
Pilots are to blame for South Korea plane crash that killed 179 when aircraft slammed into concrete wall and burst into flames, report finds
The Jeju Air Boeing 737 was moments from landing at the coastal Muan Airport after a flight from Bangkok on December 29 when it struck a flock of birds - believed to be Baikal teal ducks - which sent one its engines into failure.
In a horrifying twist, investigators say the pilots then shut down the wrong engine, sealing the fate of those on board.
Instead of switching off the damaged engine, the crew mistakenly cut power the only one that was still functioning. 'A pilot may have mistakenly turned off the engine,' investigators said.
The aircraft, now critically compromised, continued its botched descent at dangerously high speed, with the landing gear still retracted.
Moments later, the plane careened off the runway, slammed into a reinforced embankment, and erupted into a fireball.
Only two of the cabin crew members seated at the rear survived the inferno.
In a chaotic press conference on Saturday, grieving members of the victims stormed the room, accusing officials of scapegoating the pilots. 'They've just blamed it all on the pilots' a man shouted.
Amid the uproar, investigators hastily retrieved copies of the interim findings from journalists, claiming the report was not yet officially released.
Despite the backlash, investigators stood by their conclusion - that there was no mechanical fault with the Boeing aircraft.
Instead, a catalogue of cockpit errors led to South Korea's worst aviation disaster in decades.
'The pilot should have turned off the right engine, which was severely damaged by the bird strike, but he turned off the left engine, which was spinning, and the black box and power went out,' an official told South Korea's MBN television news.
Disturbingly, the final moments of the flight remain particularly shrouded in mystery.
Power to the aircraft's flight data and voice recorders cut out for four minutes before the crash, severely hampering the investigation.
Experts also say the pilots violated safety protocol following the bird strike, climbing abruptly and executing a risky turnaround before attempting an unorthodox landing - on the same runway but from the opposite direction.
Aviation professionals have pointed out chilling similarities to the 1989 Kegworth crash in the UK, where a British Midland 737 went down after pilots also shut off the wrong engine.
That disaster claimed 47 lives.
Families of the Muan victims are now demanding accountability and transparency.
Kim Yu-Jin, head of the bereaved families group, deemed the report 'unconvincing' and warned that the way officials handle the findings could affect compensation for grieving loved ones.
'When investigators take a position, it should be accompanied by documents that support their position and convince the bereaved family that their conclusions are inevitable,' she said. 'We were only given their conclusions.
She added: 'We have repeatedly asked them to be careful about these disclosures because the way that the results of the investigation are communicated can have an impact on the compensation that families receive.'
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