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Object spotted in sea not from the missing AirAsia plane: Indonesian vice president

Search to resume today for Flight QZ8501,which went missing during lightning storm

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Bracing for the worst, a relative of a QZ 8501 passenger weeps at the Surabaya airport as the second day of search operations for the missing jet yields little answers. Photo: Reuters
An object spotted during a sea search for an AirAsia plane was not from the missing AirAsia jet, Indonesia’s vice president said on Monday evening, after reports that an Australian surveillance aircraft had found something.
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“It has been checked and no sufficient evidence was found to confirm what was reported,” Jusuf Kalla told a press conference at Surabaya airport from where the ill-fated plane departed.

Kalla said there were 15 ships and 30 aircraft searching the area. 

“It is not an easy operation in the sea, especially in bad weather like this,” he said.

Indonesian Air Force spokesman Hadi Tjahjanto said the search was now focused on a patch of oil spotted off Belitung island in the Java Sea.

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An Indonesian official said earlier on Monday that objects had been spotted in the sea by an Australian search plane hunting for the plane, which vanished with 162 people on board.

Jakarta’s Air Force base commander Rear Marshal Dwi Putranto said he was informed that an Australian Orion aircraft had detected suspicious objects near Nangka island, about 100 miles southwest of Pangkalan Bun, near central Kalimantan, or 700 miles from where the plane lost contact.

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