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PANGKALAN BUN, Indonesia (Associated Press) — Family members of those aboard AirAsia Flight 8501 collapsed in agony Tuesday as images of debris and a bloated body flashed across Indonesian television screens, proof that the plane crashed into the sea two days earlier with 162 people on board.

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The low-cost carrier vanished Sunday halfway through a two-hour flight between Surabaya, Indonesia and Singapore after encountering storm clouds, sparking an international hunt with dozens of planes, ships and helicopters.

On the third day of searching, the first signs of the jet were found in shallow, aqua waters only about 10 miles (16 kilometers) from the plane's last known coordinates: A life jacket, an emergency exit door. Parts of the jetliner's interior, including an oxygen tank, were brought to the nearest town, Pangkalan Bun. Another find included a bright blue plastic suitcase, completely unscratched.

"I know the plane has crashed, but I cannot believe my brother and his family are dead," said Ifan Joko, who lost seven relatives, three of them children, as they traveled to Singapore to ring in the New Year. "... We still pray they are alive."

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First Adm. Sigit Setiayanta, Naval Aviation Center commander at Surabaya Air Force base, told reporters six corpses were spotted about 160 kilometers (100 miles) from Central Kalimantan province.

Rescue workers were lowered on ropes from a hovering helicopter to retrieve bodies. Efforts were hindered by 2-meter-high (6-foot) waves and strong winds, National Search and Rescue Director SB Supriyadi said, but the first body was later picked up by a navy ship. Officials said as many as six others followed, but they disagreed about the exact number.

Supriyadi was on the aircraft and saw what appeared to be more wreckage under the water, which was clear and a relatively shallow 20 to 30 meters (65 to 100 feet).

Television coverage of the discovery sent a spasm of pain through the room at the Surabaya airport where relatives were waiting for news, especially as it showed a half-naked man floating in the water, a shirt partially covering his head.

Many screamed and wailed uncontrollably, breaking down into tears while they squeezed each other. One middle-aged man collapsed and had to be carried out on a stretcher.

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Their horror at the news was captured by cameras on the other side of windows into the waiting room. To grant traumatized family members privacy, officials blacked out the glass later Tuesday evening.

Around 125 family members were planning to travel to Pangkalan Bun on Wednesday to start identifying their loved ones. Body bags and coffins have been prepared at hospitals there, while dozens of elite military divers will join the massive search. They are desperate to scour the water ahead of approaching rough weather.

The crash caps an astonishingly tragic year for air travel in Southeast Asia, and Malaysia in particular. Malaysia-based AirAsia's loss comes on top of the still-unsolved disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 in March with 239 people aboard, and the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 in July over Ukraine, which killed all 298 passengers and crew.

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Nearly all the passengers and crew were Indonesians, who are frequent visitors to Singapore, particularly on holidays.

Haidar Fauzie, 60, said his youngest child and only daughter, Khairunnisa Haidar, was a stewardess who had worked with AirAsia for two years.

On learning about the crash, he struggled to console his grieving wife. They last saw their child six weeks ago, when she returned home on holiday.

"From the start, we already knew the risks associated with being a stewardess," said Fauzie. "She is beautiful and smart. It has always been her dream to fly. We couldn't have stopped her."

Before flying to Surabaya to pay his respects to the families, AirAsia group CEO Tony Fernandes tweeted, "My heart is filled with sadness for all the families involved in QZ 8501. On behalf of AirAsia my condolences to all. Words cannot express how sorry I am."

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Fernandes, the founder and the face of AirAsia, and a constant presence in Indonesia since the tragedy started unfolding, said he planned to travel to the recovery site on Wednesday.

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"I have apologized profusely for what they are going through," he said of his contact with relatives. "I am the leader of this company, and I have to take responsibility. That is why I'm here. I'm not running away from my obligations."

It is not clear what brought the plane down.

