(3 Jan 2007) SHOTLIST
South Sulawesi
1. Various aerials of plane search for Boeing 737 wreckage
2. Various of rescuers inside plane looking out for crash site
3. More aerials
Polewali, West Sulawesi
4. Wide of ambulance
5. Wide of rescue team unloading body bags
6. Wide of Indonesia police rescue team
7. Indonesia rescue workers talking to each other
8. Wide of Indonesian rescue team walking in forest to search for the plane
Makassar, southern Sulawesi
9. Exterior shot of victim identification centre
10. Couple sitting outside
11. Exterior of entrance to centre
12. Officers at desk inside centre
13. Officers at desk
14. Close-up of Disaster Victim Identification documents
15. Officers working by desk
16. Officers working on laptop computer
17. Pan interior of office
STORYLINE
Search and rescue teams in Indonesia looking for a jetliner that disappeared with 102 people onboard expanded their search on Wednesday to the sea off the island of Sulawesi, one day after senior Indonesian officials erroneously said a dozen survivors had been found along with the Boeing 737's charred wreckage.
Visibility was good but there was no sign of Flight KI-574, according to an Air Force Squadron Commander, whose team followed the ill-fated plane's scheduled flight path to the site where Singapore's Elba satellite recorded its last distress signal.
Soon after sunrise on Wednesday, three navy ships and five air force craft were deployed over a large section of south and western Sulawesi and nearby waters, Bambang Karnoyudho, the head of the National Search and Rescue Agency, told The Associated Press.
Karnoyudo said that based on radar and satellite readings he thought it most likely that the plane had fallen into the sea, but rescuers were also looking on the land.
Local police said forces were searching a roughly 300-square kilometre (mile) triangle of sea and land, stretching from Tanah Toraja in the east to coastal waters off Majane and Mamuju in the west.
Meanwhile, relatives were still waiting anxiously for news about the Adam Air plane, which lost contact on Monday after sending two distress signals during a flight from Indonesia's main island of Java to Sulawesi.
Many gathered in the southern Sulawesi city of Makassar, believed to be the closest place to where the plane went down, and a special information centre was set up to provide relatives of passengers with information.
Rescue teams spent more than 10 hours on Tuesday hiking along slippery forest paths in a mountainous region of Sulawesi's western coast but found nothing, prompting authorities to expand their search on Wednesday to include the sea.
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