In a statement the Ministry of Defense said, "Raksha Mantri (Defense Minister) directed that if need arises more resources be diverted for the Search and Rescue operations. He was apprised of the difficult condition under which the operations are being undertaken in the last 24 hours. The state of the sea is 3 to 4 and is very choppy with thick monsoon clouds in the area making the search effort quite challenging. Raksha Mantri has directed that the operations be continued unhindered till further orders."
#SAROps Latest on SAR operations being undertaken by IN, IAF & ICG @SpokespersonMoD pic.twitter.com/HihMggSaCC
— SpokespersonNavy (@indiannavy) 23 июля 2016 г.
India Air Force has deployed two C-130 aircraft equipped with electro-optical and infrared sensors. An Indian Navy P8I aircraft equipped with a synthetic aperture radar along with Dornier aircraft are also taking part in this operation. The Indian Navy has deployed 13 ships and is being assisted by six ships of the Indian Coast Guard and merchant vessels in the area, as well as one submarine.
Wing Commander Anupam Banerjee, Press Relation Officer for the Indian Air Force said that the biggest challenge is bad weather and low visibility. Sources say that depth of the sea in search area is around 3000 meters. The speed of the wind in search area is 18-20 knots while visibility is 3-4 nautical miles.
"The black-box has a pinging device that creates vibration. All the ships deployed there have magnetic anomaly detectors that will detect vibrations from the pinging device. All the ships and aircrafts on search mission are trying to detect this signal. But it is not going to be easy as the signal strength reduces with depth. We have also deployed a submarine that has sonar. They also have receivers to detect signals. But it is a difficult mission," he added.
RM @manoharparrikar during aerial survey of SAR Ops for AN 32. pic.twitter.com/NyzSsldIDV
— DPR (@SpokespersonMoD) 23 июля 2016 г.
The An-32 jet belonged to the 33rd Indian Air Force Squadron and went missing in the morning of July 22 during a scheduled courier sortie from Tambaram (Chennai) to Port Blair. The aircraft departed from Tambaram at 0830 (Indian Standard Time) with 6 crew members and 23 passengers.
The aircraft was scheduled to arrive at Port Blair at 1145. The aircraft did not make any contact with air traffic controller of Port Blair and an overdue action was initiated. The last radar contact marked by Chennai air traffic radar was 151 nautical miles east of Chennai at n altitude of 23000 ft.