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Navy ends AirAsia jet recovery efforts with 92 bodies still missing

The Indonesian military has called off efforts to recover the wreckage of an AirAsia plane that crashed into the Java Sea last month, after failing to find any more bodies inside the fuselage.

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Indonesian rescue personnel unload a coffin bearing a body recovered from the underwater wreckage of the ill-fated AirAsia flight QZ8501. Photo: AFP

The Indonesian military has called off efforts to recover the wreckage of an AirAsia plane that crashed into the Java Sea last month, after failing to find any more bodies inside the fuselage.

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Flight QZ8501 went down on December 28 in stormy weather with 162 people on board, during what was supposed to be a short trip from the Indonesian city of Surabaya to Singapore.

Search and rescue teams failed repeatedly in recent days to lift the main body of the Airbus A320-200, where officials had hoped to find the majority of the victims.

The navy, which has provided much of the personnel and equipment for the rescue effort, said yesterday it was withdrawing as the badly damaged fuselage was too difficult to lift and no more bodies had been located.

"All of our forces are being pulled out," said Rear Admiral Widodo, a navy official overseeing the search and rescue operation. "We apologise to the families of the victims."

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So far just 70 bodies have been recovered, and the national search and rescue agency said it would try to find more victims in smaller-scale operations.

"We will continue to try fulfil the hopes of the victims' relatives, but the operation will not be a large-scale one," the agency's head Bambang Soelistyo said.

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