The last communication indicated the pilots were worried about bad weather. They sought permission to climb above threatening clouds, but were denied due to heavy air traffic. Four minutes later, the jet disappeared from the radar without issuing a distress signal.

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The plane's cockpit voice and flight data recorders, or black boxes, have yet to be recovered. Scott Hamilton, managing director of aviation consultancy Leeham Co., said in a post on his website that autopsies may provide some of the earliest clues about what happened.

"If death was due to blunt force trauma, this could suggest passengers were alive upon impact with the water," he wrote. "If death came from other circumstances, this could suggest an explosive decompression and in-flight break up occurred."

Several countries rushed to Indonesia to help with search and recovery efforts.

The United States said it was sending the USS Sampson destroyer, joining at least 30 ships, 15 aircraft and seven helicopters in the search for the jet, said Indonesia's Search and Rescue Agency chief Henry Bambang Soelistyo.

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A Chinese frigate also was on the way, while Singapore said it was sending two underwater beacon detectors to try to detect pings from the plane's all-important cockpit voice and flight data recorders. Malaysia, Australia and Thailand also are involved in the search.

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McDowell reported from Jakarta. Associated Press writers Niniek Karmini, Ali Kotarumalos and Margie Mason in Jakarka and Eileen Ng in Surabaya, Indonesia contributed to this report.



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Video After The Jump

JAKARTA, Indonesia (Associated Press) — Aircraft and ships that spent several hours searching Indonesian waters turned up no sign of an AirAsia plane that disappeared Sunday with 162 people on board in airspace possibly thick with dense storm clouds, strong winds and lightning, officials said.

Aircraft searching for AirAsia Flight 8501 called off the effort for the night and will resume at Monday morning, said Achmad Toha of Indonesia's search and rescue agency. Some ships were continuing the search overnight, he said.

The plane took off Sunday morning from Surabaya, Indonesia's second-largest city, and was about halfway to its destination, Singapore, when it vanished from radar.

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The last communication between the pilot and air traffic control was at 6:13 a.m. (2313 GMT Saturday), when the pilot "asked to avoid clouds by turning left and going higher to 34,000 feet (10,360 meters)." It was last seen on radar at 6:16 a.m., and a minute later was no longer there, Djoko Murjatmodjo, Indonesia's acting director general of transportation, told reporters.

More than 12 hours later, shocked family members huddled at the Surabaya airport from where the Airbus A320 had taken off, awaiting any news of the jetliner.

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Air Asia group CEO Tony Fernandes flew to Surabaya and said at a press conference that that the focus should be on the search and the families.

"We have no idea at the moment what went wrong," said Fernandes, a Malaysian businessman who founded the regional low-cost carrier in 2001. "Let's not speculate at the moment."

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It is the third major aviation incident involving Malaysia this year. In March, Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 disappeared with 239 people, and in July, a jet from the same airline was shot down over Ukraine, killing all 298 people aboard.

Indonesia and Singapore launched a search and rescue operation for Flight 8501 near Belitung island in Java Sea, the area where the jetliner lost contact with ground traffic control about 42 minutes after taking off from Surabaya.

Murjatmodjo said there was no distress signal from the cockpit of the twin-engine, single-aisle plane.

"We hope we can find the location of the plane as soon as possible, and we hope that God will give us guidance to find it," he said.

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Speaking 10 hours after the plane lost contact, Indonesia Vice President Jusuf Kalla expressed deep concern.

"It is most possible that it has experienced an accident," he said.

AirAsia said in a statement that the plane was on the submitted flight plan route. However, it had requested a change due to weather before communication with the aircraft was lost while it was still under the control of Indonesian air traffic control.

"This is my worst nightmare," Fernandes tweeted.

Malaysia-based AirAsia, which has a presence in most of Southeast Asia and recently in India, has never lost a plane before and has a good safety track record. Flight 8501 was operated by AirAsia Indonesia, a subsidiary that is 49 percent owned by AirAsia Malaysia.

