A missed email and a sick relative prevented two Indonesian families – of five and 10 members respectively – from catching the AirAsia QZ8501 flight. They had cursed their misfortune, before the news came of the plane having disappeared from radars.
LIVE UPDATES on the missing AirAsia plane
Chandra Susanto, who had been planning a holiday in Singapore
with his wife and three children since March, had to cancel it a
day before the due date, because his father got ill.
“It was a difficult decision to make because my son
Christopher was so disappointed,” Susanto told the Daily
Mail Australia. “He had been looking forward to the holiday
for a long time.”
Susanto has now posted a picture of his QZ8501 ticket on
Facebook, praising Christ for the miraculous escape.
“Thank you, Lord Jesus. Your plan is so beautiful, our family
safe from harm,” he wrote.
Susanto, his wife Inge, and their children - Christopher,10,
Nadine, 7, and Felix, 5 – are among the 23 ‘no-shows’ for the
AirAsia plane, which was on its way from the Indonesian city of
Surabaya to Singapore, when it lost contact with air traffic
control early on Sunday morning.
READ MORE: Search for missing AirAsia flight
resumes as 24 hours pass
“Our lives have changed,” Susanto said. “We are so
grateful. We have an opportunity to be the best people we can and
to help others.”
And it was a really narrow escape for the family of 10 of Ari
Putro Cahyonom and his wife Christianawati, who apparently missed
an email informing them the flight had been rescheduled for an
earlier departure.
Five adults and five children, including a seven-month-old and an
11-month-old, almost made it to the plane and could still see a
group of passengers boarding. However, when they ran up to the
gate, it was closed.
The upset family, unwilling to give up on a holiday in Singapore,
was trying to negotiate a later flight when an airport official
brought them the news of the flight they missed.
"This must have been the best Christmas gift your family ever
received," Christianawati recalled the official’s words in
an interview to Fairfax Media. "The flight you were supposed
to be on has crashed."
The fate of the missing plane actually remains unknown. The
search operation still goes on. The head of Indonesia's search
and rescue agency has, however, told journalists the plane is
likely at the bottom of the sea.
"It was a miracle that happened to my family, and I believe
God will provide the same miracle to all the families who are
waiting for their loved ones," Cahyonom now says.
There were 162 people, mostly Indonesians, on board the missing
QZ8501 flight - 155 passengers and seven crewmembers.
Their relatives are still waiting at Changi Airport in Singapore
and Juanda Airport in Surabaya for news of the lost plane.
The search operation led by Indonesia and joined by Australia,
Malaysia and Singapore, was halted for the night on Sunday and
has resumed Monday morning.