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Jeju Air crash families file complaint to speed up South Korea's investigation

Jeju Air crash families file complaint to speed up South Korea's investigation

Families of victims of December's devastating plane crash in
South Korea have filed a complaint against 15 people including the transport minister and the airline chief who they believe are responsible for the disaster that killed all but two of the 181 people on board.
Police and government officials have already been investigating the Jeju Air crash, so the complaint is largely seen as a symbolic step calling for a swifter and more thorough inquiry. Many bereaved families complain of what they see as a lack of meaningful progress in efforts to determine what caused the disaster and who is responsible.
On Tuesday, 72 bereaved relatives submitted the complaint to the Jeonnam Provincial Police agency in southern South Korea, according to their lawyers and police.
The 15 people cited in the complaint include the transport minister, Jeju Air's president and airline officials handling maintenance and safety issues, along with officials at Muan International Airport who are responsible for preventing bird strikes, air traffic control and facility management, according to a statement from a lawyers' group supporting the relatives.
Family members of a victim of the Jeju Air plane crash grieve at Muan International Airport in South Korea on December 29 last year. Photo: Yonhap/EPA-EFE
'Four months after the disaster, we can't help feeling deep anger and despair over the fact that there has been little progress' in the investigation, Kim Dae-hye, a bereaved family member, said in the statement.

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