Fiery crash kills at least 167 in worst airline disaster in South Korea
At least 167 people
were killed when an Jeju Air plane belly-landed and veered off the runway,
erupting in a fireball as it slammed into a wall at South Korea's Muan
International Airport on Sunday, the national fire agency said.
Jeju Air flight
7C2216, arriving from the Thai capital Bangkok with 175 passengers and six crew
on board, was attempting to land shortly after 9 a.m. (0000 GMT) at the airport
in the south of the country, South Korea's transport ministry said.
Two people, both crew
members, were rescued, and officials have suggested the rest are presumed dead.
It is the deadliest
air accident ever on South Korean soil, and the worst involving a South Korean
airline in nearly three decades, according to ministry data.
The twin-engine Boeing
737-800 was seen in video broadcast on local media skidding down the runway
with no apparent landing gear before slamming into a wall in an explosion of
flames and debris. Other photos showed smoke and fire engulfing parts of the plane.
The two crew members,
a man and a woman, were rescued from the tail section of the burning plane,
Muan fire chief Lee Jung-hyun told a briefing. The fire was extinguished as of
1 p.m., Lee said.
"Only the tail
part retains a little bit of shape, and the rest of (the plane) looks almost
impossible to recognise," he said.
Authorities switched
from rescue to recovery operations and because of the force of the impact, were
searching nearby areas for bodies possibly thrown from the plane, Lee added.
The two crew were
being treated at hospitals with medium to severe injuries, said the head of the
local public health centre.
Hours after the crash,
family members gathered in the airport's arrival area, some crying and hugging
as Red Cross volunteers handed out blankets.
Families screamed and
wept loudly as a medic announced the names of 22 victims identified by their
fingerprints.
Papers were circulated
for families to write down their contact details.
One relative stood at
a microphone to ask for more information from authorities. "My older
brother died and I don’t know what’s going on," he said. "I don’t
know."
Another asked
journalists not to film. "We are not monkeys in a zoo," he said.
"We are the bereaved families."
Mortuary vehicles
lined up outside to take bodies away, and authorities said a temporary morgue
had been established.
The crash site smelled
of aviation fuel and blood, according to Reuters witnesses, and workers in
protective suits and masks combed the area while soldiers searched through
bushes.
Authorities had worked
to rescue people in the tail section, an airport official told Reuters shortly
after the crash.
The crash is the worst
by any South Korean airline since a 1997 Korean Air crash in Guam that killed
more than 200 people, according to transportation ministry data. The worst on
South Korean soil was an Air China crash that killed 129.
Investigators are
looking into bird strikes and weather conditions as possible factors, Lee said.
Yonhap cited airport authorities as saying a bird strike may have caused the
landing gear to malfunction.
The control tower
issued a bird strike warning and shortly afterward the pilots declared mayday,
a transport ministry official said, without specifying whether the flight said
it struck any birds.
Soon after the mayday
call the aircraft made its ill-fated attempt to land, the official said.
A passenger texted a
relative to say a bird was stuck in the wing, the News1 agency reported. The
person's final message was, "Should I say my last words?"
The passengers
included two Thai nationals and the rest are believed to be South Koreans,
according to the transportation ministry.
JEJU AIR SAYS BEREAVED
ARE TOP PRIORITY
The Boeing 737-800
jet, operated by Jeju Air, was manufactured in 2009, the transport ministry
said.
Jeju Air CEO Kim E-bae
apologised for the accident, bowing deeply during a televised briefing.
He said the cause of
the crash was still unknown, that the aircraft had no record of accidents and
there were no early signs of malfunction. The airline will cooperate with
investigators and make supporting the bereaved its top priority, Kim said.
No abnormal conditions
were reported when the aircraft left Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi Airport, said
Kerati Kijmanawat, president of Airports of Thailand.
It is the first fatal
flight for Jeju Air, a low-cost airline founded in 2005 that ranks behind only
Korean Air Lines and Asiana Airlines in terms of the number of passengers
in South Korea.
The accident happened
only three weeks after it started regular flights from Muan to Bangkok and
other Asian cities on Dec. 8.
Muan International is
one of South Korea's smallest airports but it has seen the number of
international passengers jump nearly 20 times to 310,702 from January to
November this year, from the same period in 2022, according to government data.
Boeing said in a
emailed statement, "We are in contact with Jeju Air regarding flight 2216
and stand ready to support them. We extend our deepest condolences to the
families who lost loved ones, and our thoughts remain with the passengers and
crew."
The U.S. Federal
Aviation Administration did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
All domestic and
international flights at Muan airport had been cancelled, Yonhap reported.
South Korean acting
President Choi Sang-mok, named interim leader of the country on Friday in an
ongoing political crisis, arrived at the scene of the accident and said the
government was putting all its resources into dealing with the crash.
Two Thai women were on
the plane, aged 22 and 45, Thai government spokesperson Jirayu Houngsub said,
adding that details were still being verified.
Thai Prime Minister
Paetongtarn Shinawatra sent condolences to the families of the dead and injured
in a post on X, saying she had instructed the foreign ministry to provide
assistance.
The ministry said in a statement it was in touch with the South Korean authorities.
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