A search vessel may have located the section of doomed AirAsia Flight 8501 that 
contains the black box voice and data recorders, authorities said Monday.

Tatan Syuflana, AP
National Search and Rescue Agency personnel carry the seats of AirAsia Flight 
8501 after being airlifted by a U.S. Navy helicopter that belongs to USS 
Sampson in Pangkalan Bun, Indonesia, Monday.
"We found what has a high probability of being the tail of the plane," Yayan 
Sofyan, commander of Indonesian Navy ship KRI Bung Tomo, said at a news 
conference. He said the tail should contain the black boxes — the flight data 
and voice recorders. His vessel was able to recover other debris that was 
handed over to authorities, he said.
Indonesian authorities did not immediately confirm the discovery. "I am not 
saying it's the tail yet," said Bambang Soelistyo, head of the National Search 
and Rescue Agency. "That is suspected. Now we are trying to confirm it."
Rainy, foggy weather has hamstrung search efforts for the wreckage of the 
Airbus A320-200, which plunged into the murky waters of the Java Sea on Dec. 28 
with 162 people on board.
So far 37 bodies have been recovered. Sonar has detected what appears to be 
several large pieces of the plane in the water. None had been found by divers, 
whose efforts have been constantly delayed by the weather.

USA TODAY
Answering what caused AirAsia crash is rigorous process

Also Monday, Indonesia announced sanctions against airport officials who 
allowed AirAsia Flight 8501 to take off without proper permits from Surabaya, 
Indonesia, bound for Singapore.
The Transportation Ministry said it suspended the operator of the Surabaya 
airport as well as several control tower officials. In addition, the licenses 
and schedules of all airlines flying into Indonesia will be scrutinized.
The plane was traveling on a Sunday. Officials have since said its permit for 
the popular route was only for Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, and that 
AirAsia quietly switched three of those days. Officials in Singapore, however, 
have said the plane was authorized to fly on Sundays from its end.
The Transportation Ministry also has imposed mandatory briefings between pilots 
and flight operation officers prior to departures, the ministry's acting 
director general for air transportation, Djoko Murjatmodjo, told The Jakarta 
Post. Authorities said such meetings would keep pilots informed of possible 
emergencies that could emerge on specific routes.
All AirAsia flights between Surabaya and Singapore have been suspended while 
the airline is investigated.

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Contributing: The Associated Press

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