No evidence of terrorism in AirAsia crash
Investigators
have found no evidence so far that terrorism was involved in the crash of
AirAsia Flight 8501, according to reports.
Lead
investigator Mardjono Siswosuwarno told The
Wall Street Journal on Monday
that investigators listening to the cockpit voice recorder did not report any
indications of threats or gunfire. "So far, there's no sign of terrorist
activity," he said. Nurcahyo Utomo, from Indonesia 's Transportation Safety
Committee, told the paper that nothing heard so far suggested pilot suicide
played a role.
The
flight's cockpit voice recorder and the other black box — the data recorder —
were retrieved by divers last week, followed by the plane's fuselage, the
examination of which has been hampered by bad weather. Many bodies of the 162
people on board are believed to be inside.
Andreas
Hananto from Indonesia 's
Transportation Safety Committee, told BBC Indonesian that there were
indications that the plane had encountered bad weather. He said investigators
had heard "no threatening voice on board" during the two-hour
recording, and added that the audio appeared to indicate that the pilot was too
busy trying to regain control of the plane to send a distress signal.
More analysis was needed
to determine the exact weather conditions at the time of the crash, and the
weather's impact on the engines, he told the BBC.
Nurcahyo
Utomo, from the Transportation Safety Committee told the WSJ: "So far we've managed to
transcribe only half of (the cockpit voice recorder) because there are so many
noises. We hope to complete it in a week."
A
preliminary report on the crash is expected to be released on Jan. 28, the BBC
reported.
Divers
recovered debris including passenger windows and seats from the floor of the Java Sea
on Monday, AirAsia said in a statement. "However, the floating mission
continued to be hampered due to high waves and adverse weather
conditions," the statement added. A total of 53 bodies have been recovered
so far.
Authorities
hope the black boxes will help determine why the Singapore-bound jet plummeted
into the Java Sea
less than an hour out of Surabaya ,
Indonesia , amid
heavy storms on Dec. 28. All 162 passengers and crew are presumed dead.
The
Indonesian Transport Ministry has said AirAsia did not have a license to fly
the route on the day of the crash, a claim AirAsia Indonesia had vigorously disputed.
In testimony before the Indonesian parliament, however, airline president Sunu
Widyatmoko acknowledged that due to an "administrative mistake" the
airline had only verbally proposed a schedule change to allow Sunday flights.
The airline
has been banned from flying the Surabaya-Singapore route. The Transport
Ministry has suspended scores of routes from other domestic airlines for
similar alleged violations.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2015/01/19/no-evidence-terrorism-airasia/21988747/
Structure of the Lead:
WHO-Investigators
WHEN-not give
WHAT- have found no evidence so far that terrorism was involved
WHERE-in the crash of AirAsia Flight 8501
HOW-terrorism
Keywords:
1. terrorism:恐怖主義
2. cockpit:座艙
3. indication:跡象
4. fuselage:機身
5. hamper:阻礙
6. investigator:調查員
7. debris:雜物.瓦礫
8. vigorously:大力地
9. testimony:證詞
10. alleged:所謂的