By Jack Kim and Lisa Barrington SEOUL (Reuters) -Both engines of the Jeju Air plane that crashed last month contained duck ...
The first report on last month’s Jeju Air crash in South Korea has confirmed bird strikes in the plane’s engines, though officials haven’t determined the cause of the accident that killed all but two ...
The exact cause of the Jeju Air crash remains unclear, and the investigation is complicated because the black boxes stopped ...
The first report on last month’s Jeju Air crash in South Korea has confirmed bird strikes in the plane’s engines, though ...
The preliminary report was released by the Aviation and Railway Accident Investigation Board on Monday in South Korea.
Pilots’ actions after the bird strike are an early focus of the investigation, according to people familiar with the probe.
South Korean authorities have submitted their preliminary findings on the Jeju Air crash that killed 179 people to the ...
The black boxes holding the flight data and cockpit voice recorders for the crashed Jeju Air flight that left 179 people dead stopped recording four minutes before the disaster, South Korea's ...
Jeju Air flight 7C2216 departed Bangkok on 29 December for Muan in southwestern South Korea, but crash-landed on its belly, overshooting the regional airport’s runway and exploding into flames ...
including Jeju Air CEO Kim E-bae,” said police in South Jeolla Province, where the crash in Muan city happened. The flight was carrying 181 people from Thailand to South Korea on Sunday when it ...
By River Akira Davis Reporting from Tokyo A Jeju Air crash in South Korea last week, the deadliest plane accident in years, has stunned the global aviation industry. The country is regarded as a ...