Concrete mound a fatal flaw


Crash report: Family members walking near a concrete structure at the site of the Jeju Air crash at Muan International Airport. (Inset) Mourners leaving message cards in the shape of airplane tickets. — Reuters

A report commissioned by the government has found that the Jeju Air plane crash in December 2024 that killed 179 people might not have been deadly if there had not been a concrete mound at the end of the runway, an opposition lawmaker said.

The Boeing 737-800 coming from Bangkok belly-landed and overran the runway at Muan ‌International Airport, killing almost everyone on board after it struck a concrete support for a localiser antenna. The only survivors were two flight attendants at the far rear of the plane.

A simulation contained in the report commissioned by the government-led Aviation and Railway ​Accident Investigation Board indicated that all on board might have survived without the concrete structure, which did not meet international safety standards, Kim Eun-hye, a member of a bipartisan parliamentary special committee on the accident, said in a press release on Thursday.

The simulation by a South Korean structural engineering institute found the aircraft’s initial impact as it hit the runway was not strong enough to cause severe injuries and the plane would have slid about 770m before stopping if the barrier was not there, her press release said.

It also concluded that if the navigation ‍facility had been supported by a breakable structure, instead of ‍a ​concrete mound, the aircraft could have breached a fence with only minor injuries, according to the release.

Kim’s office declined to share the full report. Korea Airports Corp, which runs Muan airport, said it could not comment until the final investigation results are released. South Korea’s investigation board did not respond immediately to requests for comment.

Kim said the tragedy reflected years of government negligence ‍dating back to 1999, when the structure ‍was built, and it was left uncorrected despite violating regulations and being flagged as unsafe.

The lawmaker’s statement comes as families of the victims and opposition ‌politicians step up pressure for full accountability, accusing authorities of delaying the release of the analysis and failing to adequately address whether the infrastructure’s design contributed to the high death toll.

The report focused on the structural hazard, but does not yet constitute a final official accident conclusion. A full investigative report is still pending authorities’ public disclosure after missing a one-year deadline to release a progress report.

The Muan airport is not due to reopen until April.

A representative of the victims’ family association said that the report was “solid proof that the disaster was man-made” and said the families were demanding an apology from the investigation board for concealing the information. — Reuters

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Aseanplus News

China warns of ‘law of the jungle’ as US exits global bodies
China-Japan military tensions: what lies ahead in 2026?
Hong Kong issues third straight frost warning as cold weather expected over weekend
Is this the end for Dr Akmal?
Cricket-Bangladesh players act normal despite controversies, says Shanto
RM2.2mil in Rolex watches, luxury assets seized from house of ex-army chief’s second wife
Repeat buyer tucks into another McDonald’s Hong Kong shop for US$15.2 million
Pakistan nears US$1.5bil deal to supply weapons, jets to Sudan, sources say
India's 2025 rice exports surge to near record as curbs lifted
US Treasury Secretary says Australia, India invited to G7 meeting on critical minerals

Others Also Read