JAKARTA, INDONESIA
A US
warship Tuesday joined an expanded search for an AirAsia passenger plane
missing off Indonesia as the pilot's last words to air traffic control
were revealed.
The recording shows the pilot wanted to
avoid a menacing storm system before all communication was lost, an
Indonesian air safety official said.
More than 48 hours
after the Airbus A320-200 carrying 162 people lost contact en route
from Indonesia's second largest city Surabaya to Singapore, no clue has
been found as to the plane's final location or fate.
Before
take-off the pilot had asked for permission to fly at a higher level to
avoid a storm but his request was not approved due to heavy traffic on
the popular route, AirNav, Indonesia's flight navigation service, said
Tuesday.
In his final communication, the pilot asked to
alter his course and repeated his original request to ascend to avoid
bad weather.
"The pilot requested to air traffic
controllers to deviate to the left side due to bad weather, which was
immediately approved," Wisnu Darjono, the safety director for
Indonesia's flight navigation service AirNav told AFP.
"After
a few seconds the pilot requested to ascend from 32,000 to 38,000 feet
but could not be immediately approved as some planes were flying above
it at that time," Darjono said.
That was the last communication with AirAsia Flight QZ8501.
"Two
to three minutes later when the controller was going to give a
clearance to a level of 34,000, the plane did not give any response," he
said.
At take-off the pilot had requested permission to fly at 34,000 feet but due to traffic it could not be approved, he said.
"At that time there were 11 planes flying route M635," he said, adding that 160 flights a day used the route to Singapore.
NO SIGN OF AIRCRAFT
Details of the pilot's final contact came as the National Search and Rescue Agency (Basarnas) said it had expanded the search.
The
hunt is focused on waters around the islands of Bangka and Belitung in
the Java Sea, across from Kalimantan on Borneo Island, but the army has
also been asked to carry out ground searches, including in mountainous
areas.
Basarnas chief Bambang Soelistyo told reporters
the search zone had been expanded from seven sectors to 13, covering
156,000 square kilometres (60,000 square miles).
"We
intensified today's search operation by expanding the search area on sea
from the coordinates where the plane was missing and on land to the
east and west of Borneo island," deputy operations chief Tatang
Zainuddin told AFP.
As the search resumed at dawn for a third day, he said oil spills spotted on Monday had been tested but were not aviation fuel.
"The oil leak is actually from fishermen's boats, not from the AirAsia plane," Zainuddin said.
"We haven't found any signs of the aircraft's whereabouts up to now."
Indonesian
officials however appear to be preparing for the worst, with Soelistyo
saying Monday it was likely the plane was at "the bottom of the sea",
based on its estimated position.
INTERNATIONAL EFFORT
Australia,
Singapore and Malaysia have sent maritime surveillance aircraft and
warships to assist in the search, joining Indonesian planes, ships and
scores of fishing boats scouring the waters for signs of the ill-fated
aircraft.
Washington said it was deploying the USS
Sampson to join the growing international effort, with the destroyer
expected to arrive in the search zone Tuesday.
South
Korea said it was sending a P-3 reconnaissance plane that was involved
in the search for Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 which vanished in
March.
While the operation has drawn comparisons with
the ongoing search for MH370, Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbot said
it did not appear to be a great mystery.
"It doesn't appear that there's any particular mystery here," Abbott told Sydney radio station 2GB on Monday.
"It's
an aircraft that was flying a regular route on a regular schedule, it
struck what appears to have been horrific weather, and it's down. But
this is not a mystery like the MH370 disappearance and it's not an
atrocity like the MH17 shooting down."
China, which had 152 citizens onboard MH370, said it was sending a frigate and military aircraft to help with the new search.
AirAsia
said 155 of those on board were Indonesian, with three South Koreans
and one person each from Singapore, Malaysia, Britain and France. The
Frenchman was the co-pilot.
The missing plane was
operated by AirAsia Indonesia, a unit of Malaysian-based AirAsia which
dominates Southeast Asia's booming low-cost airline market.
Indonesia, a vast archipelago with poor roads and railways, has seen explosive growth in low-cost air travel over recent years.
But the air industry has been blighted by low safety standards in an area that also experiences extreme weather.
AirAsia, which has never suffered a fatal accident, said the missing jet last underwent maintenance on November 16.
The plane's disappearance comes at the end of a disastrous year for Malaysian aviation.
Malaysia
Airlines Flight MH370 disappeared while flying from Kuala Lumpur to
Beijing in March with 239 passengers and crew, and in July flight MH17
was shot down over unrest-hit Ukraine, killing all 298 on board.
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