Headlines
Indonesia to continue AirAsia search operation sans military
Jakarta, Jan 28
Indonesia's National Search
and Rescue Agency (BASARNAS) chairman Bambang Soelistyo Wednesday said
an operation to search for bodies of victims and wreckage from the
crashed AirAsia flight QZ8501 would continue despite the end of the
military's participation in the mission.
Bambang told a press
conference at the BASARNAS headquarters that the search operation would
resume Saturday, to be carried out by BASARNAS elements.
"We will
give two days off for teams taking part in the operation as they have
not taken rest for one month. Besides that, the days off would be used
to supply necessities for vessels and crews for the upcoming operation,"
Xinhua news agency quoted Soelistyo as saying.
He pointed out that the pulling out of the military from the operation would not weaken the capabilities of search teams.
The
main focus of the multinational operation comprising Indonesia,
Australia, the US, Russia, China, Malaysia, Singapore and South Korea,
was recovering more bodies after two black boxes and the tail section of
the Airbus A320-200 were retrieved earlier this month.
Soelistyo said BASARNAS would engage all of its resources, including vessels and helicopters, in the upcoming operation.
Besides
that, the operation would be assisted by local government of West
Kotawaringin regency, which has been facilitating the search operation,
and traditional divers and professional divers working for an offshore
oil mining facility.
"We have 26 divers of our own. Some 20
others from the SKK Migas would join the operation along with
traditional divers. Eight experts will also join in," Soelistyo said.
SKK Migas is Indonesia's oil and gas industry regulator agency.
An advanced search programme was underway to support the search, he added.
On Tuesday, the Indonesian military pulled out of the search operation after 31 days.
All
military personnel involved in the operation were told by the nation's
military commander to return to their bases as no more bodies were found
from the plane's wreckage in the past two days.
The search
operation started Dec 28 when the Singapore-bound plane crashed into the
Java Sea amid bad weather 40 minutes after takeoff from the Indonesian
city of Surabaya in East Java.
As of now, 70 bodies of a total of 162 people on board the ill-fated aircraft have been recovered.