Lion Air promises to handle the funeral expenses of fatalities in Calamba plane crash
By Andrea Aro
The owner of the medical evacuation (medevac) plane that crashed in Calamba, Laguna Sunday vowed to pay for the funeral expenses and hospitalization of the victims of the accident.
Nine bodies are recovered by search and rescue personnel from the crash site of a private plane, with tail number RP-C2296, at a private resort in Calamba, Laguna Sunday.
(ALI VICOY / MANILA BULLETIN FILE PHOTO) “So far right now, we're managing all of the funeral expenses. The rest of the expenses...corporate will have more answers in the morning,” according to Atty. Lester Ople, lawyer of Lion Air. Lion Air currently focuses on getting the remains of their crew and passengers who perished in the crash to their loved ones and for those who need medical attention get the proper treatment, Ople added. Ople said, “for now, ang focus namin are two things. Number one, get our crew and passengers with their loved ones. Number two, those requiring medical attention as a result of this particular accident to have adequate medical attention. So 'yun ang focus namin right now." He stressed that their company is willing to work with the authorities in the investigation. “We are ready to work with authorities to have this investigated,” Ople said. In a report, authorities identified two caretakers of a private resort who suffered with burns as John Ray Roca, 19, and his mother Malou Roca, 49. According to Calamba City Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Office, the two are now admitted at the Calamba Doctors' Hospital. Office of Civil Defense (OCD) Region 4A have identified the nine fatalities in the incident, the plane’s pilot Captain Jesus Hernandez; his co-pilot First Officer Lino Cruz Jr.; Dr. Garret Garcia; nurses Kirk Eoin Badiola and Yamato Togawa; the patient Tom Carr, and his wife, Erma; Raymond Bulacja, flight mechanic; and one Ryx Gil Laput. OCD-4A said the last of the bodies were retrieved by authorities at 8:16 p.m. Sunday. The plane was transporting the patient, Tom Carr, from Dipolog City, Zamboanga del Norte to Metro Manila for treatment, according to the police report. Read more: Nine fatalities in plane crash identified
Nine bodies are recovered by search and rescue personnel from the crash site of a private plane, with tail number RP-C2296, at a private resort in Calamba, Laguna Sunday.(ALI VICOY / MANILA BULLETIN FILE PHOTO) “So far right now, we're managing all of the funeral expenses. The rest of the expenses...corporate will have more answers in the morning,” according to Atty. Lester Ople, lawyer of Lion Air. Lion Air currently focuses on getting the remains of their crew and passengers who perished in the crash to their loved ones and for those who need medical attention get the proper treatment, Ople added. Ople said, “for now, ang focus namin are two things. Number one, get our crew and passengers with their loved ones. Number two, those requiring medical attention as a result of this particular accident to have adequate medical attention. So 'yun ang focus namin right now." He stressed that their company is willing to work with the authorities in the investigation. “We are ready to work with authorities to have this investigated,” Ople said. In a report, authorities identified two caretakers of a private resort who suffered with burns as John Ray Roca, 19, and his mother Malou Roca, 49. According to Calamba City Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Office, the two are now admitted at the Calamba Doctors' Hospital. Office of Civil Defense (OCD) Region 4A have identified the nine fatalities in the incident, the plane’s pilot Captain Jesus Hernandez; his co-pilot First Officer Lino Cruz Jr.; Dr. Garret Garcia; nurses Kirk Eoin Badiola and Yamato Togawa; the patient Tom Carr, and his wife, Erma; Raymond Bulacja, flight mechanic; and one Ryx Gil Laput. OCD-4A said the last of the bodies were retrieved by authorities at 8:16 p.m. Sunday. The plane was transporting the patient, Tom Carr, from Dipolog City, Zamboanga del Norte to Metro Manila for treatment, according to the police report. Read more: Nine fatalities in plane crash identified