Families demand answers a year after South Korea's Jeju Air crash

29 Dec 2025, 11:10 AM
Families demand answers a year after South Korea's Jeju Air crash
Families demand answers a year after South Korea's Jeju Air crash
Families demand answers a year after South Korea's Jeju Air crash
Families demand answers a year after South Korea's Jeju Air crash
Families demand answers a year after South Korea's Jeju Air crash

MUAN, Dec 29 — A year after the worst air disaster on South Korean soil, families of the 179 people who died gathered around the battered concrete embankment where Jeju Air Flight 2216 crashed, demanding answers and a thorough investigation.

Hundreds of people surrounded the site at Muan International Airport where the Boeing 737-800 crash-landed without wheels deployed, slammed into the barrier and exploded into a fireball on December 29, 2024.

Relatives, who have said they are outraged by the lack of progress in finding out what went wrong, sobbed as they lit candles on a cake and sang 'Happy Birthday' today for the 16 victims who were born in December.

President promises real change

"We will not stop until the truth is finally revealed and those responsible are held accountable so that the lives of the 179 were not lost for nothing," Kim Yu-jin, representing the families, said during a memorial service at the airport.

Addressing mourners, government officials, and the Parliament Speaker, Kim accused the government of focusing on clearing up the aftermath of the crash rather than conducting a proper investigation.

Relatives laid flowers on a memorial altar and looked on as the names of the dead were read out and displayed on a screen, written on cards in the shape of boarding tickets.

"I hope the investigation will be conducted thoroughly, so that those who deserve to be punished ... are punished,” Ryu Kum-Ji, who lost both her parents in the crash, told Reuters.

President Lee Jae Myung, who took office six months after the disaster, apologised to the families in a statement earlier today and said it was his duty to ensure there was no repeat of the tragedy.

South Korean President Lee Jae Myung attends the 26th Asean-Republic of Korea Summit, part of the 47th Asean Summit and Related Summits at the Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre in Kuala Lumpur, on October 27, 2025.

"The disaster clearly revealed the systematic problems and limitations of our society. What is needed now is not perfunctory promises or empty words but rather real change and action," he said.

The government-led Aviation and Railway Accident Investigation Board has failed to meet a one-year deadline to release a report into the accident.

A preliminary report from January said both of the plane's engines sustained bird strikes during an earlier approach to the airport.

In July, investigators said the left engine, which sustained less damage than the right one following the bird strikes, was shut down before the crash landing.

Few other details have emerged since then, with questions remaining about the runway design, including the heavy embankment, and about the actions the pilots may have taken in the last few minutes of the flight.

Representatives of the families have raised questions about the board's independence and expertise, and said investigators appear to be blaming the pilots rather than examining other factors.

Parliament has been reviewing a plan to overhaul the board.

Bereaved family members walk near a concrete structure at the site of the Jeju Air crash, which claimed 179 lives, on the first anniversary of the crash, at the Muan International Airport, in Muan, South Korea, on December 29, 2025.
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