Adam Air Flight 574 (KI-574) was a scheduled domestic passenger flight operated by
Adam Air between Surabaya (SUB) and Manado (MDC) in Indonesia[1] which disappeared near Polewali in
Sulawesi on January 1, 2007.[2] The plane, a
Boeing 737-4Q8, was ultimately determined to have crashed into the ocean, from which some
smaller pieces of wreckage have been recovered. The flight recorders ("black boxes")
were retrieved from the ocean on August 28, 2007, while salvage
efforts for some larger pieces of wreckage are continuing.[3] All 102 people on board are missing and presumed dead.
A full national investigation was immediately launched into the disaster, uncovering multiple maintenance issues concerning
the airline as a whole, including a large number concerning the aircraft. Another possibility proposed by the families of some of
the deceased is that the crash was due to a faulty rudder valve, known to have caused previous accidents and incidents on Boeing 737s. Debris location has indicated that the plane
likely struck the ocean intact.
The crash is one of several transportation accidents, including the subsequent non-fatal crash of Adam Air Flight 172, which between them have resulted in large-scale transport safety reforms in
Indonesia, as well as the United States downgrading their safety rating of Indonesian
aviation, and of the entire Indonesian fleet being added to the List of
air carriers banned in the EU.
Aircraft
Adam Air's PK-KKH Boeing 737-4Q8. The missing plane is similar to the one shown except it has not been painted orange.
The aircraft, a Boeing 737-4Q8, registration PK-KKW, was manufactured in 1990.[4][5] Prior to service with Adam Air, the plane had flown for seven other
airlines, these being, in chronological order, Dan-Air, British Airways, GB Airways, National Jets Italy, WFBN,
Air One and Jat Airways, carrying four different
registration numbers, including PK-KKW.[6]
The plane had 45,371 flying hours and was last evaluated and declared airworthy by the Indonesian transport ministry on
25 December 2005.[7] It was due to be checked again in late January 2007.[7] The Surabaya airport duty manager said that
there were no technical problems with the aircraft prior to departure.[8]
Flight chronology
On January 1 2007, at 12:55 local
time (05:55 UTC), the plane departed from Juanda Airport, Surabaya, with 96 passengers (85 adults,
7 children and 4 infants)[9] and six crew on board.[1] The passenger list was composed mainly of Indonesian nationals; the only foreigners were an
American family of three.[10][11] The two-hour flight, scheduled to arrive at Sam
Ratulangi Airport, Manado, at 16:00 local time,[note 1] was as expected until the plane disappeared from
air traffic control radar screens at Makassar, South Sulawesi, with the last contact at 14:53 local time
(06:53 UTC). The last known beacon position
was detected by a Singaporean satellite.[9] The altitude of the plane was shown as 35,000 feet (10,670 m) on the radar screen.[12]
Map showing location of Sulawesi Island (light green) among the islands of Indonesia.
Weather in the region was stormy;[13] the Indonesian Bureau of Meteorology and Geophysics noted that the cloud thickness was up
to 30,000 feet (9,140 m) in height and wind
speed at an average of 30 knots (56 km/h) in the area.[14] Although the Juanda Airport operator, PT Angkasa Pura I, had
given warnings to the pilot concerning the weather condition, the plane had departed as scheduled.[15] The plane ran into crosswinds of more than 70 knots (130 km/h) over the Makassar Strait
where it changed course eastward toward land and then lost contact.[16] In his last radio transmission, the pilot reported the crosswinds to be coming from the left,
but air traffic control claimed that the winds should be coming from the right. It
is not yet known if this is significant to the accident, but it may indicate navigational error, or an emergency turn-around of
the aircraft.[17]
Contrary to early reports, no calls for help were sent by the aircraft. It might have
been simply because the cockpit crew were too busy trying to cope with an
emergency.[18][19]
Search and rescue efforts
