Indonesia Struggles With Air Safety
Oversight
U.N. Agency Puts Indonesia Air Safety
Among Worst in National Audits
Passenger seats believed to be from AirAsia Flight
8501 were recovered Monday. ENLARGE
By ANDY PASZTOR
Despite more
than seven years of concerted international help to improve the Indonesian
government's air-safety oversight, its system still ranks among the worst in
national audits conducted by a United Nations agency.
Countries that have
been scored higher by the International Civil Aviation Organization on the
overall effectiveness of their aviation laws, regulations and monitoring efforts
include tiny players such Albania, Kyrgyzstan, Cameroon and Burkina
Faso.
Regulators in Jakarta now oversee a global aviation powerhouse with
domestic airlines operating nearly 400 jets-carrying more than 50 million
passengers annually-but results of the country's latest ICAO audit are more
comparable with those for Guinea or Latvia, nations with limited aviation
activity.
In a statement Monday, Indonesia's Transport Ministry said
"it's not true that Indonesia is one of the world's most hazardous in terms of
aviation." The statement also said airlines "are required to have internal
quality and safety inspectors licensed by" regulators, who perform "routine and
periodic audits every two years, and surveillance every month."
In July
2007, after a spate of deadly crashes, Indonesian officials and leaders of ICAO,
an arm of the U.N., signed what they described as a "groundbreaking declaration"
committing Jakarta to "prompt and wide-ranging action" to enhance commercial
aviation safety. Indonesia pledged to provide the necessary financial and human
resources to properly regulate fast-growing airlines, with early progress slated
to come within a year.
Since then, the country's aviation sector has
continued to expand dramatically, with new airlines taking wing and traffic
growing at an average annual rate of roughly 15%. But ICAO and independent
air-safety experts say many of the same oversight problems remain, despite
improving accident rates in this decade.
The issue of Indonesia's safety
initiatives is under enhanced scrutiny after the Dec. 28 crash of AirAsia Flight
8501.
The ICAO's audit program doesn't rate the safety or the management
of individual carriers. Instead, it is intended to gauge how well government
agencies are staffed and financed to ensure compliance with global
standards.
The timing, duration and focus of the agency's audits vary
based on the complexity of each nation's aviation activities, as well as
information received from that country. Over the past decade or so, more than
180 separate audits have been completed, covering 99% of international air
traffic.
In May 2014, the agency found Indonesia's progress toward those
goals was significantly below the world-wide average in each of the eight
categories audited.
Agency experts assessed everything from legislation
to the level of pilot licensing to aircraft inspections. Other categories dealt
with air-traffic control services, airports and accident investigations.
According to ICAO's website, Indonesia scored below 40% in five categories and
came close to the global average only in two.
After examining Jakarta's
oversight system, the ICAO assessed its level of "effective implementation"
below India, Philippines and Bangladesh, which also have wrestled with oversight
difficulties and ended up in the crosshairs of U.S. authorities.
The ICAO
doesn't have any direct enforcement authority, but its assessments influence
U.S. and European Union actions to restrict or ban certain foreign airlines from
serving their citizens.
Responding to the May audit, Indonesia agreed to
a corrective action plan. But last month, the EU said "the safety oversight
system in Indonesia still needs substantial improvement." The European
Commission, the EU's executive arm, said it found "no objective or conclusive
evidence that the implementation of the corrective action plan" by Indonesian
officials was adequate.
Since 2007, the U.S. has effectively barred
Indonesian carriers from increasing flights to American destinations. The EU
currently has Indonesia on a "blacklist" that includes 20 other states with
substandard safety records, and certain Indonesian carriers are barred from
flying into Europe.
But the country's accident rate has been trending
down. Tatang Kurniadi, who heads Indonesia's National Transportation Safety
Committee, said last week that the nation's 2014 aircraft accident rate fell to
0.82 per million flights this year, down from 2.94 per million in 2007. The
rolling five-year average was about 1.2.
Over the same period, crashes
and major accidents involving Western-built jets averaged around .36 per million
flights, according to the latest data from the International Air Transport
Association.
Prior to the AsiaAir crash, no commercial jet had suffered a
fatal accident in seven years. Indonesia's worst airline accident took place in
September 1997, when a Garuda Indonesia A300 jet crashed into a hill as it
approached the city of Medan, killing all 222 passengers and 12 crew.
The
country's ranking by U.S. officials, which doesn't assess the safety of
individual carriers, is unlikely to improve in response to the AirAsia disaster.
"Our efforts to get an upgrade" from U.S. authorities now will be more
difficult, said Hadi Mustofa Djuraid, an expert at the transportation
ministry.
Corrections & Amplifications
Regulators in Jakarta
oversee domestic airlines operating nearly 400 jets that carry more than 50
million passengers annually. A previous version of this article stated that the
airlines carried 300 million passengers.
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