South Korea Jeju Air Plane
Crash: Black Boxes Stopped Recording 4 Min Before Flight Crashed, Key Data
Missing
Story
by Jagran English
• 2h
South Korea Jeju Air Plane Crash: Black Boxes
Stopped Recording 4 Min Before Flight Crashed, Key Data Missing
The flight data and cockpit voice recorders on the Jeju Air jet that
crashed on Dec. 29 stopped recording about four minutes before the airliner hit
a concrete structure at South Korea's Muan airport, the transport ministry said
on Saturday. Authorities investigating the disaster that killed 179 people, the
worst on South Korean soil, plan to analyse what caused the "black
boxes" to stop recording, the ministry said in a statement.
The voice recorder was initially analysed in South Korea, and, when
data was found to be missing, sent to a U.S. National Transportation Safety
Board laboratory, the ministry said. The damaged flight data recorder was taken
to the United States for analysis in cooperation with the U.S. safety
regulator, the ministry has said. Jeju Air 7C2216, which departed the Thai
capital Bangkok for Muan in southwestern South Korea, belly-landed and overshot
the regional airport's runway, exploding into flames after hitting an
embankment.
The pilots told air traffic control the aircraft had suffered a bird
strike and declared emergency about four minutes before it crashed into the
embankment exploding in flames. Two injured crew members, sitting in the tail
section, were rescued. Two minutes before the Mayday emergency call, air
traffic control gave caution for "bird activity". Declaring
emergency, the pilots abandoned the landing attempt and initiated a go-around.
But instead of making a full go-about, the budget airline's Boeing 737-800 jet
took a sharp turn and approached the airport's single runway from the opposite
end, crash-landing without landing gear deployed.
Sim Jai-dong, a former transport ministry accident investigator, said
the discovery of the missing data from the crucial final minutes was surprising
and suggests all power including backup may have been cut, which is rare. The
transport ministry said other data available would be used in the investigation
and that it would ensure the probe is transparent and that information is
shared with the victims' families. Some members of the victims' families have
said the transport ministry should not be taking the lead in the investigation
but that it should involve independent experts including those recommended by
the families.
The investigation of the crash has also focussed on the embankment,
which was designed to prop up the "localiser" system used to assist
aircraft landing, including why it was built with such rigid material and so
close to the end of the runway.
(Note: This story has not been edited by Jagran English staff. Credit:
Reuters )
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