False reports of discovery
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Initial reports indicated that the plane had been located in the mountainous region of Sulawesi around 20 kilometres (12 mi)
from Polewali town and that there were 12 survivors. This led to the mobilization of an
Indonesian Air Force plane carrying hundreds of search and rescue personnel.[2] However the team found no sign of aircraft wreckage at the reported crash site.[20] On January 2, 2007, the Indonesian transport minister confirmed that the plane had
not yet been found and reports to the contrary were based on false rumors from local villagers passed on to local
officers.[21] It later turned out that the 12
reported survivors were actually from the MV Senopati Nusantara, which had
sunk two days earlier during the same storm.[22]
Continued efforts
A search and rescue team 3,600 members strong was mobilised.[23] One Boeing 737-200 Surveiller (a military surveillance
plane), two infrared-equipped Fokker-50 aircraft from the
Republic of Singapore Air Force,[24][25] a
Navy Nomad plane and six helicopters were amongst many
vehicles dispatched to aid searching for the missing plane from the air.[26][23]
Indonesian sonar-equipped military aircraft and ships
capable of detecting underwater metallic objects later joined the team, equipped with two mini remote-controlled
submarines.[27][28] These searched the sea for five days between January 3 and January 8, without success.[29]
Naval ships combed the Makassar Strait while military personnel went through jungles and
mountains of Sulawesi.[30] In the
face of heavy rain and strong winds in the area, the search efforts, coordinated from Makassar city, were focused in the area
between the coastal town of Majene and the mountainous region of Toraja.[30] The
search in the two areas was due to twin signals, each carrying different emergency locator
transmitter frequencies, received by the Singaporean satellite and an Indonesian
military air base.[31] The two separate locations
produced on radar screens were a spot on the sea in Majene and on land in Rantepao,
Tana Toraja.[32][note 2]
Searches were then expanded throughout the Island of Sulawesi; some were triggered by unknown distress signals received by a
commercial Lion Air flight and an airport.[33]A police officer at the Barru
district police operational centre said that all the districts with stretches of coastline along the Makasser Strait had teams
searching for the plane.[34]
There were fears that the plane's tracking equipment and emergency locator beacon could have been damaged after the crash or
weakened by interference, and that this would hamper the search.[35] The head of the National Search and Rescue Agency told the Associated Press that he believed the aircraft was probably lost at sea.[35] From 5
January 2007, the main focus of the search was relocated to areas south of Manado, after
Manado's Sam Ratulangi Airport reported detecting a signal from the plane a day
before.[36] However, the rugged
terrain coupled with thick and low hanging clouds continued to hamper the search efforts, and three relatives of missing
passengers who overflew part of the area on a military reconnaissance plane admitted that the chances of finding the plane were
slim.[37] Officials said that it
was unlikely any bodies have survived in one piece.[38] On January 14, at Indonesia's request, Singapore sent
four towed underwater locator beacon detectors, sometimes called 'Towed Pinger
Locators', and six consultants in their use to aid in the search.[39][40][41] These would successfully locate the black boxes. On January
24, the British ship MN Endeavour joined the search. The ship is operated
by local mining firm PT Gema Tera Mustikawati and is usually used by oil and gas drilling companies to map the seabed.[42] By January 24, the Indonesian government had spent an average of Rp 1 billion (about U.S.$110,000) a day on the
search.[43]
On February 10, search operations were officially halted by the Search and Rescue Agency,
according to Transportation Minister Hatta Rajasa, finalizing the legal status of both the plane and its passengers and crew.
