‘Totally Destroyed’ Indonesia Jet Makes Search Almost Impossible Bloomberg 1/21/2021 Will Davies
(Bloomberg) Bayu Wardoyo tends to skip the 6 a.m. breakfast of Indonesian fried rice served to divers on the ship searching for wreckage of the Sriwijaya Air passenger jet that crashed in the Java Sea on Jan. 9. He prefers coffee, light snacks and some fruit to prepare for the long day ahead.
Later in the morning, kitted out in a black wetsuit and weighed down by diving paraphernalia, he boards a speedboat and heads out under heavy monsoon clouds to the day’s search area. Once there, Wardoyo attaches his scuba regulator and rolls overboard into waters filled with fresh tragedy.
Searching for remains in disintegrated Indonesia jet is almost impossible One diver says he’s never seen a crash as devastating as this, with the aircraft body totally destroyed and scattered 21 January 2021 - 13:37 Will Davies Divers searching for remains and wreckage in Indonesia. Picture: GETTY IMAGES/OSCAR SIAGIAN
Hong Kong Bayu Wardoyo tends to skip the 6am breakfast of Indonesian fried rice served to divers on the ship searching for wreckage of the Sriwijaya Air passenger jet that crashed in the Java Sea on January 9. He prefers coffee, light snacks and some fruit to prepare for the long day ahead.
ABC News
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Indonesia ends search for crashed plane s victims, debris
Indonesian authorities have ended the search for remaining victims and debris from a Sriwijaya Air jet that nosedived into the Java Sea, killing all 62 people on board
By FADLAN SYAM Associated Press
January 21, 2021, 12:54 PM
• 2 min read
The Associated Press
Workers use a forklift to load pieces of wreckage of Sriwijaya Air flight SJ-182 that crashed into the Java Sea on Jan. 9, onto a truck be transported for further investigation, at Tanjung Priok Port in Jakarta, Indonesia, Thursday, Jan. 21, 2021. Indonesian authorities on Thursday ended the search for the wreckage of the plane that nose-dived into the sea, killing all of its passengers on board. (AP Photo/Dita Alangkara)
Bayu Wardoyo tends to skip the 6 a.m. breakfast of Indonesian fried rice served to divers on the ship searching for wreckage of the Sriwijaya Air passenger jet that crashed in the Java Sea on Jan. 9. He prefers coffee, light snacks and some fruit to prepare for the long day ahead.