Jeju Air CEO Banned from Leaving South Korea Amid Crash Investigation
Jeju Air CEO Kim E-bae has been banned from leaving South Korea as police investigate Sunday’s deadly plane crash involving the airline’s jet.
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Jeju Air CEO Kim E-bae has been banned from leaving South Korea as police investigate Sunday’s deadly plane crash involving the airline’s jet.
Investigators have successfully extracted initial data from one of the black boxes of the Jeju Air plane that crashed in South Korea, killing 179 people. Officials continue to probe the cause of the tragedy.
Investigators in South Korea are probing a deadly plane crash that killed 179 people, exploring factors like bird strikes, landing gear issues, and pilot decisions during the emergency.
South Korea mourns after 179 people die in a catastrophic Jeju Air plane crash, with only two survivors. Investigations point to a possible bird strike as the cause.
The pilot of a Jeju Air jet reported a bird strike and declared mayday before the plane crashed on Sunday, says South Korea’s Transport Ministry.
South Korea faces its worst air disaster in decades as 179 people die in a plane crash at Muan International Airport. Only two crew members survived the tragic incident, prompting a national mourning.
A plane crash at South Korea’s Muan International Airport leaves 179 dead and two survivors rescued.
President Xi Jinping offered heartfelt condolences to South Korea after a tragic Jeju Air plane crash, expressing sympathy to victims’ families and wishing the injured a quick recovery.
The Accident Investigation Committee has retrieved the two flight recorders from the crashed passenger plane in South Korea that killed over 120 people.
South Korea’s acting President Choi Sang-mok declares Muan a special disaster zone following a deadly plane crash at Muan International Airport.