This announcement allowed the families of the victims to start the insurance claims process.[44]
Discovery of wreckage
Locations on topographical map of Sulawesi

= black boxes

= international
airports

= related cities
Unidentified submerged objects
On Monday, 8 January, three large metal objects, suspected to be wreckage, were detected by
the Indonesian ship KRI Fatahillah's sonar.[45][[#wp-_note-body+wreckage|[46]]] First Admiral Gatot Subyanto of the Indonesian
Navy indicated three locations, between 3–6 km (2–4 miles) apart, off Mamuju
city on Sulawesi's western coast. Due to limitations of the navy's sonar equipment, it was not clear what the metal was,[45] and Indonesia had no other equipment of its
own.[47] A
U.S. Navy ship, USNS Mary
Sears, arrived in the area on January 9 with better equipment to help identify the
objects, and on the same date a Canadian jet with five separate air crews, working in shifts, was sent to aid with aerial mapping
of the suspected location.[48] The
Indonesian Marine and Fishery Department has since suggested that the metal objects could instead
be instruments deployed to study the underwater sea current.[[#wp-_note-body+wreckage|[46]]] A total of twelve Indonesian Navy ships were deployed in the area, including
the KRI Ajak, KRI Leuser and KRI Nala.[49][39]
Extra underwater equipment, including a metal detector and an undersea camera, was sent from the U.S., and arrived aboard the
USNS Mary Sears on January 17.[49][50] The |black boxes were subsequently located elsewhere, in the waters in an area known as
Majene, and a wide, sweeping search of the area revealed high amounts of scattered debris there,
too. This debris was analyzed to confirm it belongs to the 737.[51]
Floating debris
The aircraft's right horizontal stabilizer was found by a fisherman, south of
Pare Pare, about 300 metres (984 ft)
off the beach on January 11,[52] although it was not originally handed in as its discoverer thought it to be a piece of
plywood, only later realizing it was a piece of the tail.[53] This was confirmed by the serial number on the stabilizer, 65 C 25746
76, which matches that of components on the missing 737.[54][55] The fisherman received a reward of 50 million rupiah (equivalent to about $5,500) for his
discovery.[53] Later, other parts of
the aircraft, including passenger seats, life jackets, a food tray, part of an aircraft tire, eight pieces of aluminum and fiber,
an ID card, a flare and a headrest have also been recovered from the area.[[#wp-_note-body+wreckage|[46]]][56][57] By January 13, a piece of a wing was also
recovered.[49] It is unclear whether
the 1.5 metres (4.9 ft) long section is a section of the right wing or the
left wing, although it was examined in an attempt to discover this.[53] The total count of recovered objects associated with aircraft, as of January 29, was 206, of which 194 were definitely from the 737.[58] On January 15, an
unidentified fuel spill was spotted by the Singaporean reconnaissance aircraft along the western coast of Sulawesi,[34] but by the time a ship arrived
to attempt to determine whether the spill came from the aircraft it had been moved by strong currents.[59] Although it was searched for, it was
not relocated. Pieces of clothing thought to belong to passengers were also recovered,[53] and on January 15, pieces of human
hair and what is thought to be human scalp were recovered from a headrest that had been pulled from the sea.[59] They were DNA tested to attempt to identify them; the results of this test are, however, unknown.[53]
Black boxes
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On January 21, the flight data recorder
(FDR) and cockpit voice recorder (CVR), colloquially called black boxes, were located off the coast of West
Sulawesi by the U.S. vessel Mary Sears.[60] The flight data recorder was located at 03°41′02″S, 118°08′53″E at a depth of
2,000 metres (6,561.7 ft), while the cockpit voice recorder was located at
03°40′22″S, 118°09′16″E at a depth of
1,900 metres (6,233.6 ft).[[#wp-_note-bernama27
January|[61]]] These positions indicate the black boxes are located approximately 1.4 km (0.9 mi) apart. The Indonesian vessel Fatahillah travelled to the
location, while Mary Sears traveled to Singapore, arriving on January 29 to return the
detector equipment used to locate the devices.[60] It did not travel immediately to Singapore because it was mapping the immediate area.
