As the search for AirAsia Flight QZ8501 stretched into its eighth day, the Java Sea continued to slowly give up the remains of the 162 victims aboard the ill-fated flight, as well as wreckage of the aircraft.
At
least four more bodies had been recovered on Sunday, taking the count
to 34. The remains were transferred by helicopter to the processing
center in Pangkalan Bun, Indonesia, to the north of the search area.
The
developments come as Indonesian officials announced that they had
identified three more bodies -- two female passengers and a male flight
attendant.
Additional wreckage was spotted overnight, measuring almost 10 meters (33 ft) by one meter (3.3ft).
Initial compensation offered
As
many endured the agonizing wait for news of their loved ones, CNN
obtained details of initial compensation packages from AirAsia to the
families of the victims.
Several
family members told CNN on Sunday that families of those on board the
plane were presented with a draft letter from AirAsia outlining details
of preliminary compensation.
The letter states that families are entitled to about $24,000 for each family member that was on the plane.
While some families signed the letter, others requested revisions to the wording.
This
compensation money is for any "financial hardships" during this period
of the search, and in the letter AirAsia stressed that it was not a
confirmation that their family members were deceased.
Search continues
Taking
advantage of better weather, the surface search area has been extended
to the east, Marsdya Bambang Soelistyo, head of the Indonesian Search
and Rescue agency, told reporters Sunday.
Although
there has been an improvement in conditions, they remain difficult,
with heavy rain and high waves continuing to hamper recovery efforts.
The
surface search's extension was based on predictions that the remains of
the victims, along with wreckage from the aircraft, have drifted with
the current.
The priority surface, and underwater search, areas remained the same, he added.
Twenty
aircraft and 27 ships were involved in Sunday's search. Divers are on
standby but the underwater search was halted due to poor visibility and
strong currents.
Three more bodies --
still wearing seat belts -- were spotted on Friday, an Indonesian
Marine Corps Major, Professor De Greatsman said.
Search
teams have found several large pieces of debris believed to be parts of
the aircraft. Sulistyo said the latest objects -- including one that
is 18 meters (59 feet) long -- were located by sonar in the priority
search area.
Searchers came upon the metal parts after spotting an oil slick late Friday.
Sinking bodies
Anton
Castilani, head of the Disaster Victims Identification unit, is eager
to get the rest of the victims out of the waters before they sink to the
bottom of the sea. He is in charge of identifying them and said that
gases in the bodies that keep them afloat disperse after a few days in
the water.
He urged families to be
patient with his team as they identify loved ones. He wants to do his
work right. "We have to make sure that we have to return that right body
to the right family," he said.
Decomposition
also slows his work down. "The later the dead bodies come to you, the
harder you work," he said. His team uses fingerprints and dental records
as well as DNA to find out who they have recovered.
AirAsia officially identified victims
• Hayati Lutfiah Hamid
• Grayson Herbert Linaksita
• Kevin Alexander Soetjipto
• The Meiji Tedjakusuma
• Hendra Gunawan Syawal
• Khairunisa Haidar Fauzi
• Jie Stevie Gunawan
• Juanita Limantara
• Wismoyo Ari Prambudi
• Grayson Herbert Linaksita
• Kevin Alexander Soetjipto
• The Meiji Tedjakusuma
• Hendra Gunawan Syawal
• Khairunisa Haidar Fauzi
• Jie Stevie Gunawan
• Juanita Limantara
• Wismoyo Ari Prambudi
Recoveries, identifications
On Friday, the USS Sampson, which the U.S. Navy has deployed to help, recovered some bodies.
A
limited number of them will be autopsied to determine the cause of
death to aid the investigation, an Indonesian official said Saturday.
But many families don't want autopsies done.
"For
the sake of the investigation, we agree, and it is accepted by
Interpol, to perform autopsies on the pilot, co-pilot and some randomly
selected passengers," said East Java Police Chief Anas Yusuf.
Nine of the plane's victims have been identified with the addition of the three victims' names on Sunday.
Search priorities
Finding the fuselage and black box of the Airbus A320-200
has priority for the 59 diving teams searching underneath the waves.
Russia has joined the effort with 22 underwater teams along with a
search plane and a cargo jet.
The
searchers are concentrating on a 1,575-square-nautical-mile zone that
officials believe is the "most probable area" to find the remains of the
aircraft.
Here's where things stand on Flight QZ8501:
The flight
What we know: QZ8501
took off early December 28 from Surabaya, bound for Singapore. Roughly
35 minutes into the flight, the pilot asked air traffic control for
permission to turn left and climb to avoid bad weather. Minutes later,
the plane disappeared from air traffic control's radar.
What we don't know: What happened on board after contact with the plane was lost. No distress call was received.
Some
experts speculate that the aircraft experienced an aerodynamic stall
because of a lack of speed or from flying at too sharp an angle to get
enough lift. Other theories include a lack of information about the
plane's position or storm damage to the engines.
The investigation
What we know:
The "black boxes" are key. Actually, they're orange and should be in
the plane's tail. A lab in Jakarta will analyze them, if they are
recovered. The batteries powering the "pingers" that send acoustic
signals have only about 24 days of power left.
What we don't know:
What destroyed the plane. Investigators will need to use information
gleaned from the flight recorders and clues from the wreckage to try to
find out.
"The more bits I can put into my mosaic, the better my picture will be," aviation safety expert Michael Barr said.
The plane and the pilots
What we know:
The Airbus, operated by AirAsia's Indonesian affiliate, had accumulated
about 23,000 flight hours in about 13,600 flights in six years. The
plane's last scheduled maintenance was November 16.
Flight
8501's veteran captain, Iriyanto, 53, had 20,537 flying hours, 6,100 of
them with AirAsia on the Airbus A320, the airline said. The first
officer, Remi Emmanuel Plesel, 46, had 2,275 flying hours, a reasonable
amount for his position.
Indonesian
authorities are looking in to why AirAsia was flying that particular
route on that particular day; the country's transport ministry claims
that AirAsia was permitted to fly it only on Mondays, Tuesdays,
Thursdays and Saturdays. AirAsia said it will cooperate with the inquiry
and suspended all service from Surabaya to Singapore in the meantime.
What we don't know:
Did technical problems or human error have anything to do with the
crash? A major aviation database registers 54 incidents involving the
A320.
Some A320 accidents and
incidents involve fan-cowl detachments, landing gear collapse, bird
strikes and pilot error, an expert said. These cause disasters only in
very rare cases.
Security threat?
Meanwhile, the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta issued a security alert Saturday
after being "made aware of a potential threat against U.S.-associated
hotels and banks in Surabaya." A State Department official, however,
told CNN that there was "no knowledge of any connection between this
threat and the Air Asia flight."
No
additional information was given regarding the nature of the threat, but
the Embassy recommended "heightened vigilance and awareness of one's
surroundings when visiting such facilities."
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