
The first pictures have emerged of passengers on board a doomed jet that crashed into the sea off Indonesia 'killing all 189 on board'.

Lion Air's flight JT-610 was heading to Pangkal Pinang, an island north of the capital, Jakarta, when it lost contact with air control about 6.33am local time - just 13 minutes after take-off.

Shortly before the disaster, the plane's pilot, Indian national Bhavye Suneja, had reported 'technical difficulties' and, minutes after take-off, asked to return to the airport, an official said. Traffic control allowed the return, but the aircraft then vanished from radar and plunged 5,000ft into the sea.

The flight, which crashed shortly after take-off, had suffered instrument problems the day before, according to a technical log obtained by the BBC.

The technical log from the plane's previous flight from Bali to Jakarta suggests the Indonesian flight had an 'unreliable' airspeed reading and the captain and first officer had conflicting altitude readings the day before the crash.

This morning Lion Air's president said the Boeing 737 MAX 8, which went into service just months ago, had gone in for repairs ahead of its final flight.

'It got repaired in Denpasar (in Bali) and then it was flown to Jakarta,' Edward Sirait told AFP. 'Engineers in Jakarta received notes and did another repair before it took off' on Monday. That's the normal procedure for any plane.'

Websites that display flight data showed the plane speeding up as it suddenly lost altitude in the minutes before it disappeared.

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A relative of passengers prays as she and others wait for news on a Lion Air plane that crashed off Java Island at Depati Amir Airport in Pangkal Pinang

A woman named as Lutfiani showed a picture of her husband, Deryl Fida Febrianto (left), who she said was on board. A crying mother showed a graduation picture of her son, Agil Nugroho Septian (centre, in the right-hand picture), who was also a passenger

The domestic flight lost contact with air traffic control at about 6.33am local time (10.33am AEDT, 11.33pm BST)

The Lion Air aircraft crashed about 13 minutes after taking off for Indonesia. It is not clear how many people were on board (pictured is the plane)

Rescue workers are at the site where it is believed the Lion Air flight JT610 crashed just minutes after taking off. Divers (pictured) are trying to locate the wreckage

Debris could be seen on the water north of Indonesia's capital, Jakarta, as rescue ships arrived at the scene in the wake of the disaster

Rescuers have started the grim task of recovering victims from the scene with body bags seen lined up at Tanjung Priok Harbour

Members of an Indonesian rescue team carry a body bag at Tanjung Priok Harbour, Indonesia, in the wake of the disaster

Photos show debris, including what appeared to be an emergency slide, and personal belongings picked up from the water's surface by ships that reached the crash area in the Java Sea. Separate images show heart-broken relatives waiting for news at Jakarta's Soekarno Hatta International airport and at the terminal in Pangkal Pinang.

One of the passengers was 22-year-old Deryl Fida Febrianto, who was married just two weeks ago and was on his way to Pangkal Pinang to work on a cruise ship.

His wife, Lutfinani Eka Putri, 23, said that her husband messaged her from the aircraft at 6.12am, sending her a photo from the plane, and at 6.15am he stopped replying to her messages. They had grown up together, she told reporters, showing a picture of the smiling couple on their wedding day.

'When I saw the news, I matched the flight number with the ticket photo Deryl had sent,' she said. 'I immediately started crying.'

Rescuers said today that all 189 passenger and crew were 'likely' and that human remains had been found.

'My prediction is that nobody survived because the victims that we found, their bodies were no longer intact and it's been hours so it is likely 189 people have died,' agency operational director Bambang Suryo Aji told reporters.

Pilot Suneja, originally from New Delhi, had worked for Lion Air since March 2011 and had logged 11,000 flying hours.

Passenger missed doomed Lion Air flight because of traffic A plane passenger is lucky to be alive after traffic jams made him late for a flight that crashed in to the sea off Indonesia. Sony Setiawan was due to be among the 189 people on board Lion Air flight JT 610 when it took off early from the capital Jakarta on Monday morning. But he was held up on his commute to Soekarno-Hatta International Airport and never boarded the Boeing-737. Minutes after take-off, the plane disappeared from radar before plunging 5,000ft in to the Java Sea. Officials do not expect to find any survivors. Plane passenger Sony Setiawan is lucky to be alive after traffic jams made him late for the flight Advertisement

After receiving friends and relatives who rushed to their New Delhi home upon hearing news of the crash, the parents of the pilot Suneja set off for the Indonesian capital.

'Please pray for us,' Suneja's sobbing mother said as she got into a car. A family friend, Anil Gupta, said Suneja's father was stunned and couldn't talk, and his sister and mother had not come out of their rooms.

The accident is the first to be reported involving the widely sold Boeing 737 MAX, an updated, more fuel-efficient version of the manufacturer's workhorse single-aisle jet.

Pictures and video shared online by the head of Indonesia's disaster relief agency show debris and oil floating on the water following the crash, of which there are, so far, no known survivors.

'It's correct that an RTB (return to base) was requested and had been approved but we're still trying to figure out the reason,' Soerjanto Tjahjono, head of Indonesia's transport safety committee, told reporters, referring to the pilot's request.

