Over a hundred people are dead in the country’s latest air tragedy.
An
Indonesian military transport plane crashed into a hotel and residential area
in the country’s third largest city of Medan on Tuesday, killing dozens of
people in one of the deadliest accidents for the country’s air force.
The C-130
B Hercules aircraft crashed just two minutes after it took off from an air
force base, hitting a busy road. The death toll has been climbing and is now
over 50. Though cause of the crash is still unknown, Air Force chief Air
Marshal Agus Suprianta revealed that the
pilot had told the control tower that the plane needed to turn back because of
engine trouble and was in the process of returning back to the airport.
“The
plane crashed while it was turning right to return to the airport,” he said.
Supriatna
said there were 12
crew and more than 100 passengers on board the plane, which took off from the
capital Jakarta. However, it was not clear how many people were on board when
the plane crashed, since it made two stops along the way in Pekanbaru and
Dumai.
Indonesian
military spokesman Maj. Gen. Fuad Basya confirmed that the aircraft had been
inspected and cleared to fly before taking off. Nonetheless, in response to the
incident, Indonesia’s air force has temporarily grounded
its remaining eight Hercules aircraft, which were received from the United
States.
This is
not the first time a C-130 Hercules plane has been involved in a deadly crash.
In May 2009, a plane crashed into homes, skidded into a rice paddy and erupted
in flames, killing nearly 100 people. As was the case then, the crash is likely
to raise questions about the aging plane’s record and the air force’s
underfunded capabilities more generally.
Beyond
the immediate incident, Indonesia has had a chronic problem with aviation
safety. In April, as The Diplomat reported, an F-16 fighter jet
malfunctioned and caught fire during a ceremony to honor President Joko
“Jokowi” Widodo (See: “Will Indonesia’s Fighter Jet
Malfunction Affect its Defense Policy?”). In response, Suprianta
ordered the temporary grounding of the F-16 fleet for evaluation due to safety
reasons. Last December, in a more high-profile civilian incident, AirAsia
Flight 8501 crashed into the Java Sea with 162 passengers on board en route
from Surabaya – Indonesia’s second most populous city – to Singapore.
By Prashanth Parameswaran
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