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    Home » South Korea says initial data extracted from Jeju Air cockpit recorder | Aviation News

    South Korea says initial data extracted from Jeju Air cockpit recorder | Aviation News

    Team_NationalNewsBriefBy Team_NationalNewsBriefJanuary 1, 2025 Latest News No Comments2 Mins Read
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    Officials say all 179 victims from deadliest crash on South Korean soil have been identified.

    Investigators probing the deadly crash of Jeju Air Flight 2216 in South Korea have retrieved the initial data from one of the aircraft’s black boxes, officials have said.

    Joo Jong-wan, deputy minister for civil aviation, said on Wednesday that the “initial extraction” of data from the cockpit voice recorder had been completed.

    “Based on this preliminary data, we plan to start converting it into audio format,” he said.

    Joo said the plane’s second black box, the flight data recorder, would be sent to the United States for analysis as local investigators were unable to recover the information it contained due to damage it suffered in the crash.

    Flight 2216 crashed at Muan International Airport, about 290km (180 miles) southwest of Seoul, on Sunday morning, killing 179 of 181 people on board.

    The crash was the worst-ever air disaster on South Korean soil and the deadliest accident involving a South Korean airline since a Korean Air Boeing 747 crashed into a Guam hillside in 1997, killing 228 people.

    Aviation experts have raised a series of possible causes and contributing factors in Sunday’s disaster, including a collision with birds, mechanical failure, pilot error and the presence of a hardened embankment less than 300 metres (328 yards) from the end of the runway.

    The Boeing 737-800 belly-landed on the runway, without its landing gear deployed, shortly after the pilot reported a bird strike to air traffic control, then skidded into a concrete embankment and exploded into flames.

    South Korean authorities, aided by investigators from Boeing and the US National Transportation Safety Board, have focused their initial inquiries on the embankment, which some aviation experts have said should have been placed further from the runway or constructed from softer materials.

    South Korean officials on Wednesday also announced that they had confirmed the identities of all 179 victims amid complaints from grieving families about the timeframe for identifying and releasing the bodies.

    Authorities have said identifying the remains has been a slow and difficult process due to the damage done to the bodies in the crash.



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