Nur Aminah, The Jakarta Post, Badung/Jakarta | Headlines | Sun, April 14 2013, 10:22 AM
Paper Edition | Page: 1
Unexpected arrival: A passenger injured in the crash of Lion Air flight JT-960 receives treatment at Kasih Ibu Hospital in Bali. (JP/Agung Parameswara)
Landing
at Ngurah Rai International Airport in Badung, Bali, usually provides
passengers with a beautiful view of sandy beaches.
It was a
different story for those on board Lion Air flight JT-960 yesterday.
Instead of a smooth landing, the Boeing 737-800 they were aboard on
ditched into the sea.
“We heard the flight attendant announce
that we were about to land when suddenly the aircraft fell and we were
in the sea,” said one of the passengers, Andis Prasetoyo, who suffered
only slight injuries.
Flight JT-960 took off from Bandung at
12:35 p.m. and the accident took place at about 3:30 p.m. local time
(2:30 p.m. Jakarta time).
All 108 people on board, 95 adult
passengers, five children, one baby and seven crew members survived the
impact. Two of the passengers were Singaporeans and one a French
national.
The aircraft suffered damage to its fuselage and wings.
Rescue workers took 46 passengers and crew to a number of hospitals for treatment.
Most
people were treated at Kasih Ibu Hospital in Kedonganan, which received
31 injured survivors. Sanglah General Hospital treated 10 people, three
were sent to the BMC Hospital. Surya Husada Hospital and Kasih Ibu
Hospital on Jl. Teuku Umar treated one person each.
Most people
were suffering from shock or minor cuts and bruises from the impact.
Other passengers who sustained minor injuries or suffered from shock
were allowed to return home or go to their hotels.
Bali Police
chief Insp. Gen. Arif Wachyunadi declined to comment on the reasons for
the accident, saying it would be up to the National Transportation
Safety Committee (KNKT) to reveal the cause after an investigation.
“We
were very grateful that all passengers and crew were safe,” he told a
press conference at the airport’s emergency operations center.
Arif
applauded all parties that took part in the rescue such as the
military, the National SAR Agency and locals, especially fishermen.
KNKT investigators were expected to arrive in Bali later on Saturday.
Following the incident, the airport was closed for about 90 minutes, reopening at 5 p.m. local time.
Three
arriving flights were redirected to Lombok International Airport, while
another eight were requested to hold for about 15 minutes in the air.
Four departures were also delayed, head of the airport’s operation and
readiness department, Tri Basuki, announced.
“We have secured the black box flight recorders, but have to wait for the KNKT investigators,” he added.
Tri added that the pilot, Capt. Mahlup Gozali, was still being treated and had not been questioned yet.
Lion
Air general director Eduard Sirait told a press conference at the
airlines’s office in Jakarta that Capt. Mahlup Gozali was a senior
pilot.
“He has more than 10,000 flying hours experience. Before
this flight, his health was good and after the incident his health was
also reported to be good,” he said.
“The entire cabin crew, including the pilot, had met all the standard medical obligations,” he added.
Eduard explained that the 180-seater aircraft had been in operation for only two months.
“This is a new aircraft. We received the plane directly from Boeing in March 2013,” he said.
“The aircraft had met all standard operational procedures before leaving Bandung at 12:30 p.m.”
When
asked about reporters in Bali being prohibited from covering the
accident, he said that everything in the area belonged to the airport
management authority and Lion Air had no authority on the issue.
Eduard
also said that the airline would be ready to transport passengers to
their hometowns as soon as they were ready to go back.
The airline will also pay compensations for any losses suffered by the passengers, he added.
State
travel insurance company PT Jasa Raharja covers treatment expenses up
to Rp 25 million (US$2.57 million) for passengers who are treated at
hospital. As for out-patients, they will cover the treatment costs
themselves.
(hrl)
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