QZ8501 AirAsia's Surabaya-Singapore flight carrying 155 passengers and seven crew members on board went missing on Sunday.
The Airbus 320-200 took off from Surabaya in Java, Indonesia, at 5.20am local time (6.20am Malaysian time) and was due to arrive in Singapore two hours later, but it lost contact with air traffic control.
Search and rescue (SAR) efforts have since been
launched by the Indonesian authorities but have so far failed to produce results.
Reports that the plane may have crashed near Belituing Island, off the coast of Sumatra, have not been confirmed.
_______________________________________________________ LIVE REPORTS
New developments
2.43pm: The red and white debris sighted off Kalimantan in the Java sea is “likely” from from the AirAsia Flight QZ8501, Reutersquotes an Indonesian official as saying.
“We are checking if it’s debris from the aircraft. It’s probably from the body of the aircraft,” says Djoko Murjatmodjo, who is Indonesian Transport Ministry acting director-general of air transportation.
The Airbus 320-200 took off from Surabaya in Java, Indonesia, at 5.20am local time (6.20am Malaysian time) and was due to arrive in Singapore two hours later, but it lost contact with air traffic control.
Search and rescue (SAR) efforts have since been
launched by the Indonesian authorities but have so far failed to produce results.
Reports that the plane may have crashed near Belituing Island, off the coast of Sumatra, have not been confirmed.
_______________________________________________________ LIVE REPORTS
New developments
- Debris sighted in search area
- Missing plane yet to be fitted with tracking tech
- US Navy sending ship to help
- Search area has been expanded and revised
2.43pm: The red and white debris sighted off Kalimantan in the Java sea is “likely” from from the AirAsia Flight QZ8501, Reutersquotes an Indonesian official as saying.
“We are checking if it’s debris from the aircraft. It’s probably from the body of the aircraft,” says Djoko Murjatmodjo, who is Indonesian Transport Ministry acting director-general of air transportation.