'We hope the black box is not far from the main wreckage so it can be found soon,' he said, referring to the cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder.

Pope Francis conveyed his condolences to those affected today with The Vatican secretary of state, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, saying in a telegram to that the pontiff 'offers the assurance of his prayers for all who have died and for those who mourn their loss'.

Relatives were pictured crying at the Pangpal Pinang airport as they awaited news on their loved ones and family members were also pictured arriving at the agency's headquarters in Jakarta.

Human remains were placed in body bags after being recovered from the scene of the crash off Indonesia

An Indonesian policeman at Tanjung Priok port in Jakarta holds wreckage recovered from the ill-fated Lion Air flight JT610

The Lion Air flight crashed into the sea having reached an altitude of 5,000ft shortly after take off

A wallet belonging to a victim of the Lion Air passenger jet that crashed is seen in the waters of Ujung Karawang, West Java

The plane that crashed into the sea off Indonesia on Monday had a technical problem on its last flight that was resolved, Lion Air's president has said

Indonesian relatives take a picture of a passenger list of the plane crash victims as they wait for the news at the Lion Air Branch office at Soekarno Hatta Airport

Feni, who uses a single name, said her soon-to-be-married sister was on the flight, planning to meet relatives in Pangkal Pinang, a jumping off point for beach-and-sun seeking tourists on nearby Belitung island.

'We are here to find any information about my younger sister, her fiance, her in-law to be and a friend of them,' said Feni.

'We don't have any information,' she said, as her father wiped tears from reddened eyes. 'No one provided us with any information that we need. 'We're confused. We hope our family is still alive,' she said.

On board were 178 adults, one child, two babies, two pilots and five flight attendants. There were also 20 staff from the Indonesian Ministry for Finance on board, and 23 government officials in total according to Reuters. AN Italian national was also among those on board.

Sony Setiawan has revealed he is lucky to be alive after traffic jams made him late for a flight that crashed in to the sea off Indonesia.He was due to be among the 189 people on board Lion Air flight JT 610 when it took off early from the capital Jakarta on Monday morning.

But he was held up on his commute to Soekarno-Hatta International Airport and never boarded the Boeing-737.

The head of search and rescue agency Basarnas told reporters body parts had been seen floating in the ocean near the crash site.

'We don't know yet whether there are any survivors,' Syaugi told a news conference. 'We hope, we pray, but we cannot confirm.'

Lion Air's flight JT-610 was heading to Pangkal Pinang, an island north of Indonesia's capital. Rescuers are seen bringing plane debris onto a boat

The fate of the passengers are unknown, but relatives were seen crying as they awaited news on their loved ones

Pictured: A passenger's bag retrieved from the water after flight JT-610 slammed into the water. The condition of the phone indicates the plane crashed with great force

Members of a rescue team are seen carrying what appears to be a body bag during the desperate search for survivors

Pictured: Bhavye Suneja was one of two pilots sitting in the cockpit when the flight hit the water, Indonesian news outlets have reported

Indonesia's deadliest air crashes: How Lion Air disaster was the latest to rock Indonesia The crash of a brand new Lion Air Boeing-737 MAX into the sea on Monday, just minutes after taking off from Jakarta, is the latest in a series of air accidents to rock the archipelago. Indonesian relies heavily on air transport to connect its thousands of islands but has suffered a string of deadly plane crashes in recent years. The aviation sector is expanding fast as the economy booms but there are concerns airlines are struggling to find enough well-trained personnel to keep up with the rapid growth. Once banned from European airspace over safety fears, the EU removed all Indonesian airlines from its safety blacklist in 2018 following improvements. Here are the worst aviation disasters in the nation's history: Northern Sumatra - The worst disaster in Indonesia's aviation history left 234 dead in 1997. An Airbus A-300B4 operated by national carrier Garuda Indonesia crashed in a smog-shrouded ravine in North Sumatra, just short of Medan's airport. Java Sea - In 2014, an AirAsia plane plunged into the Java Sea during stormy weather, killing 162 people. The Malaysian airline was flying from the Indonesian city of Surabaya to Singapore. The worst disaster in Indonesia's aviation history left 234 dead in 1997. An Airbus A-300B4 operated by national carrier Garuda Indonesia crashed in a smog-shrouded ravine in North Sumatra, just short of Medan's airport Medan disaster - A Mandala Airlines domestic flight crashed shortly after take-off in 2005 into a densely populated suburb in Medan, a city of two million on the island of Sumatra, killing at least 150 including passengers, crew and people on the ground. Military families - In June 2015 an Indonesian military plane crashed shortly after takeoff, also coming down in a residential area in Medan, killing around 122 people on board, many of them servicemen and women and their families. Around 20 people were also killed on the ground and several housing blocks torn apart. The Armed Forces has been beleaguered by a string of fatal accidents in recent years. Air Force fire - In 1991, an Air Force plane crashed in East Jakarta minutes after take off when an engine caught fire, killing 135 people according to reports. Those who died included 121 airmen, 12 crew and two people on the ground. One passenger survived. River crash - In 1997, a Silk Air flight crashed into a river near the Indonesian city of Palembang while on its way to Singapore from Jakarta. All 104 passengers and crew were killed in what was investigated as a possible pilot murder-suicide. New Year's Day crash - An Adam Air plane plunged into the sea off Sulawesi island on New Year's Day 2007, killing all 102 people on board. The airline was later banned from flying. Indonesian authorities said the pilots lost control after becoming preoccupied with malfunctioning navigational equipment. Advertisement

He later said body parts had been seen floating near Tanjung Karawang, where the plane is believed to have gone down, about 34 nautical miles north-west of Jakarta, but it was too soon to say how many had died.

