Jakarta:Indonesian military chief Hadi Tjahjanto said on Sunday that a naval ship deployed to search for the Sriwijaya Air plane that crashed into the waters off Jakarta has caught a signal at the accident site.
The Boeing 737-500 aircraft, flying from the capital Jakarta to Pontianak city in West Kalimantan province on Saturday afternoon, crashed into the Java sea off the Seribu District in the north of Jakarta, reports Xinhua news agency. It was carrying 50 passengers, including 10 children and 12 crew members.
In a statement on Sunday, Tjahjanto said naval ship KRI Rigela equipped with a remote-operated vehicle, which arrived at the search location at 3 am, detected the signal possibly from the aircraft. "Based on the results of monitoring, and according to the coordinates given from the last contact, it is strongly suspected that there was a signal from the plane," he said.
Meanwhile, divers have found a tyre and more debris of the crashed plane. Local TV footage showed rescuers lifting a tyre of the Boeing 737-500 plane from the sea, and underwater equipment displaying a lot of debris at the seafloor with the depth of 23 metres.
Spokesman of the National Search and Rescue Office (Basarnas) Yusuf Latief told Xinhua that some pieces of the debris have been collected from the scene. A total of 362 rescuers with 38 ships, some of them equipped with multi-beam echo-sounders and remotely operated vehicles (ROV) to detect objects underwater, were searching for the victims and the wreckage of the budget airline plane, he said.
"The ships will search for the location of the fuselage of the plane," Latief said. The search was also carried out by air and land as the strong current might bring the debris to the coast of nearby islands, according to him.