No survivors as bodies of Sumatran crash victims found

THE bodies of all 18 people who were on board a plane that crashed into the jungle-covered mountains of western Indonesia were recovered from the wreckage yesterday.

The Spanish-designed CASA C-212 lost contact with air traffic control early on Thursday while flying from North Sumatra to Aceh province.

Minutes later, it sent out a distress signal, then dropped off the radar.

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Rugged, forested terrain and bad weather had prevented rescuers from reaching the crash site by foot, and the wreckage was spotted from a helicopter Friday in the Leuser mountains at an altitude of 5,000 feet.

Yesterday, 13 rescuers were lowered from helicopter by rope to the crash site, following two others who had reached the site just before darkness fell on Friday.

“They found the bodies in their seats with their seat belts on,” Sunarbowo Sandi, head of the local search-and-rescue team, said from his monitoring post in a village near the crash site in the Bahorok region, about 930 miles north-west of the capital, Jakarta.

The bodies included all 14 passengers and four crew members. Four of the dead were children.

Hopes had been raised that there may be survivors after the aircraft was spotted intact with one of its doors open, and rescuers dropped food and medicine down to the crash site.

The victims’ relatives, who had been waiting for information, broke down in tears when they learned that their loved ones were found dead. Many of them accused the airline – PT Nusantara Buana Air – of taking too long to give them information.

“The rescue operation was too slow and unprofessional,” said Rosmawati Harahap, who lost her son, daughter-in-law and two grandchildren in the crash.

But rescuers insisted that tornado-like winds and heavy fog hampered their efforts.

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“The conditions were really bad,” said Sandi, the search-and-rescue official, adding that rescuers were further hampered by the mountainous terrain and impenetrable forests.

Robur Rizallianto, a safety manager with the airline, said “all efforts” were made to try to save the passengers. It was unclear what caused the crash, and Indonesia’s transportation safety commission was investigating the accident.

The aircraft, made in Indonesia in 1989, was last inspected on 22 September, according to Rizallianto. It was in good condition, and a check ahead of take-off on Thursday also came up clean, he said.

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