The Mary Sears used its side scan sonar (SSS) unit to map an area of
approximately 10.3 km² (3 sq nmi) around the recorders in high
resolution, an operation which required 18 passes across the area at approximately 3 kt (5.6 km/h), taking six hours per pass including lining up for the next pass. It
discovered a large amount of wreckage in the area, which is now considered to be all that remains of the aircraft.[60] A senior Indonesian marine official
said on January 24 that he did not believe the equipment which is necessary to retrieve the boxes from that depth is available in
any Asian country.[62] The black boxes had a battery life of just 30 days, and were subsequently unable to emit
locator signals.[41]
On February 3, Indonesian Naval vessel
KRI Tanjung Dalpele took affected families out to the crash site where a
memorial service was held, which included throwing flowers into the sea.[63]
Salvage
Wikinews has news related to:
On January 26, a dispute arose between Adam Air and the Indonesian government regarding
the retrieval of the black boxes. Due to the depth involved, recovery required an underwater
remotely operated vehicle, but due to the cost of using this method of
recovery — especially since such equipment required shipped in from elsewhere — the government placed the responsibility for the
cost of recovering the recorders on Adam Air. Vice President of
Indonesia Jusuf Kalla went as far as to question the need to retrieve the black boxes
at all, although experts said in response that the accident was of international significance as it
could indicate a fault with the aircraft.[17] Adam
Air said that in its opinion, the black boxes should be recovered, describing the accident as being relevant on both national and
international levels, but refused to pay, saying that that was the responsibility of the government.[64] Indonesia did
request technical assistance from the United States, Japan and France. [65] Jim Hall, a former
chairman of the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board, said
that it was essential the boxes were recovered quickly, as at that point their 30-day battery life was about to expire, which it
subsequently did. He cited problems such as poor visibility and strong currents making it difficult to recover the devices
without the signal. [17] Setio Rahardjo, Head of
National Committee for Transportation Safety, estimated that equipment for the salvage operation, if available, would cost
$100,000 per day to hire in an operation that will take around ten days, equating to U.S.$1 million.[66]
On January 31 it was reported that the U.S. had to withdraw the vessel Mary Sears
from the searches, the U.S. military saying that the vessel had other duties. Further funding and help from the U.S. would have
to be approved by the Congress. At the same time external companies were
suggested as possible retrievers of the black boxes. Indonesia continued to seek help from other countries, like France and
Japan. Setio Rahardjo maintained that Adam Air should be
charged with the retrieval costs.[67]
It was originally confirmed that Indonesia would not pay for the salvage operation, neither could they force Adam Air
to.[68] On February 15, it was reported that Adam Air had been in contact with two salvage companies, Smit Internationale and Phoenix International, regarding the salvage
operation.[69] It was Phoenix who supplied the Mary Sears with
the necessary equipment for the search operation.[70] Adam
Air received preliminary invoices and continued negotiations with the two companies.[68] However, Adam Air announced that they did indeed intend to select a
company to conduct the operation shortly and would pay for this themselves.[68]
On May 28, Adam Air announced they had signed a contract with Phoenix International, with
original plans being for the recovery to occur in June, according to Aero News.[71] On August
23, the Eas arrived in Sulawesi's Makassar port to begin salvage operations, which will began with several days
survey. The vessel was carrying a mini submarine that can dive up to 6,000 metres (20,000 ft), and is equipped with sonar and
deep sea cameras.[72][73]
A Phoenix International underwater robot scouring the sea off Majene for on Sulawesi finally retrieved the Flight Data
Recorder on August 27 and Cockpit Voice Recorder on August
28. The two devices were found at a depth of around 2,000 metres (6,500 ft) and were 1,400 metres apart. They had been
moved 10–15 metres from their original locations by powerful underwater currents.[74] The black boxes will be sent to Washington for analysis, which could take
months, or even fail due to data destruction caused by the long submersion.[75][76] The final cost of the salvage operation to retrieve the black boxes was US$3 million,[77] of which two million was contributed by the Indonesian government, with Adam Air
paying for the rest.[78]
Efforts are now continuing with the hope of recovering various large pieces of wreckage from the seabed.[79]
Investigation
President Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono ordered a full investigation to discover the cause of the aircraft's disappearance, including the cause of any
accident it may have had, before the main debris field had even been found. The investigation will also look at the airworthiness
of the plane and standard procedure on airplane operations.[80] A team from the United States with
representatives from the National Transportation Safety Board, the
Federal Aviation Administration, Boeing
and General Electric were sent to Indonesia to
assist the Indonesian National Committee for Transportation in the investigation.[81][82] Patrick Smith, a U.S.-based airline pilot
and aviation commentator, has said that "Whatever happened to the plane, it was likely rapid and catastrophic," and said that an
on-board explosion or metal fatigue-induced structural failure were the most likely
causes of the accident.[82] There will
also be a wider investigation into Indonesia's transport system as a whole.[[#wp-_note-body+wreckage|[46]]] Eyewitnesses have reported seeing a low-flying, unstable aircraft in the area
that the wreckage has been recovered from, but lost sight of it after hearing a loud bang.[56] The chief of the Indonesian Plane Technicians
group, Wahyu Supriantono, said that the plane was unlikely to have suffered an in-flight break up or explosion as the
debris field would have been larger, and as a result, wreckage would have been discovered earlier.[83] The Indonesian KNKT, responsible for the investigation, said that
even if the flight recorders are not retrieved they still intended to publish a final report complete with a probable cause,
saying they had other "facts and findings" that provide enough information to do so.[68]
Maintenance concerns
Investigators quickly became concerned about apparent poor maintenance and believe it may play an important factor in the
accident.
