Lion Air crash casts spotlight on Indonesia's aviation safety
record
Lion Air, a low-cost Indonesian airline, has been
involved in a number of incidents in recent years
JAKARTA:
Indonesia's aviation safety record has come under the spotlight again after a
Lion Air flight with 189 people on board crashed into the sea off Indonesia's
island of Java on Monday morning (Oct 29).
Flight JT610 was en route to
Pangkal Pinang from Jakarta when it lost contact 13 minutes after takeoff.
Indonesia, which relies heavily on air transport to connect its
thousands of islands, has seen several fatal crashes in recent
years.
Last year the Indonesian air traffic controllers association
revealed that the rate of take-off and landings in Jakarta allowed by state-run
air navigation company AirNav was more than the airport could handle, increasing
the chance of accidents.
The country's carriers have also in the past
faced years-long bans from entering European Union and US airspace over their
safety records.
Recently, a 12-year-old boy was the sole survivor of a
plane crash that killed eight people in mountainous eastern Indonesia in
August.
In August 2015, a commercial passenger aircraft operated by
Indonesian carrier Trigana crashed in Papua due to bad weather, killing all 54
people on board.
In 2014, an AirAsia plane crashed with the loss of 162
lives. Indonesian investigators' final report showed a chronically faulty
component in a rudder control system, poor maintenance and the pilots'
inadequate response were major factors in what was supposed to be a routine
flight from the Indonesian city of Surabaya to Singapore.
PAST LION AIR
INCIDENTS
Privately owned budget carrier Lion Air was founded in 1999 and
its only fatal accident to date was when a MD-82 crashed upon landing at Solo
City in 2004.
Two dozen people were killed when the flight from Jakarta
skidded off a rain-slicked runway after landing.
However, six other Lion
Air jets, including one that crash-landed in the water short of the runway at
Bali in 2013, were damaged beyond repair in various accidents, according to
Aviation Safety Network.
In June, Lion was among three major Indonesian
airlines that had their safety ranking upgraded to seven stars by global rating
agency AirlineRatings.com.
Last year one of its Boeing jets collided with
a Wings Air plane as it landed at Kualanamu airport on the island of Sumatra,
although no one was injured.
In May 2016, two Lion Air planes collided at
Jakarta's Soekarno-Hatta airport, while a month earlier a plane operated by
Batik Air - part of the Lion Group - clipped a TransNusa plane.
In 2013,
a Lion Air jet with a rookie pilot at the controls undershot the runway and
crashed into the sea in Bali, splitting the plane in two. Several people were
injured in the crash, although no one was killed.
In 2004, two dozen
people were killed when a Lion Air flight from Jakarta skidded off a
rain-slicked runway after landing in the Central Java city of Solo.
"The
industry has grown very quickly and keeping pace with that growth is challenging
in keeping the safety culture intact," said Greg Waldron, the Asia managing
editor of industry publication FlightGlobal, which keeps an accident
database.
If all on board prove to have died on Monday's crash, it would
rank as Indonesia's second-worst air disaster, after a Garuda Indonesia A300
crash in Medan that killed 214 people in 1997, he said.
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