About 150 people have joined the rescue mission, including 30 divers, as authorities search desperately for survivors.

The air tracking service FlightRadar 24 tracked the plane, showing it looping south on take-off and then heading north before the flight path ended abruptly over the Java Sea, not far from the coast.

A tug boat leaving Jakarta's port saw the plane falling into the water, which is reported to be about 30-35m deep.

The jet was a Boeing 737 MAX 8 which can carry as many as 210 passengers.

In a statement Boeing said it was 'deeply saddened by the loss of Flight JT 610' and expressed sympathy for the loved ones of those on board.

A statement issued by Indonesia's search and rescue agency said the plane's Emergency Local Transmitter beacon did not emit a distress signal as it fell from the sky - despite it being tested and declared fully functional until August 2019.

'It has been confirmed that it has crashed,' Yusuf Latif, a spokesman for the agency, said by text message, when asked about the fate of the Lion Air plane.

A myriad of debris was located in the ocean nearby the crash site, both from the plane and its passengers

No survivors have been found, and seats from the plane were found empty, floating in the ocean, striking fear into the hearts of those with loved ones on board

Relatives were seen comforting each other as they all waited as a group at Depati Amir Airport in Pangkal Pinang, Indonesia waiting for news

'We cannot give any comment at this moment, said Edward Sirait, chief executive of Lion Air Group. 'We are trying to collect all the information and data'

Indonesian relatives of the plane crash victims cry as they wait for the news at the Sukarno Hatta Airport in Jakarta

Rescuers have started to assemble debris and belongings found at the crash site as the search for the plane continues today

Data from the Flight Radar website showed the plane took off before it stopped transmitting north east of Jakarta

A plane carrying 189 people crashed into the sea north of Indonesia's capital Jakarta shortly after take-off. Rescuers are seen picking up debris

LionAir's CEO Edward Sirait said a technical problem had been raised about the plane before it took off, but added the plane was cleared by engineers before take-off on Monday morning.

He said the airline owned 11 of the 737 Max 8 models and that none had had any issues up until Monday.

He told reporters: 'This plane previously flew from Denpasar to Cengkareng (Jakarta). There was a report of a technical issue which had been resolved according to procedure.'

Preliminary flight tracking data from Flightradar24 shows the aircraft climbed to around 5,000 feet (1,524 m) before losing, and then regaining, height, before finally falling towards the sea.

It was last recorded at 3,650 feet (1,113 m) and its speed had risen to 345 knots, according to raw data captured by the respected tracking website, which could not immediately be confirmed.

Rescuers pulled the belongings of passengers out of the sea, but it is not yet known if anyone survived the crash

Pictured: Wreckage from the plane and miscellaneous items belonging to its passengers

Its last recorded position was about 9 miles north of the Indonesian coastline, according to a Google Maps reference of the last coordinates reported by Flightradar24. It lost contact with air control at about 6.33am local time (10.33am AEDT, 11.33pm BST).

The accident is the first to be reported that involves the widely-sold Boeing 737 MAX, an updated, more fuel-efficient version of the manufacturer's workhorse single-aisle jet. The first Boeing 737 MAX jets were introduced into service in 2017.

Lion Air's Malaysian subsidiary, Malindo Air, received the very first global delivery.

Dr Soerjanto Tjahjono, who heads up Indonesia's national transportation safety committee, told reporters the doomed plane had only clocked about 800 flight hours since beginning service in August.

Meanwhile, Australia's foreign affairs ministry says Australian government officials and contractors 'have been instructed not to fly on Lion Air or their subsidiary airlines' following the crash. The statement posted on the ministry's website said the decision will be reviewed when the findings of the crash investigation are clear.

Lion Air is one of Indonesia's youngest and biggest airlines, flying to dozens of domestic and international destinations.

In 2013, one of its Boeing 737-800 jets missed the runway while landing on the resort island of Bali, crashing into the sea without causing any fatalities among the 108 people on board.

Indonesia has a horror track record on air safety and only recently the European Union removed all Indonesia airlines from its aviation safety blacklist.

Three major Indonesia airlines, including Lion, were upgraded to the top safety tier in June after passing a key international audit.

There have been more than 40 air accidents resulting in deaths in Indonesia since 2001.

A rapid expansion of air travel in recent years has seen an explosion of low-cost airlines operating in the country.