Adam Air as a whole
-
The safety record of Adam Air has been heavily criticized. Adam Air has reportedly bribed pilots to fly planes they knew were
unsafe.[84] Pilots have reported
repeated and deliberate breaches of international safety regulations, and aircraft being flown in non-airworthy states for months
at a time. They claim that there have been such incidents as requests to sign documents to allow an aircraft to fly, while not
having the authority to, and while knowing the plane to be unairworthy, flying a plane for several months with a damaged door
handle, swapping parts between aircraft to avoid mandatory replacement deadlines, being ordered to fly aircraft after exceeding
the take-off limit of five times per pilot per day, flying an aircraft with a damaged window, using spare parts from other
aircraft to keep planes in the air and ignorance of pilot's requests not to take off due to unsafe aircraft. The Associated Press quoted one pilot as saying that "Every time you flew, you had to fight with the ground
staff and the management about all the regulations you had to violate." They also claimed that if pilots confronted their seniors
in the airline, they were grounded or docked pay.[85] [84]
The specific aircraft
Investigators discovered that the aircraft was the subject of a large number of complaints by pilots - called write-ups in the
aviation industry. The highest number of complaints concerned the captain's side vertical speed
indicator, which informs the air crew of the speed at which the airplane is ascending or descending. A total of 48
complaints were made regarding the instrument in the three months prior to the crash.[86] The aircraft's left right
inertial reference system, which informs pilots what direction the aircraft is turning in, was complained about a total of
thirty times.[86] The
International Herald Tribune reported that this may be of particular
significance.[86] The third
most-complained about instrument was a fuel differential light, which received fifteen write-ups.[86] Numerous complaints were also received about inoperative cockpit
instrument lights, as well as multiple other malfunctions.[86] Most notably, several complaints were made that the flaps, which modify drag and lift during take-off and landing, were jamming at twenty-five degrees upon
landing, and two complaints that the weather radar was faulty.[86] The weather radar fault is particularly
important as it would explain why the aircraft flew into a storm, when evasive measures would normally be taken.[86]
Legal action
Adam Air is being sued by Indonesian consumer and labor groups over the accident, for a total of one trillion rupiahs (US$100
million), to be paid to the families of the victims.[87]
According to a lawyer for the families, speaking in a press conference along with the secretary for the Adam Air KI-574
Passengers' Families Association, formed in the aftermath of the disaster, 30 of the victim's families intend to sue Boeing over
the accident instead of Adam Air. However, this does not necessarily mean that all of the others will sue Adam Air, as they may
not necessarily exercise their right to sue at all.[88][89] Representatives of the families have explained that they believe the plane was brought
down by a faulty rudder control valve, similarly to the accidents involving SilkAir Flight
185, United Airlines Flight 585 and USAir Flight 427. They have explained that, as a result, they are suing Boeing and Parker Hannifin, the valve's manufacturer, although airlines using the 737 have been warned about
problems with the rudder control valves.[90]
Reaction
Political
Vice President Jusuf Kalla
described the disappearance as an "international issue." [91] A few days after the disappearance, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono set
up the National Team for Transportation Safety and
Security, partially as a response to the high number of recent transportational accidents in Indonesia, and partially as a
direct response to the event.[92] The team is
tasked to evaluate thoroughly the transport safety procedures and review the existing regulations on transportation.[92] It will not, however, investigate accidents; the
entity responsible for this is the Komisi Nasional Keselamatan Transportasi (KNKT), or in English the National Transportation
Safety Commission (NTSC), which is part of Departemen Perhubungan (Ministry of Transportation).[93]
Adam Air
Adam Air has been accused by multiple organisations of poor maintenance and of ordering pilots to fly in all weather and
regardless of aircraft conditions. Adam Adhitya Suherman, founder of the family-run airline, has personally denied these
