Contact lost with plane carrying 102 in Indonesia
Source: Reuters
(Adds official's comment on distress signal, details) By Ahmad Pathoni JAKARTA, Jan 1 (Reuters) - Contact was lost on Monday with an Adam Air Boeing 737-400 plane flying between Indonesian islands with 96 passengers and six crew on board, Indonesian officials said. The plane was flying from Surabaya on Java island to Manado on Sulawesi island. Tatang Ikhsan, director general at the transport ministry said on Elshinta radio that the flight had originated in Jakarta with a stop in Surabaya. It left Surabaya at 1 p.m. (0600 GMT) and was scheduled to land just over two hours later in Manado in North Sulawesi. Contact was lost when the plane was at an altitude of 35,000 feet, about one hour before it was due to land, Ikhsan said. He later told a news conference that a Singapore satellite picked up a distress signal from a plane 83 nautical miles northwest of Makassar, the capital of South Sulawesi province. "We call on other flights which crossed this route to provide information on any distress signal," he said. Transport Minister Hatta Rajasa said the plane had been sighted above the Mamuju forest on Sulawesi. "(It was) preliminary information from a plane flying above it. It will be the first clue for SAR (Search and Rescue) to move to the area," he told Elshinta radio, adding that rescuers had already been ordered to go. "Let's hope it made an emergency landing," he said. An Adam Air Boeing 737-300 plane was forced to make an emergency landing in February at a small airport in East Nusa Tenggara province after a navigational failure caused the pilot to lose contact with the destination airport in Makassar. Adam Air, one of about a dozen budget airlines in the world's fourth most populous nation, operates 19 Boeing <BA.N> 737 jets. It serves dozens of domestic routes in Indonesia and also flies to Singapore. The airline was established by two Indonesians, Agung Laksono, the speaker of the house of representatives, who currently serves as chairman of the company, and Sandra Ang, in 2002 and commenced operations on Dec. 19, 2003. In January a newspaper report said Adam Air was planning a share listing in Singapore for 2008. Air travel in Indonesia, home to 220 million people, has grown substantially since the liberalisation of the airline industry after the Asian financial crisis in the late 1990s, which enabled privately owned budget airlines to operate.
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