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    HomeAsiaIndonesia searching for missing surveillance plane with 11 onboard

    Indonesia searching for missing surveillance plane with 11 onboard

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    Jan 17 (Reuters) - Indonesian rescuers ​were searching on Saturday for an ATR 42-500 fisheries surveillance aircraft that went missing with 11 people on board, officials said.

    The Indonesia Air ⁠Transport plane lost contact with air traffic control at about 1:30 p.m. (0530 GMT) around Maros region in South Sulawesi province, Andi Sultan, an official ‍at the local rescue agency, told Reuters.

    The aircraft had been heading to Makassar, the ​capital of South Sulawesi, after departing from Yogyakarta province before contact was lost, Sultan said.

    There were eight crew and three passengers on board, he added.

    Around 400 ​personnel, including military and police units, were deployed to search for the plane and those on board, though the effort was being hampered by bad weather, Sultan said. He declined to comment on the possible cause of the incident.

    "We suspect the plane came down near the ‌peak of Mount Bulusaraung. We have deployed our personnel there," he said.

    The ‌plane had been chartered by Indonesia's Ministry of Marine Affairs and Fisheries, ministry official Pung Nugroho ​Saksono told state news agency Antara.

    Marine Affairs and Fisheries Minister Sakti Wahyu Trenggono said the three passengers were ministry staff conducting air surveillance on ‌fisheries.

    The ATR 42‑500 is a regional turboprop aircraft capable of carrying between 42 ⁠and 50 passengers.

    According to unconfirmed Flightradar24 data, an aircraft matching ‌the description was flying eastward over the ​Java Sea at about 11,000 feet before rapidly losing altitude and dropping off tracking systems.

    In France, Franco-Italian planemaker ATR said it had been informed ⁠of an accident in Indonesia ⁠and that its specialists were supporting local authorities as they began their ​investigation.

    (Reporting by Ananda Teresia in Jakarta, Tim Hepher in Paris, and Rajveer Singh Pardesi in Bengaluru. Editing ‌by Toby Chopra and Mark Potter)

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