Khairunisa, known to her friends as Nisa, was identified because her name tag was reportedly still attached to her uniform.
FMT
KUALA LUMPUR: The body of a former law student, Khairunisa Haidar Fauzi, who was following her dreams of becoming a stewardess after joining AirAsia last year, was among seven bodies identified so far, said the Daily Mail Australia in a Mail Online report which quotes from other sources as well. She was a trainee flight attendant on board doomed AirAsia flight QZ8501.
She left a touching love letter from the sky for her boyfriend in one of her last Instagram posts.
“I love you from 38,000 ft,” 22-year-old Khairunisa wrote on a napkin to her partner Divo just two weeks ago.
Along with photos of her travels, family and friends, Khairunisa often shared messages to her boyfriend including his and her name written in sand on Instagram.
Khairunisa’s brother, M. Ikhsan Nul Kamil, told Indonesian news portal Detik.com: “If they are saying they have found the body of one of the air stewardess, then we hope it is our little sister.”
He described her as a cheerful person and said: “She was a good girl, always liked to help others. I always asked for her help when I needed it. But she was also ‘manja’ (spoiled) because she phoned home four times a day.”
Khairunisa, known to her friends as Nisa, was identified because her name tag was reportedly still attached to her uniform.
Authorities have confirmed the bodies of four males and three females – including a flight attendant – have been discovered in the search.
Nisa was tentatively identified as one of the seven bodies so far retrieved from the Java Sea after the aircraft crashed on Sunday, 42 minutes after taking off from Surabaya in Indonesia with 162 people on board.
Her father, Haidar Fauzi, told the Sydney Morning Herald that he heard his daughter had been found but it has not been officially confirmed.
“We only borrowed our daughter from God and now he has taken her back,” Haidar told the SMH.
Her family has been waiting at Juanda Airport near Surabaya in East Java province, where a crisis centre has been providing information to anxious relatives since the plane vanished from radars after departing the airport for Singapore.
“This is what we expected, and the sooner the body is returned, the sooner we can have her back,” said Haidar.
Her father said she would have put the lives of her passengers before her own.
FMT
KUALA LUMPUR: The body of a former law student, Khairunisa Haidar Fauzi, who was following her dreams of becoming a stewardess after joining AirAsia last year, was among seven bodies identified so far, said the Daily Mail Australia in a Mail Online report which quotes from other sources as well. She was a trainee flight attendant on board doomed AirAsia flight QZ8501.
She left a touching love letter from the sky for her boyfriend in one of her last Instagram posts.
“I love you from 38,000 ft,” 22-year-old Khairunisa wrote on a napkin to her partner Divo just two weeks ago.
Along with photos of her travels, family and friends, Khairunisa often shared messages to her boyfriend including his and her name written in sand on Instagram.
Khairunisa’s brother, M. Ikhsan Nul Kamil, told Indonesian news portal Detik.com: “If they are saying they have found the body of one of the air stewardess, then we hope it is our little sister.”
He described her as a cheerful person and said: “She was a good girl, always liked to help others. I always asked for her help when I needed it. But she was also ‘manja’ (spoiled) because she phoned home four times a day.”
Khairunisa, known to her friends as Nisa, was identified because her name tag was reportedly still attached to her uniform.
Authorities have confirmed the bodies of four males and three females – including a flight attendant – have been discovered in the search.
Nisa was tentatively identified as one of the seven bodies so far retrieved from the Java Sea after the aircraft crashed on Sunday, 42 minutes after taking off from Surabaya in Indonesia with 162 people on board.
Her father, Haidar Fauzi, told the Sydney Morning Herald that he heard his daughter had been found but it has not been officially confirmed.
“We only borrowed our daughter from God and now he has taken her back,” Haidar told the SMH.
Her family has been waiting at Juanda Airport near Surabaya in East Java province, where a crisis centre has been providing information to anxious relatives since the plane vanished from radars after departing the airport for Singapore.
“This is what we expected, and the sooner the body is returned, the sooner we can have her back,” said Haidar.
Her father said she would have put the lives of her passengers before her own.
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