Search for AirAsia continues third day - flight plan was dangerous says Aviation expert

Search for AirAsia continues third day - flight plan was dangerous says Aviation expert
Search for AirAsia continues third day - flight plan was dangerous says Aviation expert
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The News Minute | December 30, 2014 | 7:55 am IST

Two days after the Air Asia flight went missing, officials still continue looking for the missing passengers and plane with the rescue teams drawing new flight plans and expanding their area of search.

Many countries including the United States Navy have volunteered to help and the rescue team believes that the plane might be at the bottom of the ocean after it went missing in an area known as the "Thunderstorm Factory"

The authorities have extended the search area from five to 13 zones in the Java Sea. A map showing the "more detailed" search area was posted on Twitter by Channel NewsAsia reporter Sumisha Naidu.

An Australian aviation expert however, said on Tuesday that human error undoubtedly led to the disappearance of AirAsia flight QZ8501 after the pilots flew directly into a well-known danger zone above the Java Sea.

Expert Neil Hansford said that either the Indonesian captain or the French first officer plotted a dangerous flight plan.

He said veteran pilots avoided the area where the plane is believed to have gone down and would not fly through it.

"They call it 'the thunderstorm factory,'" Hansford told the Nine Network, Xinhua reported.

"You plan to go around it. You don't plan to go through it."

He said whoever plotted the flight plan made a fatal error.

"Whoever did the flight plan -- now we don't know whether it was the French first officer or the captain himself," Hansford said.

"Whether they read the meteorology right they were given in Surubaya who dropped the ball? And how well did they communicate? One whose basic language is Bahasa, and the other guy's basic language is in French.

"How good is their common English between the two of them?"

He concluded by emphatically saying it was pilot error.

"I've said all along it was never going to be engineering," Hansford said.

Meanwhile, search for the missing plane resumed Tuesday. The multi-national search operation has now been expanded to a wider area, media reports said.

The Airbus A320-200 disappeared Sunday en route from Surabaya in Indonesia's East Java to Singapore after the pilot requested a change of flight plan due to stormy weather.

The ill-fated plane was carrying 162 people, including 155 Indonesians, three South Koreans, and one person each from Malaysia, Singapore, Britain and France.

AirAsia, a low-cost carrier established in 2001 by Tony Fernandes, a Malaysian of Indian descent, has dominated cheap travel in the region for years with about 100 destinations and affiliate companies in several Asian countries.

Indonesia's Air Vice Marshall also added that  while there have been sightings of suspicious objects, all have proven to be false alarms so far.


With inputs from IANS

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