Sunardi, a weather forecaster at the Indonesia's Meteorology and Geophysics Agency, said dense storm clouds were detected up to 44,000 feet in the same area at the time the plane was reported to have lost contact.

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"There could have been turbulence, lightning and vertical as well as horizontal strong winds within such clouds," said Sunardi, who like many Indonesians uses only one name.

The plane had an Indonesian captain and a French co-pilot, five cabin crew and 155 passengers, including 16 children and one infant, AirAsia Indonesia said in a statement. Among the passengers were three South Koreans, a Malaysian, a British national and his 2-year-old Singaporean daughter. The rest were Indonesians.

AirAsia said the captain has a total of 6,100 flying hours, but Fernandes later said the number is more than 20,000. The airline said the first officer has 2,275 flying hours.

At Surabaya airport, dozens of relatives sat in a room waiting for news, many of them talking on mobile phones and crying. Some looked dazed. As word spread, more and more family members were arriving at the crisis center to await word.

Transport Minister Ignasius Jonan told reporters in Surabaya that search and rescue efforts now involved the Indonesian army, the national Search and Rescue Agency as well as Singapore and Malaysia.

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The Search and Rescue Agency's operation chief, Maj. Gen. Tatang Zaenudin, said 200 rescuers had been deployed to the east side of Belitung island.

Air Force spokesman Hadi Tjahjanto said three aircraft, including a surveillance plane, were dispatched to the area. The Singapore air force and the navy also searched with two C-130 planes. The area continued to receive heavy rain as searchers looked for the lost aircraft.

Airbus said in a statement that the missing aircraft was delivered to AirAsia in October 2008, which would make it six years old. It said the plane had accumulated about 23,000 flight hours in some 13,600 flights. AirAsia said the aircraft had last undergone scheduled maintenance on Nov. 16.

AirAsia, which has dominated cheap travel in the region for years, flies short routes of just a few hours, connecting large cities of Southeast Asia. Recently it has tried to expand into long-distance flying through its sister airline AirAsia X.

Fernandes, who is the face of AirAsia and an active Twitter user, sent out an earlier tweet saying: "Thank you for all your thoughts and prays. We must stay strong." He tweeted later that he was heading to Surabaya.

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Fernandes stirred controversy earlier this year after incorrectly tweeting that Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, now synonymous with one of aviation's enduring mysteries, had landed safely. The wide-bodied Boeing 777 disappeared with 239 people aboard soon after taking off from Kuala Lumpur for Beijing on March 8. It remains missing.

Another Malaysia Airlines flight, also a Boeing 777, was shot down over rebel-controlled eastern Ukraine while on a flight from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur on July 17. All 298 people on board were killed.

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William Waldock, an expert on air crash search and rescue with Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Prescott, Arizona, cautioned against drawing comparisons to the disappearance of Flight 370.

"I think we have to let this play out," he said. "Hopefully, the airplane will get found, and if that happens, it will probably be in the next few hours. Until then, we have to reserve judgment."

The circumstances bode well for finding the plane since the intended flight time was less than two hours and there is a known position at which the plane disappeared, he said.

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, expressed solidarity with AirAsia. In a tweet he said: "Very sad to hear that AirAsia Indonesia QZ8501 is missing. My thoughts are with the families. Malaysia stands ready to help."

President Barack Obama, who was vacationing in Hawaii, was briefed on the plane's disappearance and officials were tracking the situation, the White House said.

The Airbus A320 is a workhorse of modern aviation. Similar to the Boeing 737, it is used to connect cities anywhere from one to five hours apart. There are currently 3,606 A320s in operation worldwide, according to Airbus. The A320 family of jets, which includes A319 and A321, has a very good safety record, with just 0.14 fatal accidents per million takeoffs, according to a safety study published by Boeing in August.

