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Indonesian jetliner parts recovered
WASHED ASHORE:
Local police in Sulawesi said that the parts recovered were spread over a 400m radius, but that the wreckage could have drifted hundreds of kilometers
AP, MAKASSAR, INDONESIA
Friday, Jan 12, 2007, Page 5
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Bambang Karnoyudho, left, the national search and rescue agency chief, and Eddy Suyanto, search mission coordinator, display a piece of the missing Adam Air plane yesterday in Makassar, Indonesia.
PHOTO: AP
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Parts of a jetliner that crashed with 102 people on board were found by fishermen or washed to shore in northwest Indonesia yesterday, 10 days after the plane disappeared in stormy weather, officials said.
A 1m section of tail, the back of a seat and other debris were the first pieces of wreckage to be recovered from the Boeing 737, which vanished without a trace on New Year's Day, baffling crash investigators and sparking a massive land and sea search.
Eddy Suyanto, the head of search and rescue operations, said the serial number on the tail -- found 300m off the western coast of Sulawesi Island -- confirmed it was part of Adam Air Flight KI-574.
No survivors or bodies confirmed as being on the aircraft have been found, Suyanto said.
Metro TV broadcast the corpse of a woman washed up close to where the debris was found, but quoted a doctor as saying that its condition indicated it had been in the water for just five days.
Local police chief Gatot Haryanto told Metro the plane parts recovered yesterday were spread over a 400m radius. Scores of officers, fishermen and people living on the coast were looking for more debris.
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"I cried when I heard, but I am now relieved."
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Rosmala Dewi, mother of a stewardess on the missing Adam Air jetliner
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The jetliner left Java island for the North Sulawesi provincial capital of Manado on Jan. 1. The pilot twice changed course after battling 130kph winds but did not issue a mayday or report technical difficulties before dropping off the radar halfway as it approached the western coast of Sulawesi.
With no emergency location signal to guide more than 3,600 soldiers, police and volunteers searching in Sulawesi's dense jungles and surrounding seas, teams have fanned out over a nearly 80,000km2 area.
A day after the plane's disappearance, authorities falsely reported finding its wreckage along with 12 survivors in a remote mountainous district on Sulawesi, outraging relatives of those on board.
News that debris had been found gave a comfort to one relative yesterday.
"I cried when I heard, but I am now relieved," said Rosmala Dewi, whose daughter was a stewardess on the flight.
"At the very least we now have a sign [where the aircraft fell]," she said.
On Tuesday, authorities said a Navy ship had detected large pieces of metal on the seabed off Sulawesi north of where the debris was washing up, but were unable to say whether they were from the downed plane.
The USNS Mary Sears, which has sonar and satellite imagery capabilities, is scanning the debris to determine whether it came from the missing plane. Its findings have not yet been made public.
Local fisherman told authorities they had spotted a low-flying, unstable aircraft in the area but lost sight of it after hearing a loud bang.
Suyanto said wreckage from the plane could have drifted hundreds of kilometers over the last 10 days.
Three Americans -- a man from Oregon along with his two daughters -- were among the plane's 96 passengers. They were believed to be the only foreigners on board.
Adam Air is one of about 30 budget carriers that sprang up in Indonesia after the industry was deregulated in 1998. The rapid expansion has led to cheap flights throughout Indonesia, but has raised concerns about the maintenance of the jetliners.
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