Sukhoi’s black box discovered, at last

May 16, 2012, 09.17 AM  | Reporter: Edy Can
Sukhoi’s black box discovered, at last

ILUSTRASI. Kurs dollar-rupiah Bank Mandiri hari ini Jumat 7 Mei 2021, cek sebelum tukar valas. (KONTAN/Carolus Agus Waluyo)


JAKARTA. Many questions will likely be answered now that the members of the Indonesia’s search and rescue missions have finally found the flight-data recorder, commonly known as the ‘black box’, of Sukhoi Superjet 100 that crashed last week on Mt. Salak, Bogor, West Java.

Bogor’s Surya Kencana Military Resort Commander Col. (Inf.) A.M. Putranto told Antara news agency late on Tuesday that members of joint team between the Army Special Force (Kopassus) and Indonesia Rock Climbing Federation discovered the black box at the crash scene.

“The officials of the National Transportation Safety Committee (KNKT) studied the object that the members had discovered at the crash scene. They concluded that it was indeed the Sukhoi’s black box,” he said.

Putranto, who is also the search and rescue mission’s coordinator in the area, said that the team found the flight-data recorder near the wreckage of the ill-fated aircraft’s rear section at around 10 p.m.

Earlier this week, KNKT chief Tatang Kurniadi told The Jakarta Post that the starting point of the examination of airplane’s black box would be in Indonesia, saying that he had discussed it with Russian Ambassador to Indonesia Alexander A. Ivanov.

He added, however, that should Russian technology be needed to explore the black box’s data, his team would bring the black box to Moscow.

The Russian-made aircraft Sukhoi Superjet 100, with 45 people onboard, disappeared from radar screens last Wednesday before an Air Force helicopter spotted its wreckage at an altitude of 5,800 feet in the foothills of Mt. Salak’s in Cidahu, Sukabumi, the day after.

Search and rescue teams found that the bodies of the Sukhoi passengers were no longer intact.

Eight Russian crew members, one American citizen and one French passenger were onboard along with 35 Indonesians. (The Jakarta Post)

Editor: Edy Can

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