accusations, and has said that maintenance costs "up 40 percent of our total operational costs".[94] Despite this denial of any
responsibility for the crash, Adam Air has compensated the families of deceased passengers Rp 500 million (equivelent to about
US$55,000 or €42,000) per passenger. It also compensated families of the flight crew.[95][43]
There has been some call from relatives of the deceased for Adam Air to build a memorial to the victims in Makassar, South Sulawesi. Adam Air said that if an agreement could be
reached then they would fulfil the request.[96]
Aftermath
Even though the accident remains under investigation, the Indonesian government
announced plans immediately after the accident to ban jets over ten years of age for any commercial purpose.[97] The age limit was previously 35 years or
70,000 landings.[98] Although this is in response to a large number of aircraft accidents, it
is mainly in response to this accident and the Flight 172 incident. Indonesia also
announced that the Transportation Ministry would be reshuffled in response to this accident, Flight 172 and the loss of the ferries MV Senopati
Nusantara and Levina 1. Among those replaced were the directors of air and
sea transports and the chairman of the National Committee for Transportation Safety.[99] Indonesia also introduced a new system of ranking airlines according to their safety record, with a level one ranking meaning the
airline has no serious issues, a level two ranking meaning the airline must fix problems, and a level three rating forcing the
airline to be shut down.[100]
On March 16, 2007, the Indonesian government announced plans
to shut down an unspecified Indonesian air carrier.[101] It was announced on March 22 that Adam Air was one of
seven airlines that will have their licenses revoked within three months unless they could improve their safety
standards.[102] The other six
airlines involved were Batavia Air, Jatayu
Airlines, Kartika Airlines, Manunggal
Air Services, Transwisata Prima Aviation and Tri-MG Intra Asia Airlines.[102] The airlines were all targeted as a direct result of the crash, as they were in the
third level of the ranking system introduced as a result.[103] All fifty-four of Indonesia's airlines, including state-owned Garuda Indonesia, were told they would need to make some improvements, with none of them receiving a
level one ranking.[104]
It was reported on June 28, 2007, that Adam Air would escape closure and has been upgraded one rank in safety rating, to the
middle tier. The airlines that have lost their licenses are Jatayu Gelang Sejahtera,
Aviasi Upataraksa, Alfa Trans Dirgantara and Prodexim and the airlines that have been grounded pending improvements and facing potential licence
revokation are Germania Trisila Air, Atlas Delta Setia,
Survey Udara Penas, Kura-kura Aviation and SMAC. [105]
On April 16, 2007, the American Federal Aviation Administration responded to the results of the new airline survey by
downgrading Indonesia’s air safety oversight category from a 1 to a 2 because of "serious concerns" over safety. This means it
views Indonesia's civil aviation authority as failing to oversee air carriers in accordance with minimum international
standards.[106] As a direct result, the
U.S. Embassy in Jakarta issued
a warning to all American citizens flying in or out of Indonesia to avoid using Indonesian airlines, and instead use
international carriers with better safety reputations.[107] This was followed on June 28, 2007 by the adition of all Indonesia's airlines, none of which flew to Europe at
the time, to the List of air carriers banned in the EU. Budhi
Mulyawan Suyitno, Director-general of civil aviation at the Indonesian transport ministry, responded by saying that he felt
Indonesia had made the improvements required by the EU.[108][109]
Flight 172
-
On February 21 2007, just 51 days after the loss of Flight
574, Flight 172, an Adam Air Boeing 737-300
aircraft (registration PK-KKV) flying from Jakarta to Surabaya
had a hard landing at Juanda International Airport. The incident caused the
fuselage of the plane to crack and bend in the middle, with the tail of the plane drooping towards the ground. There were no
reports of serious injuries from the incident. As a result, six Adam Air 737s were grounded awaiting safety checks. Adam Air
described this as "harsh punishment" for an accident it blamed on poor weather conditions, but Vice President Jusuf Kalla had said that all
Boeing 737-300s should be checked.[110]
See also
- Adam Air Flight 172
- Air safety
- List of notable accidents and incidents on
commercial aircraft
- MV Senopati Nusantara which sank during the same storm.
