Date: December 19th, 1997
Type: 737-300
Registration: 9V-TRF
Operator: SilkAir
Where: Sungsang Village near Palembang, Sumatera, Indonesia
Report No.: Not Available
Report Date: -
Pages: -
This is not an accident investigation report.
A SilkAir, Singapore, Boeing 737-300 bearing flight number MI-185, on Friday (19/12) afternoon at
about 16.30 West Indonesia Time exploded in mid-air and fell in pieces in the waters of the Musi
River, Parit 12, Sungsang Subregency, Musibanyuasin Regency, some 70 kilometers north of
Palembang, South Sumatra.
The aircraft took off from the Soekarno Hatta Airport, Jakarta, at 15.23 WIT, for Singapore. Until
23.00 WIT yesterday the fate of the 97 passengers and seven crew members was not yet known.
Communication director general Sikado, as quoted by Antara, estimates that all passengers and crew
members have perished.
As soon as they received reports, the Sungsang, Musibanyuasin police mobilized personnel to give
assistance. The South Sumatra Police SAR team led by police district chief Brig.Gen. Deddi Ganrijadi
Gantika, around 19.00 hours headed towards the location by speedboat. The Palembang-Sungsang
distance was covered in two and a half hours.
Communications Minister H Dhanutirto, at 22.00 hours WIT left Halim Perdanakusuma by King Air
Beechcraft directly for Palembang. With him went Air Communication director general Zainuddin
Sikado, "Basarnas" head Harinto, and chairman of the AAIC, Prof Oetarjo Diran.
From the flight manifest, the twin jet aircraft was carrying 40 Singapore citizens, two Japanese, 23
Indonesians, four Germans, 10 Malaysians, five Americans, five French citizens, three British citizens,
and one person each from Bosnia, Austria, India, Taiwan and Australia.
Singapore Airlines spokesman Rick Clements told the AFP news agency that six of the seven crew
members were Singapore citizens, and one a New Zealand citizen. Reportedly the Singapore police
have cordoned off the SilkAir service area in the Changi International Airport., where relatives of the
victims are waiting for further news.
The Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore is reported to have sent two Super Puma helicopters to
assist in the search operations.
December 27, 1997 - Flight Recorder From Jet Found
JAKARTA, Indonesia - Rescue teams found one of two ``black box'' recorders
today from the Singapore-operated jet that plunged into a river in Sumatra
last week, killing all 104 people aboard.
Dwiyono, an officer at the Search and Rescue Post at Palembang Airport near
the crash site, said divers retrieved the flight data recorder of the SilkAir
Boeing 737-300 from the Musi River.
The flight recorder tracks information including speed and altitude and the
angle of the plane before the crash.
An accompanying voice recorder, which keeps a record of sounds and radio
conversations in the cockpit, remained missing, he said.
Black box information could be vital in determining the cause of the Dec. 19
crash en route from Jakarta to Singapore.
The flight data recorder was to be flown to the United States on Sunday for
analysis, the official Antara news agency reported, quoting Indonesia's
transportation minister, Haryanto Dhanutirto.
Indonesian investigators have neither the expertise nor the facilities to
carry out such an analysis.
Indonesian and Singaporean divers, guided by sonar readings, so far have
retrieved only small pieces of the plane from the murky waters.
Meanwhile, Indonesian and Singapore officials agreed today that mainly
unidentified human remains found by divers should be buried in a common grave
near the crash site, about 250 miles northwest of Jakarta.
Indonesian President Suharto had agreed to the concept of a common grave,
Dhanutirto said. Singapore officials would have to agree to the location.
Singapore's Transport Minister Mah Bow Tan, who visited the site on Friday,
said he supported the plan for a common grave as long as the relatives of the
victims agreed.
The data recorder reportedly was found in about 30 feet of water in the area
where the plane hit the river and disintegrated.
Experts from the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration and the National
Transportation Safety Board, along with employees from Boeing and engine maker
General Electric, have been assisting Indonesian investigators.