Hunt for Lion Air jet's black box delayed by bad
weather
FILE PHOTO: Workers load up recovered debris and
belongings believed to be from Lion Air flight JT6
JAKARTA: A
renewed search for the cockpit voice recorder of a Lion Air jet that crashed
into the Java Sea on Oct. 29 has been delayed for two days due to bad weather
hampering the arrival of a specialised ship, the airline said.
The crash,
the world's first of a Boeing Co 737 MAX jet, killed all 189 people on board and
the main wreckage and second 'black box' were not recovered in an initial
search.
Lion Air said in a statement that it was funding a 38 billion
rupiah (US$2.6 million) search effort using the offshore supply ship MPV
Everest, which had been expected to arrive in the search area on
Monday.
Bad weather and heavy rain at the port of Johor Bahru in Malaysia
interfered with the equipment and crew mobilisation process, delaying the ship's
arrival at the crash site until Wednesday, the airline said late on
Sunday.
Lion Air's decision to foot the bill for the search is a rare
test of global norms regarding search independence, as such costs are typically
paid by governments.
A spokesman for the transportation ministry said its
obligation was to fund the investigation. The search for the cockpit voice
recorder was the airline's responsibility, he said.
Lion Air on Sunday
said the search for the cockpit voice recorder was the "duty and responsibility"
of Indonesia's transport safety committee. The airline on Monday issued a
revised statement removing that reference.
In 2007, efforts to recover
the black boxes from a crashed Adam Air jet were delayed due to disagreements
between the Indonesian government and the airline over who should bear the
cost.
Indonesian investigators said last week that bureaucratic wrangling
and funding problems had hampered the search for the Lion Air recorder and they
had turned to the airline for help.
Safety experts say it is unusual for
one of the parties to help fund an investigation, required by UN rules to be
independent to ensure trust in any safety recommendations.
There are also
broader concerns about resources available for such investigations worldwide,
coupled with the risk of agencies being ensnared in legal disputes.
The
clock is ticking in the hunt for acoustic pings coming from the L3 Technologies
Inc cockpit voice recorder fitted to the jet. It has a 90-day beacon, the
manufacturer's online brochure shows.
The flight data recorder was
retrieved three days after the crash, providing insight into aircraft systems
and crew inputs, although the cause has yet to be determined.
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