Notes
- Cities on Java island, including Surabaya, observe one
hour difference with cities on Sulawesi islands (UTC+7 and UTC+8 respectively).
- An aeroplane has two ELTs: one, a portable unit, is located in the cockpit, emits on 121.5 MHz, and is activated by the
plane ditching at sea; the other, a fixed ELT near the tail, emits on 406 MHz and is activated by a crash landing.
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Indonesia jet", CNN. Retrieved on 2007-01-03.
- ^ "Indonesia
shifts search for missing plane after beacon signal", Channel NewsAsia. Retrieved
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- ^ "Daunting task
as Indonesia steps up airliner search", Channel NewsAsia. Retrieved on 2007-01-08.
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Navy joins search for missing Indonesian airliner - channelnewsasia.com - Obtained on January
16 2007.
- ^ a b
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of Indonesian plane - People's Daily Online - Obtained on January 26 2007.
- ^ a b Lesson
learned from accidents - The Jakarta Post - Obtained on January 24, 2007.
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2007.
- ^ a b "Airline hunt spots metal in sea", BBC. Retrieved on 2007-01-08.
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[d] More Adam Air
plane wreckage discovered - The Daily Telegraph (Australia) - Obtained on 11 January
2007
- ^ Indonesia: metal object
detected during plane search - Xinhua - Obtained January 16 2007
- ^ "Kanada Kirim Sebuah Pesawat Bantu Cari
Adam Air", Media Indonesia, 2007-01-09.
- ^ a b c Technical
help awaited as plane search continues - The Jakarta Post
- ^ Metal Detector Arrives To Help Locate Missing Indonesian Airplane - Playfuls.com - Retrieved
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- ^ Black Box Found From New Year's Day Plane
Crash - KOIN News 6 - Obtained January 25 2007.
- ^ "Tail of missing Indonesian plane found", Sydney Morning Herald, 2007-01-10.
- ^ a b c d e
- ^ Adam Air Plane Trail Found in
Parepare Bay - Agoravox - Obtained on January 15
2007
- ^ Pieces of missing
plane found in Indonesian waters - Kare11.com - Obtained 11 January 2007
- ^ a b Fishermen find parts of jetliner - CNN - Obtained 11
January 2007
- ^ Parts of lost Indonesian jet found - MWC
News - Obtained January 11 2007
- ^ Adam Air black box detected,
search for plane slowed - e-Travel Blackboard - Press Release - Obtained January 29
2007
- ^ a b Investigators say fuel spill may be from downed Indonesian jetliner - Long Beach Press-Telegram, CA - Obtained
January 15 2007
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January_0|^] SAR Team Stops Search For Adam Air Plane
- ^ /Missing Adam Air Plane Blackbox
Detected - Bernama.com- Obtained on January 24 2007
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- ^ Indonesian airline, government battle over retrieval of black box —
monstersandcritics.com (news section) — Obtained on January 26 2007.
- ^ Indonesia Seeks Help To Retrieve Crashed Jetliner's "black Box" — Playfuls.com — Obtained January 29 2007.
- ^ Government Asks Adam Air to Pay for Salvage - TempoInteractive - Obtained February 2, 2007.
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- ^ a b c
d Indonesia's aviation safety agency to publish preliminary report into New Year's Day Adam
Air crash despite failure to locate black boxes - www.flightglobal.com - Obtained March 5, 2007.
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continue expansion - Obtained February 15, 2007.
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seek plane's black box - Reuters - August 23, 2007 - Retrieved on the same date
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Adam Air black box arrives in Makassar - The Jakarta Post - August 31, 2007 -
Obtained same date.
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Indonesian plane - Reuters - August 28, 2007 - Retrieved on the same date
- ^