Australian plane owner charged over ‘black flight’ to Indonesia
The Straits Times
The plane owner was charged with people smuggling after allegedly helping 2 fugitives flee to Indonesia. Read more at straitstimes.com.
SYDNEY – An Australian aircraft owner appeared in court on March 12 charged with people smuggling after allegedly helping two fugitives flee to Indonesia on a “black flight” from a remote peninsula, the police said.
Indonesian officials detained four men in the Merauke district of Indonesia’s easternmost region of Papua upon arrival in November, after the small fixed-wing aircraft’s two pilots failed to declare their two passengers in documents.
An investigation found one man was on bail for alleged kidnapping offences in Sydney, and the other was wanted for alleged drug trafficking, the Australian Federal Police said.
The pair travelled thousands of kilometres from Sydney to Australia’s north-eastern tip, boarding the plane at a remote indigenous fishing town on the Cape York peninsula in Queensland.
The plane flew with its transponder turned off until it reached international waters, police said.
A “black flight” typically sees planes log false flight plans, fly at low altitude or turn off their transponders in a bid to evade detection by authorities.

VATICAN CITY, March 16 - Pope Leo met on Monday with an investigative journalist who alleges that a prominent Catholic organisation with ties to right-wing politicians in the U.S. and other countries covered up sexual and financial crimes, which the group firmly denies. Read more at straitstimes.com.












