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The Engineers also advised they have software to download and unscramble the parameters from the FDR. The CVR is a completely different ball game. Again you need the software to download, however there are legal boundaries to privacy regarding this. Apparently a regulating body within Indonesia in conjunction with Airbus would analyse the recording.
Yes, it looks as though the National Transportation Safety Committee (of Indonesia) is the primary investigative body.
Madjono Siswosuwarno, the main investigator at the National Transportation Safety Committee, told Reuters ...... "The download is easy, probably one day. But the reading is more difficult ... could take two weeks to one month," Siswosuwarno said.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/01/12/indonesia-airplane-idUSL3N0UR1BV20150112
I don't know how capable they are of reading the data. From 2009 to 2011 Australia helped them with the data from several Indonesian aircraft crashes, at their request. It seems they will need someone to help them, unless they have greatly upskilled themselves since 2011. You'd think that Singapore would be the natural choice, seeing as the plane was headed for Singapore and had a Singaporean on it.
Technical assistance - Indonesian National Transportation Safety Committee (NTSC), recovery of information from FDR - Investigation number: AE-2011-058
.... the ATSB appointed an accredited representative to assist the NTSC and initiated an investigation under the Australian Transport Safety Investigation Act 2003.
http://www.atsb.gov.au/publications/investigation_reports/2011/aair/ae-2011-058.aspx