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December 30, 2024

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What we know now about the Jeju Air plane crash

What caused the accident?

Investigations have been launched, but officials suspect the accident could have been caused by bird strike and adverse weather conditions.

When asked if the accident happened due to the runway being too short, one official said this was likely not a factor.

“The runway is 2,800 meters long, and similar-sized aircraft have been operating on it without issues,” they said.

What is a bird strike?

A bird strike is a collision between a bird and an aircraft in flight.

A bird strike can be hazardous to aircraft safety and jets are especially vulnerable to loss of power if birds are sucked into the air intakes, according to the UN agency International Civil Aviation Organization. A number of fatal accidents have occurred globally due to bird strikes.

In 2009, a US Airways Airbus A320 famously ditched in New York’s Hudson River after a bird strike on both of its engines, in an incident widely known as the “Miracle on the Hudson” because there was no loss of life.

Rescue operation

Hundreds of firefighters and other emergency responders — including military — were deployed to the area, with South Korea’s acting president designating the site a special disaster zone.

Families were waiting on the first floor of Muan airport, with many relatives crying in despair.

Government response

The accident occurred with South Korea in the throes of a political crisis, with its third president in a month.

Acting President Choi Sang-mok, on his third day in office, convened an emergency meeting with cabinet members and visited the crash scene.

Aviation safety record

South Korea’s aviation industry has a solid safety record and the crash was the first fatal accident for Jeju Air.

A Jeju Air-operated Bombardier Q400 carrying 74 passengers veered off the runway due to strong winds at another southern airport, Busan-Gimhae on August 12, 2007. A dozen people were injured.

Before yesterday’s crash, the deadliest such incident on South Korean soil dated to April 15, 2002.

An Air China Boeing 767 plane travelling from Beijing hit a hill near Busan-Gimhae airport, resulting in 129 deaths.

The most recent fatal crash of a South Korean airline happened at San Francisco airport on July 6, 2013. Asiana Airlines’ Boeing 777 aircraft missed its landing, leaving three dead and 182 hurt.

The deadliest disaster to hit a South Korean airline goes back more than four decades — when a Soviet fighter jet shot down a Boeing 747 above the Sea of Japan.

Twenty-three crew and 246 passengers aboard the Korean Air flight were killed in the September 1, 1983, disaster, as they were travelling from New York to Seoul via Alaska.




 

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