Russian jet wreckage found in Indonesia - Action News
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Russian jet wreckage found in Indonesia

Search and rescue teams say they have discovered bodies near the wreckage of a Russian-made passenger plane that smashed into a steep Indonesian volcano with 45 people on board.

No survivors spotted in mountain crash

Wreckage of a missing Sukhoi Superjet-100 is scattered on the mountainside in Bogor, West Java, Indonesia. The new Russian-made passenger plane disappeared Wednesday during a demonstration flight with 47 people on board. (Indonesian Air Force/Associated Press)

Search and rescue teamssay they have discovered bodies near the wreckage of a Russian-made passenger plane that smashed into a steep Indonesian volcano with 45 people on board.

Spokesman Gagah Prakoso said his teams reached the remote, rugged site near the crater on Thursday afternoon.

They found the Sukhoi Superjet-100 scattered along the jungle slopes.

He said rescuers also spotted several bodies, which will have to be placed in nets and lifted by ropes to hovering helicopters.

The plane was on a demonstration flight for potential buyers in Indonesia when it crashed Wednesday, just 20 minutes after takeoff.

Family members, many of whom spent a long, sleepless night at the airport, broke down in tears on hearing the news. Others stared blankly ahead in disbelief.

"From the pictures we're seeing, it looks like it was a total loss," said Daryatmo, chief of the national search and rescue agency, as the first images flashed across local TV.

Relatives of a passenger of the missing Sukhoi Superjet-100 aircraft gathered at Halim Perdana Kusuma Airport in Jakarta. (Reuters)

The Sukhoi Superjet-100, Russia's first new passenger jet since the fall of the Soviet Union two decades ago, was scattered on acliff near the top of Mount Salak, a volcano just 50 kilometres southwest of Jakarta. The company's blue-and-white logo peeked through the dense canopy of trees.

Pilot asked for permission to descend

The plane left Halim Perdanakusuma Airport in the capital Wednesday for a quick test flight aimed at impressing potential buyers.

Twenty-one minutes after takeoff, the crew asked for permission to descend from 3,000 metres to 1,800 metres, said Daryatmo, chief of the national search and rescue agency.

The plane fell off the radar immediately afterward.

It was not clear why the Russian pilot and co-pilot asked to drop down, especially when it was so close to the2,200-metre- high mountain, or if they got the OK.

Tapes between the pilots and air traffic control are being reviewed as part of the investigation, said Tatang Kurniadi, chief of the National Commission on Safety Transportation.

They will not be released to the media any time soon, he said.

More than 1,000 people, including soldiers and police, took part in the search and rescue efforts Thursday.

Eventually, helicopters carrying out aerial surveys spotted the wreckage.

Jet considered key to Russian aerospace industry

Russia's aerospace industry was badly undermined in the economic turmoil following the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union. The Superjetdeveloped by the civil aircraft division of Sukhoi with the co-operation with Western partners has been widely considered the country's chance to regain a foothold in the international passenger plane market.

A Russian Sukhoi Super Jet 100 takes off during the International Aviation and Space Show in Zhukovsky, outside Moscow, in August 2011. (Mikhail Metzel/Associated Press)

Its "Welcome Asia!" tour, which also included stops in Pakistan, Myanmar and Kazakhstan, was intended to drum up support.

Sunaryo from PT. Trimarga Rekatama, the company that helped organize Wednesday's event, said 45 people were on board, many of them potential buyers and journalists.

Among them were eight Russians, all from Sukhoi companies and 37 Indonesians.

An American consultant with Indonesia's PT. Sriwijaya Airline and a Frenchman with aircraft engine-maker Snecma also were on board.

The Superjet a 75- to 95-seat plane was being touted as a challenger to similar-sized jets from Canada's Bombardier Inc. and Brazil's Embraer SA.

It made its inaugural commercial flight last year.

"It is their big hope that they will somehow get into the jet aircraft passenger market in a bigger way than they have, because we all know that the Russians have had a dreadful record in the past with their aircraft, so this was vitally important to their industry," said Tom Ballantyne, a Sydney-based aviation expert.

With a relatively low price tag of around $35 million, the plane has garnered around 170 orders. And Indonesia, a sprawling archipelagic nation of 240 million people with a fast-growing middle class, was one of the biggest potential customers. Kartika Airlines and Sky Aviation among dozens of airlines to have popped up in Indonesia in the last decade to meet the growing demand for cheap air travel had already ordered at least 42.

People involved in those plans said they were waiting for the results of the investigation before reconsidering. Most wanted to know whether the problem was mechanical or pilot error.