Flight 8501 disappeared while it was at its cruising altitude, which is usually the safest part of a trip. Just 10 percent of fatal crashes from 2004 through 2013 occurred while a plane was in that stage of flight, according to the August Boeing safety report.

In 2007, an Indonesia-owned Adam Air flight carrying 102 people vanished during a domestic flight. Debris was found a few days later, but much of the fuselage remains on the ocean floor. In 1995, an Indonesian plane operated by Merpati Nusantara Airlines disappeared over open water while flying between islands in the archipelago nation. The 14 crew and passengers were never found.

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Passing through bad weather such as severe thunderstorms could have been a factor with Flight 8501. Airbus jets are very sophisticated and are able to automatically adjust to wind shears or other weather disruptions. However, weather has played a role in past air disasters that occurred at cruise elevation, including the 2009 Air France Flight 447 crash over the Atlantic Ocean.

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Another possibility is some type of catastrophic metal fatigue caused by the cycle of pressurization and depressurization associated with each takeoff and landing cycle — something that Flight 8501 would have done a lot. Still, metal fatigue is unlikely because this plane is only six years old.

___

Associated Press writers Joan Lowy in Austin, Texas, Scott Mayerowitz in New York and Lori Hinnant in Paris contributed to this report.



Photo sources: Associated PressNew York Daily News


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Video And Pics After The Jump

 

Via Fox Sports

 

Somebody other than Anderson Silva possesses the UFC middleweight belt for the first time since 2006.

 

And Silva has only himself to blame.

 

Chris Weidman took advantage of some of Silva’s usual showboating early in the second round to knock out the longtime champ. A left hook to the chin of a lackadaisical Silva dropped him and a few moments (and a few more Weidman punches later), the fight was halted.

 

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“We expected him to do things like that,” Weidman said. “He’s done it plenty of times in a lot of fights. I don’t see him as being cocky. He’s trying to mentally defeat you in there. It got to the point when he was doing it, ‘You know what? Screw this. I’m hitting him.’”

 

Silva’s never shied away from showboating, especially as he ruled the middleweight division where he successfully defended the belt a UFC record 10 times.

 

But it was clear early on that Weidman — who improved to 10-0 — would be a challenge. Not only is Weidman a stellar wrestler, he showed with one punch he can be a powerful striker.

 

“People are going to say a lot of things now,” Silva said through an interpreter. “They are going to say Chris got lucky or I underestimated him. But we need to respect what he did and we need to respect he went in there and beat me. That’s pretty much it.”

 

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Weidman was the aggressor early and had Silva in trouble on the ground a couple times in a wild first round. From the start of the second, Silva turned up the hot dogging — something that ultimately ended his reign.

 

“I don’t feel he’s disrespected his opponents out there,” Weidman said. “I think he was trying to get the mental edge and wait for you to get angry.”

 

It was Silva's first loss in the UFC and also his first loss by knockout as a pro.

 

UFC president Dana White had guaranteed that Silva would get a rematch against Weidman — and White stuck to the promise even as Silva seemed at best lukewarm to the idea.

 

“I guarantee you there is nothing I want more than a rematch with Chris Weidman,” White said.

 

Silva, however, said first he needs “three to four months” off before he decides what’s next.

 

“I've defended this title for a long time and now I need to take some time off for myself,” Silva said.

 

Silva recently signed a 10-fight deal and there’s been a lot of talk about a “Super Fight” against Jon Jones or Georges St-Pierre. That’s not going to happen anytime soon with Silva’s loss, according to White.

 

“That fight cost Georges St-Pierre, Jon Jones and Anderson Silva a lot of money,” White said. “In those Super Fights, he was the link to both of them.”

 

White announced that Jones, the light heavyweight champ, will next face Alexander Gustafsson at UFC 165 on Sept. 21. Welterweight champ St-Pierre will fight Johny Hendricks at UFC 167 on Nov. 16.

