A Jeju Air Boeing 737-800 skidded down the runway and crashed in a fireball in South Korea, and investigators are just beginning the process of figuring out why.
A preliminary accident report submitted to the UN on Monday said the investigation into South Korea’s deadliest air disaster ...
Heartbreaking images captured a 3-year-old boy who was one of the 179 people killed in Sunday’s Jeju Air crash in South Korea celebrating his first family vacation abroad days before the ...
The two sole survivors aboard the Jeju Air plane crash that killed 179 people lived because they were seated at the rear of the aircraft — which is statistically the safest place to be on a ...
Belly-landings are risky and carried out only in an emergency. Here are the situations in which this is done, and what probably happened with the Jeju aircraft.
By Daisuke Wakabayashi Reporting from Seoul When Jeju Air’s status as South Korea’s biggest low-cost carrier seemed under threat from the merger of the country’s two biggest airlines last ye ...
The CEO of Jeju Air addressed reporters on Tuesday, outlining how the airline plans to recover from the catastrophic crash that killed 179 people. Kim E-bae announced measures he hoped would ...
Two of the six Jeju Air crew members are the only survivors of the crash, and are being treated at a local hospital after the plane veered off a runway and slammed into a wall at Muan ...
South Korean police said on Thursday they had raided Jeju Air and the operator of Muan International Airport as part of their investigation into Sunday's crash that killed 179 people in the ...
Dec 30 (Reuters) - A South Korean Jeju Air passenger jet crashed on landing at Muan International Airport on Sunday, killing 179 people in the country's deadliest air disaster. The following are ...
Almost 180 people died when Jeju Air flight 7C2216 crashed at Muan International Airport on Dec. 29, 2024 - the deadliest air disaster on South Korean soil. It was the first fatal accident ...
A Jeju Air plane crashed on Sunday, killing 179 people. The CEO addressed reporters on Tuesday. Its CEO, Kim E-bae, outlined how the airline plans to regain trust after the catastrophic crash.