Search area expanded to locate missing Indonesian plane

No distress signal was received from the plane with 10 passengers, 3 of whom were children.

October 05, 2015 11:05 am | Updated July 07, 2016 06:22 pm IST - MAKASSAR (INDONESIA):

Military personnel on Saturday walk past a Twin Otter plane similar to the one that is reported missing on Friday, at Sultan Hasanuddin airport in Makassar, South Sulawesi, in Indonesia. Six planes and four ships embarked on a widening search on Monday for the plane with 10 people on board.

Military personnel on Saturday walk past a Twin Otter plane similar to the one that is reported missing on Friday, at Sultan Hasanuddin airport in Makassar, South Sulawesi, in Indonesia. Six planes and four ships embarked on a widening search on Monday for the plane with 10 people on board.

Six planes and four ships embarked on Monday on a widening search for a plane with 10 people on board that went missing in eastern Indonesia three days ago.

The search for the turboprop plane, owned by the Aviastar Mandiri airline, was focusing on the sea near Bone Gulf, the large inlet between the two southern peninsulas of Sulawesi Island, said Henry Bambang Soelistyo, the head of Indonesia’s National Search and Rescue Agency.

Three military aircraft, a search and rescue helicopter and two similar Twin Otter planes owned by the airline and four patrol boats joined Monday’s search operation.

3 children among passengers

The DHC-5 Twin Otter plane lost contact with air traffic controllers 11 minutes after taking off in good weather on Friday from Masamba in South Sulawesi province. It was on a routine flight to Makassar, the provincial capital, carrying three crewmembers and seven passengers, including three children. No distress signal was received.

Weekend search efforts were hindered by bad weather and rough terrain, Mr. Soelistyo said. Rescuers have checked locations reportedly by the locals, but found nothing.

On Sunday, two aircraft and two helicopters combed areas around the location where the missing plane was believed to have made the last contact and areas where villagers allegedly heard or spotted the plane before it went missing, said Ivan Ahmad Titus, the agency’s operation director.

Lacked locating device?

Mr. Soelistyo said the plane may not have been equipped with an emergency locator transmitter, a device attached to the so-called black boxes, which emits a signal indicating its position. Director General of Air Transportation Suprasetyo said officials were investigating that possibility.

The 1981 Canadian-made plane joined Aviastar in January 2014 and underwent its most recent maintenance on Sept. 15.

Such accidents on the rise

Indonesia, a sprawling archipelago nation of about 250 million people, has been plagued by transportation accidents in recent years, including plane and train crashes and ferry sinkings. It is one of Asia’s most rapidly expanding airline markets, but is struggling to obtain qualified pilots, mechanics, air traffic controllers and modern airport technology.

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