 

Frankie Edgar, in his first non-title fight since 2009, eased to victory over fellow featherweight Charles Oliveira with a unanimous decision, 30-27, 29-28, 30-27, in the co-main. Edgar, the former lightweight champion, used his boxing skills to set the pace in a rare three-round fight for Edgar, who entered on a three-fight skid.

 

“I’ve been through the hell my last two fights and I’ve fought my way back,” Edgar said in his televised post-fight interview.

 

Mark Munoz was dominant in his first step inside the Octagon since a loss to Weidman last July. Injuries — and memories of the loss to Weidman — sent Munoz into depression and he ballooned past 260 pounds.

 

But Munoz weighed in at 185 pounds on Friday and, on Saturday, destroyed Tim Boetsch. Munoz put on a wrestling exhibition for much of the fight and also landed 132 total strikes (77 percent) to Boetsch’s 50 strikes (72 percent), according to FightMetric.com.

 

“I’m feeling so happy, I’m home back in the Octagon and I knew if I just kept working and kept pushing I’d get the win,” Munoz said. “I was hitting him with everything I had so I really appreciate just pushing through and getting the win.”

 

Munoz raised his hand at the news conference and volunteered to fight Weidman next.

 

“If Anderson doesn’t want to fight Chris, I would love to fight him,” Munoz said.

 

Featherweight Cub Swanson made his latest argument for a title shot in the third round against Dennis Siver.

 

Swanson dropped Siver with a massive combination. Swanson, with his foot atop Siver’s chest, continued to slug away before the fight was stopped — maybe a little too late — midway through the third. The win was Swanson’s fifth in a row, the fourth by knockout during that stretch.

 

“I tried to go after him right away but had to step back and compose myself to regain the energy I needed in order to finish the fight,” Swanson said. “I’m the No. 1 contender in the division, when I get that call for my next fight, I will be ready to go for the belt.”

 

The final fight on the main card featured Roger Gracie and Tim Kennedy, both fighters making their UFC debuts. The first two rounds were a grappling showcase, as you might expect when a fighter with the name “Gracie” is involved — the family known for pioneering Brazilian Jiu Jitsu.

 

The third round — with both fighters winded, especially Gracie — turned into a stand-up battle. In the end, Kennedy, a former Strikeforce fighter, earned a unanimous decision, 30-27, 30-27, 29-28.

 

The quickest fight of the night came on the undercard broadcast on FX as Gabriel Gonzaga needed all of 17 seconds to knock out Dave Herman in the heavyweight bout. Gonzaga walked through a low kick by Herman and delivered a crushing right hand to Herman’s chin. Herman crumpled and the fight was stopped after Gonzaga followed with a couple more punches.

 

“I was ready to stand up or go on the ground,” Gonzaga said. “I saw the opening and am very happy to have gotten the knockout so fast.”

 

In post-fight awards Edgar vs. Oliveira and Siver vs. Swanson were both named Fight of the Night, earning $50,000 for each fighter. Weidman got $50,000 for Knockout of the Night.

 

Undercard:

Andrew Craig def. Chris Leben (split decision)

Norman Parke def. Kazuki Tokudome (unanimous decision)

Gabriel Gonzaga def. Dave Herman (KO, round one)

Edson Barboza def. Rafaello Oliveira (TKO, round two)

Brian Melancon def. Seth Baczynski (KO, round one)

Mike Pierce def. David Mitchell (TKO, round two)

 






 

Post fight coverage, interview with Weidman and highlights

 

 



 

 


Post fight coverage, interview with Weidman and highlights part 2

 

 



 

 

 


Frankie Edgar vs. Charles Oliveira highlights

 

 


 

 

 


Cub Swanson vs. Dennis Siver highlights

 

 


 

 

 

 

Dana White on Anderson Silva's First UFC Loss, Lost Superfights and Roy Jones Jr.

 

 

 


 

 

 


Dana White: UFC 162 Post-Fight Press Conference

 

 

 

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Photos from L.A. Times and USA Today

 

 

 

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