South Korea air crash investigators extract black box data as grieving
families mourn the victims
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[January 02, 2025]
By HYUNG-JIN KIM
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Grieving relatives of the victims of the South
Korea plane crash gathered at the site to pay respects to their loved
ones on New Year’s Day, as officials said they've extracted data from
one of the retrieved black boxes to find the exact cause of the crash.
All but two of the 181 passengers and crew on board the Boeing 737-800
operated by Jeju Air died when it crashed at Muan International Airport,
in southern South Korea, on Sunday.
Video showed the aircraft without its landing gear deployed landing on
its belly at high speed and then skidding off the end of the runaway
into a concrete fence and bursting into flames. The footage showed the
plane was experiencing an apparent engine problem in addition to the
landing gear malfunction.
Investigators say the pilot received a warning from air traffic
controllers of possible bird strikes and the plane issued a distress
signal before the crash.
The Transport Ministry said in a statement Wednesday that it has
completed works to extract data from the cockpit voice recorder — one of
the two black boxes recovered from the wreckage. It said the data would
be converted into audio files. A damaged flight data recorder will be
sent to the United States for an analysis, the ministry added.
All of the victims were South Korean, except for two Thais nationals,
with many returning from Bangkok after Christmas holidays.
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Mourners wait to pay tribute to the victims of a plane fire at a
memorial altar at Muan International Airport in Muan, South Korea,
Wednesday, Jan. 1, 2025. (Kim Sun-woong/Newsis via AP)
The bereaved families visited the site on Wednesday for the first
time since the crash for an emotional memorial service. They were
bused to the site where they took turns laying white flowers. Many
knelt and bowed deeply before a memorial table laid with food,
including “ddeokguk,” a Korean rice cake soup eaten on New Year's
Day.
The Transport Ministry said authorities have completed the
complicated process of identifying all 179 victims. It said the
government has so far handed over 11 bodies to relatives.
The country is observing seven days of national mourning following
the deadliest disaster in South Korea’s aviation history in decades.
The government has begun safety inspections of all 101 Boeing
737-800s operated by the country's domestic airlines. On Tuesday, a
team of U.S. investigators, including representatives from Boeing,
examined the crash site.
Officials have said they will consider whether the airport’s
localizer — a set of antennas housed in a concrete fence at the end
of the runway designed to guide aircraft during landings — should
have been constructed with lighter materials that would break more
easily upon impact.
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