In the past year, Malaysia’s aviation industry has suffered an unprecedented amount of tragedy. Although the odds of any person boarding a flight dying in a plane crash are about one in 11 million, three Malaysia-based aircraft have apparently gone down, with no survivors. The latest, AirAsia Flight QZ8501, had been traveling from Surabaya, Indonesia, to Singapore when it vanished while flying over the Java Sea.
To some extent, the three Malaysian air disasters are just brutal bad luck. Still, the disasters point to several disturbing trends that raise the question of whether flying in peninsular Southeast Asia is completely safe. The air market in the region has embraced low-cost carriers, leading to a proliferation of flights throughout Southeast Asia, stretching air traffic controllers, and possibly allowing some airlines to expand too rapidly. Indonesian carriers, air traffic controllers, and Indonesian airspace in general have become notorious for weak safety regulations. AirAsia has responded to this crisis much more rapidly than state carrier Malaysia Airlines did after the disappearance of Flight MH370 last March, but the opaque, authoritarian politics of Malaysia—which are common in Southeast Asia—will likely make the search and rescue operation, and any inquiry into why the flight crashed, more difficult than necessary.
AirAsia, modeled on carriers like Ryanair and Southwest Airlines, was the first low-cost airline to prosper in Southeast Asia, which had been dominated by state carriers until open-skies deals broke the market open in the past decade. AirAsia allowed the growing middle classes in Asia to use air travel for pleasure and business for the first time. The no-frills airline charged for food, bags of any significant size, choosing a specific seat, and many other services, but also gained a reputation for solid customer service. In the wake of Flight QZ8501’s disappearance, AirAsia has continued to show its responsiveness. Through its website and emergency call centers, the airline has been providing families with up-to-the-minute and seemingly accurate information about the plane and the nascent search effort, a sharp contrast from Malaysia Airlines, which told families of people on MH370 virtually nothing for days after the plane vanished.
AirAsia has expanded rapidly in Indonesia, the most populous nation in Southeast Asia and an archipelago where cheap air travel is incredibly attractive to middle classes. Indonesia-based low-cost carrier Lion Air, meanwhile, placed a massive order last year for 234 new Airbus planes, and followed that up with an order last month for 40 more new planes. Other low-cost carriers such as Citilink, Tigerair, Valuair, and many others have also built up their route networks across the archipelago.
But while air traffic has grown in the region, and while AirAsia had a mostly solid safety record, the increase in low-cost flights may have resulted in planes being operated by men and women with less experience than in the past. Southeast Asian airspace still has the same mountains, chaotic weather, and tough approach paths as it always did. The pilot on the AirAsia flight had about 6,000 hours of flight experience on the Airbus plane he was flying, but it is unclear whether he had experience flying at 34,000 feet or higher, where he was trying to take the plane to avoid bad weather. The higher the plane rises, the more difficult it can be to navigate tricky conditions like thin air and ice crystals. Some low-cost carriers seem particularly strapped trying to find quality staff, and allegedly push their pilots and crew to work too many hours, in order to run so many flights. Indonesian carrier Lion Air has had at least three of its pilots arrested for crystal methamphetamine use since 2011; crystal meth is a stimulant that can be used to stay awake and alert.
This increase in flights seems to have particularly taxed air traffic controllers, pilots, and mechanics operating in Indonesia. The country has become infamous for poor management of planes in the air and coming in for landings, and for lax enforcement of airlines’ need to maintain planes. Pay for air traffic controllers, mechanics, and regulators of the aviation industry remains low by regional standards, and graft is endemic at all levels of regulatory agencies in Indonesia; the country ranks among the most corrupt in East Asia in Transparency International’s annual Corruption Perceptions Index. Yet the increase in flights into and through the country has required more air traffic controllers, mechanics, and pilots, whether or not Indonesia is capable of providing trained people to fill these jobs.
There has been little evidence that Indonesian authorities have addressed long-standing concerns about flight safety in and around the archipelago. Lion Air alone has suffered seven accidents in the past decade, a horrendous number. (By contrast, all major U.S. airlines combined, which fly exponentially more flights daily than Lion Air, have suffered a total of three serious crashes in the past decade.) These accidents included a crash near the Indonesian city of Solo that killed 25 people, a 2013 crash where a plane trying to land in Bali in the rain smashed into the ocean short of the runway, and an accident earlier this year where a Lion Air plane coming into Bali landed so poorly it bounced up and down four times on the runway, severely injuring passengers. Meanwhile, Mandala Airlines crashed in Medan, Indonesia, in 2005, killing 105 people; an Adam Air flight in Sulawesi crashed into the sea in 2007, killing 102 people (the worst accident ever involving a Boeing 747-700); and a Garuda flight in 2007 overshot the runway in Yogyakarta and crashed, killing 22 people.
Overall, Indonesia’s airlines have suffered numerous other deadly crashes in the past 10 years. The European Union has banned virtually all Indonesian airlines from flying in the EU because of safety concerns. Even Indonesian state carrier Garuda Indonesia was, in the 2000s, banned from flying in Europe because of its safety record. The International Air Transport Association has not allowed Lion Air to become a member because of concerns about the airline’s safety.
Although AirAsia is not a state company, it will still have to navigate the opaque bureaucracies of Indonesia and Malaysia’s defense, transportation, and other ministries to conduct search and rescue and tell the complete story of what happened to Flight QZ8501. Malaysia’s semi-authoritarian government demonstrated after the disappearance of MH370 that it resents handing over any information to outsiders, even if that information can help with search and rescue efforts. AirAsia is, in a way, as much of an outsider to the Malaysian government as China, Australia, and other countries pushing to find out about MH370 were. AirAsia Chief Executive Tony Fernandes has repeatedly engaged in public spats with Malaysia’s long-ruling governing coalition, including Prime Minister Najib Razak, since Fernandes seems to detest the backroom, statist economic strategies common in Malaysia, which are the opposite of his modern business style.
Indonesia, meanwhile, though a real democracy, also has been reluctant to allow outsiders complete access when working on search and rescue missions, perhaps because Jakarta fears exposing the ineptitude of some of the country’s air regulators and controllers. The unwillingness of governments in the region to confront the shortcomings of their aviation systems means that more tragedies are likely to occur.
Source: Top Stories - Google News - http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&ct2=us&usg=AFQjCNFvu5ll6jKgsnrpx151O38YQ0WeCg&clid=c3a7d30bb8a4878e06b80cf16b898331&cid=52778695575188&ei=YXWhVPmQF8KswQHu-4FY&url=http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2014-12-29/why-air-disasters-keep-happening-in-southeast-asia
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