South Korea to remove airport concrete barriers after deadly crash

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South Korea to remove airport concrete barriers after deadly crash
Published: Jan, 22 2025 10:34

South Korea will remove concrete barriers used at airports across the country after a plane crash in December that claimed the lives of 179 people. While investigators are still probing South Korea's worst domestic civil aviation disaster at Muan International Airport, experts have said the massive berm supporting navigation antennas at the end of the runway likely made the crash more deadly than it might have been otherwise.

Only two crew members seated near the rear of the Boeing 737-800 aircraft survived the crash at Muan, about 180 miles south of Seoul, on 29 December. At the time, a special disaster zone was declared as video emerged of the aircraft, which may have malfunctioned because of bird strikes, attempting to crash-land.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player. On its second attempt, the Jeju Air plane, which had been flying from Bangkok, Thailand, veered off the runway and crashed into a wall, quickly becoming engulfed in smoke and fire. It did not have its landing gear deployed and was travelling at speed before crashing, footage appears to show.

Follow our channel and never miss an update. Following a review of antenna structures known as Instrument Landing Systems (ILS), or a "localiser", authorities have now said they will make new foundations or other adjustments for similar antennas at seven airports, including Muan, that are either below ground level or easy to break.

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