At least 167 people were killed Sunday in the crash of a Jeju Air plane from Bangkok, which crashed and caught fire while landing at Muan airport in southwest China. South Korea, probably following a collision with birds.
Two people survived the accident. The two people rescued at this stage are a passenger and a crew member, extracted alive from the wreckage of the aircraft, they had said earlier.
181 people on board
According to the authorities, the accident of flight JJA-2216 occurred Sunday at 9:03 a.m. (1:03 a.m. in Paris). The plane was carrying 181 people (175 passengers, including two Thai nationals, and six crew members) between Bangkok and Muan, a city located about 290 kilometers south of the capital Seoul.
“The cause of the accident is presumed to be a collision with birds combined with adverse weather conditions. However, the exact cause will be announced after an investigation,” Lee Jeong-hyun, head of the Muan Fire Station, said at a press briefing.
A video broadcast by local channel MBC shows the aircraft – a Boeing 737-8AS which entered service in 2009, according to the specialist site Flightradar – landing with smoke escaping from the engines. The plane then appeared to hit an obstacle at the end of the runway and was immediately engulfed in flames.
An emergency government meeting
Images broadcast by South Korean television channels show numerous emergency service vehicles and dozens of firefighters working around the carcass of the plane, completely charred except for the tail, and evacuating on stretchers of bodies wrapped in blue shrouds.
Acting South Korean President Choi Sang-mok chaired an emergency government meeting and is traveling to Muan on Sunday afternoon, his office said.
All agencies concerned (…) must mobilize all available resources to save people,” he ordered in a press release.
This is the first fatal accident in the history of Jeju Air, one of South Korea’s largest low-cost airlines, founded in 2005.
Very rare accidents in South Korea
On August 12, 2007, a Jeju Air Bombardier Q400 carrying 74 passengers went off the runway in strong winds at Busan-Gimhae airport (south), causing around ten minor injuries.
“Jeju Air will do everything in its power to deal with this accident. We offer our sincere apologies,” the company wrote in a statement published on its social networks on Sunday.
Plane accidents are very rare in South Korea.
Before Sunday’s accident, the last fatal accident at a South Korean airline was that of an Asiana Boeing 777 which missed its landing at San Francisco airport, killing three people and injuring 182 on July 6. 2013.