All the 62 passengers onboard died in the crash that occured on January 9.
Indonesia’s Transport Ministry said on Wednesday it had recovered the cockpit voice recorder (CVR) of a Sriwijaya Air jet that crashed into the Java Sea shortly after take-off on Jan. 9, killing all 62 people onboard.
A news conference to discuss the find will be held at 1100 local time (0400 GMT), according to an media invitation from the Ministry sent to reporters.
A navy spokesman, La Ode Muhamad Holib, told Reuters tha tthe CVR was found on Wednesday. A Ministry spokeswoman declined to comment on whether it was in good condition.
Divers found the casing and beacon of the CVR from the26-year-old Boeing Co 737-500 within days of the crashb ut had spent nearly three months searching for the memory unit in relatively shallow but muddy waters that sometimes attract strong currents.
It took a similar amount of time to recover the CVR of the Lion Air 737 MAX that crashed in nearby waters in 2018.
A preliminary report by investigators into the Sriwijaya crash said the plane had an imbalance in engine thrust that eventually led the plane into a sharp roll and then a final dive into the sea.
That report included information from the plane’s othe r”black box”, the flight data recorder, which was recovered soonafter the crash. The CVR could help investigators understand the actions taken by the pilots
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