Delhi man Bhavye Suneja captained the Lion Air plane that crashed into Java Sea

A Lion Air flight from Jakarta to Pangkal Pinang carrying 188 people on board crashed 13 minutes after takeoff on Monday.
Delhi man Bhavye Suneja captained the Lion Air plane that crashed into Java Sea
Delhi man Bhavye Suneja captained the Lion Air plane that crashed into Java Sea
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Tragedy befell a Lion Air flight mere 13 minutes after it took off from Jakarta. The flight, which was carrying 188 passengers including children, crashed into the Java Sea. According to reports, the Pangkal Pinang-bound plane was captained by Bhavye Suneja, who hails from Mayur Vihar in New Delhi.

Bhavye studied in Ahclon Public School from where he passed out in 2005 and subsequently joined Lion Air in March of 2011. He piloted the Boeing 737.

Bhavye was contemplating returning to India, according to the Vice President of an Indian airline. The VP told TOI that they had spoken in July, and described the 31-year-old as a “sweet sounding person”.  

A Lion Air Boeing passenger plane carrying 188 people on board requested air control for return, minutes after taking off from here, before crashing into the sea on Monday. A rescue and search operation is underway, officials said. “Being an experienced pilot of the B737 with an incident, accident-free record, we were keen to have him with us because of his good credentials,” the official said, adding that Bhavye wanted a posting in Delhi.

Bhavye was apparently looking for the Indian airline’s help in getting an Indian ATPL or a commander’s license. “We all hope and pray that Suneja and all the others on the plane survive,” the official said.

Before joining Lion Air, Bhavye was a trainee pilot at Emirates between September 2010 and December 2010.

The plane crash

The budget airline's aircraft was carrying 178 adult passengers, a child, two babies with two pilots and five flight attendants, Indonesian National Board for Disaster Management Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said, adding that the National Search and Rescue Agency, Basarnas, and the Ministry of Transportation were "handling" the situation. 

"Several pieces of Lion Air JT 610 aircraft that crashed in the waters of Karawang (was found)," Sutopo tweeted. "Some ships tug boats were on location," he added.

Flight JT-610, a Boeing 737 MAX 8 -- a brand new type of aircraft -- was on a scheduled flight to Pangkal Pinang, the main city in the Bangka Belitung Islands. 

It lost contact with ground control a few minutes after take-off, and was last tracked crossing the sea, Yusuf Latif, a spokesperson for the national search and rescue agency said confirming the crash.

The Lion Air flight took off from Jakarta's Soekarno-Hatta international airport at 6.20 am. After a short flight, it was due to arrive in Pangkal Pinang an hour later, the BBC said. But it lost contact at 6.33 am.

Nugroho tweeted images showing debris and personal belongings that came from the aircraft. Officials have also held a news conference to keep the kin of the victims informed about all measures being taken.

He also shared a video he said had been taken from a tugboat off Karawang, just east of Jakarta, which appeared to show debris floating in the water.

At 6.45 am head of the national Search and Rescue Office M. Syaugi received a report from a tugboat, AS Jaya II, that the crew had seen the debris of a plane, The Jakarta Post reported.

"The plane had requested the air traffic control to return to base before disappearing from radar," Transport Ministry Bambang Ervan told Xinhua by phone.

They suspected it to be the Lion Air flight floating near Tanjung Bungin in Karawang in West Java. It was spotted in the waters at an average depth between 30 and 35 meters, said Syaugi.

"At 7.15 am the tugboat reported it had approached the site and the crew saw the debris of a plane," Suyadi said. It was found about two nautical miles from Jakarta, Xinhua news agency reported.

Two other ships, a tanker and a cargo ship, near the location were approaching the site, Suyadi said, and a Basarnas rescue boat was also on its way.

A flight tracking website Flightradar24 said the aircraft had only been delivered to Lion Air in August, the BBC reported.

Aviation consultant Gerry Soejatman told the BBC the MAX 8 had been experiencing problems since it was introduced, including problems maintaining a level flight.

Indonesia, a vast archipelago, is heavily reliant on air travel, but many of its airlines have a poor safety record.

In 2013, Lion Air flight 904 crashed into the sea on landing at Bali's Ngurah Rai International Airport. All 108 people on board survived. In 2004, a Lion Air flight 538 from Jakarta crashed and broke up on landing at Solo City, killing 25 people, the BBC reported.

(IANS inputs)

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