16w ago / 3:36 AM EST

Jeju Air crash deadliest of the year, first in the history of the airline

Reporting from Hong Kong

At least 151 people have been killed in the Jeju Air crash, making it the deadliest airline disaster of the year.

It is also the first fatal crash in the history of the low-cost airline, which was founded in 2005.

16w ago / 3:34 AM EST

Death toll rises to 151

Stella Kim
Reporting from Seoul, South Korea

The death toll from the crash has risen to 151, according to local authorities.

16w ago / 3:27 AM EST

Boeing extends its condolences

Aurora AlmendralAurora Almendral is a London-based editor with NBC News Digital.

The Jeju Air flight was a Boeing 737-800, carrying 181 passengers and crew.

16w ago / 3:13 AM EST

The sequence of events leading to the disaster

Stella Kim
Reporting from Seoul, South Korea

“The pilot declared mayday after issuing the bird strike alert,” said Joo Jong-wan, director of the Aviation Policy Division at South Korea’s Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport, adding that the aircraft was “completely destroyed” in the crash.

The plane initially tried to land on the airport’s Runway 1, but the pilot was told to instead land on Runway 19 — in the opposite direction — due to a bird strike warning, Joo said.

A minute later, the pilot sent a mayday signal following a bird strike and tried to land on Runway 19. While passing over the runway, the plane struck a safety system called a localizer — which provides guidance during landing — failed to lower the landing gear and crashed into a wall, Joo said.

16w ago / 3:13 AM EST

The plane erupted in flames while crash landing at Muan International Airport

NBC News
Photo provided by South Korea's Muan Fire Station via APSouth Korea's Muan Fire Station via AP
16w ago / 3:13 AM EST

Death toll rises to 127 after plane crashes at South Korean airport

Stella Kim
Reporting from Seoul, South Korea

At least 127 people died when a commercial airplane crashed Sunday at a South Korean airport, officials said.

The Jeju Air flight veered off a runway while landing at Muan International Airport and caught fire after the crash, a spokesperson for the country’s National Fire Agency said.

The flight, which originated from Bangkok, was carrying 175 passengers and six crew members, said Joo Jong-wan, director of the Aviation Policy Division at South Korea’s Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport. At least two of the passengers were Thai, Joo said.

“We suspect that the accident may have been due to the breakdown in the malfunctioning landing gear,” Lee Jung-hyun, the head of the Muan Fire Department, said at a briefing. Lee said a bird strike and adverse weather also appeared to have played a role but cautioned that the exact cause is still under investigation.

“The pilot declared mayday after issuing the bird strike alert,” Joo said, adding that the aircraft was “completely destroyed” in the crash.

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