Originally published March 28, 2007 at 12:00 AM | Page modified March 28, 2007 at 4:10 PM
Nervous flying in Indonesia after airlines rank low on safety
Navigating a country of 17,500 islands scattered across three time zones has never been easy. Now it's downright scary for many air travelers...
Los Angeles Times
JAKARTA, Indonesia — Navigating a country of 17,500 islands scattered across three time zones has never been easy. Now it's downright scary for many air travelers.
Twice this year, Indonesian airliners have crashed, leaving more than 120 people dead. A Transportation Ministry audit released late last week found that none of 20 major Indonesian passenger and cargo airlines fully meet national safety regulations.
The news, coming in the wake of a series of ferry disasters, shook Indonesians already nervous about taking a trip. "I think consumers have some kind of mental trauma that makes them think twice before flying," said Tulus Abadi, a leader of the Indonesian Consumers Organization.
And Monday, Australian foreign affairs officials issued an advisory warning Australians to take the report into account before making travel plans in Indonesia, Reuters reported.
Cutting corners
Like most Asian countries, Indonesia is in the midst of a transportation revolution, as competition drives down prices and makes air travel affordable for people who once relied on boats, buses and cars. To keep fares low, airlines fighting for customers have cut corners, the audit shows.
All of the airlines met minimum safety requirements, but none qualified as an excellent carrier, Budhi Mulyawan Suyitno, Indonesia's new director general for air transportation, said in an interview.
Seven airlines ranked in the lowest of three categories, and the 13 others placed in the middle. Suyitno said that if those in the middle "made just a little effort and worked harder in these coming months, they can be upgraded to the top category."
The most serious problems included insufficient pilot training and aircraft flying without reserve fuel, Suyitno said.
Other shortcomings detected by the audit included using flight data and cockpit noise recorders that were out of date and would make accident investigations more difficult.
Suyitno declined to name the worst offenders.
The government has given airlines three months to improve or face having aircraft grounded or licenses revoked.
![]()
"In this airline business, the potential for failure is big," Suyitno said. "That is why we need strict regulation. We don't {$326} allow even a tiny space for error."
Recent crashes
On March 7, a state-owned Garuda Airlines Boeing 737-400 overshot the runway at the Yogyakarta airport on the island of Java and burst into flames. The crash killed 20 passengers and a crew member. An additional 119 people survived.
The pilot said he felt a powerful downdraft during landing. Survivors told of the aircraft bouncing hard off the runway at least twice.
Investigators are looking into claims the plane was traveling too fast on its approach. Some experts say wing flaps may have malfunctioned.
Two months before the Garuda crash, a budget-fare Adam Air jet disappeared off Sulawesi island, killing all 102 people aboard including three members of an Oregon family. There had been at least three airline disasters in the 20 months preceding that accident.
Indonesian airline safety is suffering because some of the new airlines are run by people with lots of money but not enough experience, consumer advocate Abadi said. Corruption and nepotism in issuing expensive operating licenses only raise the risks, he said.
"But the most important factor is lack of supervision from government," he added. "Government is very kind, freely giving operating licenses to new airlines, which creates an oversupply. But then the government fails to supervise, which makes conditions worse."
Abadi called on Indonesian authorities to send a strong signal by shutting down airlines with the worst safety records instead of protecting cheap air travel at any cost. "Do not gamble on people's lives only to defend something that is short-term," he said.
Copyright © 2007 The Seattle Times Company
Grab the kids and hop on Amtrak for a stress-free getaway to Portland
Travel notes: Sand-sculpture contest on Long Beach Peninsula
NEW - 11:20 AM
Climbers may be barred from Australia's famed Uluru rock
UPDATE - 11:20 AM
Getty Center, college evacuate due to LA fire
NEW - 12:10 PM
Museums celebrate Apollo 11, 40 years after first moonwalk

Gen. David Petraeus: Iraq and Afghanistan Wars
Watch highlights of General David Petraeus discussing the Iraq and Afghanistan War at the Global Leadership Series sponsored by the World Affairs Council.
Entertainment | Top Video | World | Offbeat Video | Sci-Tech
shopping

events for Friday, Jul. 10th
- IKEA Summer Sale
- Posh on Main Semiannual Sale
- Julep Nail Parlor "Sandal-Ready and S...
- Show Pony Summer Sale
editors' picks
More shopping guides- Seattle-area homebuilder losing projects to foreclosure
- Health-plan costs soar for individuals
- Trees vs. houses: Narrow, leafy street is last chance for two Madrona homes waiting to be moved
- World's largest solar plant may be built in Cle Elum
- Driver killed, deputy and prisoner injured in head-on crash near Monroe
- House Democrats likely to alter intel bill
- Drunken man shocks Spain with his generosity
- Movie review | "Brüno" struts his stuff to hilariously expose intolerance
- Chase will no longer sponsor Lake Union fireworks
- 4 Ill. cemetery workers accused in grisly plot
- Mass. files lawsuit against federal marriage law
913 - Health-plan costs soar for individuals
523 - Texas Rangers at Seattle Mariners: 07/09 game thread
243 - Seattle Mariners GM Jack Zduriencik again declines to quell Yuniesky Betancourt trade rumors
146 - World's largest solar plant may be built in Cle Elum
126 - Trees vs. houses: Narrow, leafy street is last chance for two Madrona homes waiting to be moved
91 - Wednesday night notes
86 - Pay parking in West Seattle?
76 - Franklin Gutierrez bails Mariners out in a 3-1 win
75 - House Dems want to expand secret briefings
63
- Seattle-area homebuilder losing projects to foreclosure
- Health-plan costs soar for individuals
- World's largest solar plant may be built in Cle Elum
- Trees vs. houses: Narrow, leafy street is last chance for two Madrona homes waiting to be moved
- Grab the kids and hop on Amtrak for a stress-free getaway to Portland
- During financial crisis, the business of college sports is complicated by Title IX
- Local Smith & Hawken garden stores to close
- Green River Valley plans ahead for possible flooding
- Pay parking in West Seattle?
- Jerry Large | Issues of aging affect all
