An aircraft with 54
people on board crashed in Indonesia's remote and mountainous region of Papua
on Sunday, a government official said, the latest in a string of aviation
disasters in the Southeast Asian nation.
"The latest
information is that the Trigana aircraft that lost contact has been found at
Camp 3, Ok Bape district in the Bintang Mountains regency," Air
Transportation Director General Suprasetyo told reporters. "Residents
provided information that the aircraft crashed into Tangok mountain."
There was no immediate
word on whether anyone survived.
Earlier, the National
Search and Rescue Agency (BASARNAS) said a twin-turboprop plane had lost
contact with air traffic control as it flew over the forested area of eastern
Indonesia but efforts to trace it were difficult because of failing light.
Trigana Air Operations
Director Beni Sumaryanto said that within 30 minutes of hearing that the
aircraft was missing, the airline sent another plane to scour the same flight
path but it had found nothing because of bad weather, local media reported.
According to the official
BASARNAS Twitter account, the aircraft, a short-haul ATR 42-300 airliner
belonging to Trigana Air Service and built in France and Italy, was carrying 44
adult passengers, five crew and five children and infants.
The plane was flying
between Jayapura's Sentani Airport and Oksibil, due south of Jayapura, the
capital of Papua province.
Air transport is commonly
used in Papua, Indonesia's easternmost province, where land travel is often
impossible.
According to the Aviation
Safety Network, an online database, the ATR 42-300 that went missing made its
first flight 27 years ago. ATR is a joint venture between Airbus (AIR.PA) and
Alenia Aermacchi, a subsidiary of Italian aerospace firm Finmeccanica
(SIFI.MI).
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