South Korea extends shutdown of airport where Jeju Air crash killed 179 people

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South Korea extends shutdown of airport where Jeju Air crash killed 179 people
Author: Maroosha Muzaffar
Published: Jan, 13 2025 11:58

Government plans to upgrade ‘localiser’ structures housing landing guidance systems at airports this year. South Korea has extended the closure of the airport where a Jeju Air plane crashed last month until 19 January. A Boeing 737-800 ran off the runway and burst into flames after ramming an embankment at the Muan airport, killing all but two of the 181 people on board.

The embankment housed a “localiser” landing guidance system and South Korea intends to upgrade these structures at its airports this year. The transport ministry, which has been inspecting safety conditions for airlines and airports since the Muan crash, announced the decision to modify the “localiser” structures on Monday.

“Improvement was deemed necessary including the localiser and its foundations for a total of nine facilities across seven airports, including Muan airport,” the ministry said, adding that it would finalise plans to adapt the localisers by the end of January with the goal of “completing upgrades within this year”.

The ministry said seven airports, including Muan, have embankments or foundations made of concrete or steel that need replacing. Korean officials have faced questions about design features of the Muan airport, particularly the large concrete embankment near the end of the runway used to support navigation equipment that the plane ran into.

The government has completed its inspection of six domestic airlines operating Boeing 737-800s and identified violations by some operators, including exceeding inspection timeframes before and after flights and failing to comply with procedures for addressing aircraft defects or passenger boarding issues.

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