Flight The Trigana Air flight took off from
Sentani Airport in
Jayapura at 14:22
WIT (UTC+9, 05:22
UTC) and was expected to land in Oksibil at about 15:04. Contact was lost with the aircraft at about 14:55. No distress call was made by the crew. At the time of the accident, the aircraft was on the final section of its scheduled route.
Weather conditions Conflicting statements regarding the weather conditions were released. Stormy weather was initially cited as a possible cause of the crash; however, it was later confirmed that the weather was good. Minister of Transportation Ignasius Jonan stated that bad weather was not the cause of the crash. Data from the local
Indonesian Agency for Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics office showed that the weather at the time of the crash was sunny. The crew of another aircraft landing prior to the crash also reported conditions at the time as "good". The Ministry of Transportation acknowledged that Indonesia's air navigation system equipment was very old, dating back to the 1950s, especially in remote areas such as Papua. Most airports in Papua did not have modern navigation aids at the time. Without this equipment, the airports and flight crew must rely on
visual flight rules.
Search At 15:30, Indonesia's
National Search and Rescue Agency (BASARNAS) deployed a search aircraft to find the missing ATR 42. The search was suspended due to foggy weather and was resumed, with several additional search aircraft augmented by a search team on foot, on 17 August. Local residents contacted police and reported that they saw the aircraft crash into the Tangok Mountain in the Okbape district of
Pegunungan Bintang Regency. The terrain itself had never been previously explored by humans, according to BASARNAS officials.
Recovery BASARNAS sent 250 personnel to Oksibil in response to the crash. Due to the thin air at this high altitude rescuers were unable to use air transport to recover victims or wreckage, necessitating an overland recovery. The terrain itself was described as "very steep" and it took around three days to reach the wreckage on foot, or six hours by vehicle. Indonesian National Police sent three Disaster Victim Identification (DVI) teams into the area to identify the victims of the crash. The bodies were transported to a
military hospital in Jayapura. However, bad weather and low visibility hampered the search and rescue effort. Weather systems around the wreckage were "unpredictable", according to BASARNAS. The identification of the victims used
DNA, tooth samples and forensic DNA analysis from surviving family members. The families sent post-mortem and ante-mortem data to the police. By 18 August 2015, all of the dead had been found, but bad weather prevented the recovery of victims' bodies. Some victims' bodies were intact and exhibited burn injuries, others were mutilated and difficult to identify. Photos taken from the crash site reveal that the aircraft had been heavily fragmented into smaller pieces by the force of the impact with no chance of survival. By nightfall on 19 August, 17 bodies had been carried out from the crash site. The
flight data recorder was eventually found on 20 August and shown to the media. ==Investigation==