that it crashed somewhere in the southern
Indian Ocean, they have found no wreckage, and the jet’s fate remains
unclear. In July, Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 lost contact when it was
shot down over Ukraine, ostensibly by Russian separatists, killing all
283 passengers and 15 crew on board.
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