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Jeju Air Flight 2216

Coordinates: 34°59′13″N 126°22′58″E / 34.98694°N 126.38278°E / 34.98694; 126.38278
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Jeju Air Flight 2216
HL8088, the aircraft involved in the accident, in 2023
Occurrence
Date29 December 2024 (2024-12-29)
SummaryRunway overrun after belly landing; under investigation
SiteMuan International Airport, South Jeolla, South Korea
34°59′13″N 126°22′58″E / 34.98694°N 126.38278°E / 34.98694; 126.38278
Aircraft
Aircraft typeBoeing 737-8AS
OperatorJeju Air
IATA flight No.7C2216
ICAO flight No.JJA2216
Call signJEJU AIR 2216
RegistrationHL8088
Flight originSuvarnabhumi Airport, Samut Prakan, Thailand
DestinationMuan International Airport, South Jeolla, South Korea
Occupants181
Passengers175
Crew6
Fatalities179
Injuries2
Survivors2

Jeju Air Flight 2216 was a passenger flight from Suvarnabhumi Airport near Bangkok, Thailand, to Muan International Airport in Muan County, South Korea. On 29 December 2024, a Boeing 737-800 passenger flight went off the runway at Muan International Airport and crashed into a barrier. Out of the 181 onboard, 179 people were confirmed to have been killed. Two flight attendants survived with injuries.[1]

This was the worst South Korean airline accident since the 1997 crash of Korean Air Flight 801 in Guam, and the deadliest in South Korea since the crash of Air China Flight 129 in 2002.[2] The plane crash was the first deadly accident in Jeju Air's 19-year history[3] and the deadliest plane crash of the 2020s, since Lion Air Flight 610 crashed in 2018.

References

[change | change source]
  1. Park, Ju-min; Kim, Hongji; Yim, Hyunsu (30 December 2024). "Fiery plane crash kills 179 in worst airline disaster in South Korea". Reuters. Retrieved 30 December 2024.
  2. "South Korea Plane Crash Live Updates: Dozens Dead After Jeju Air Flight Explodes – The New York Times". The New York Times. With at least 85 people killed, the crash marked the worst plane tragedy involving a South Korean airline since a Korean Air jet slammed into a hill in Guam, a U.S. territory in the western Pacific, in 1997.
  3. "Plane With 181 On Board Crashes In South Korea, Killing 29". Barron's. Dow Jones. Agence France-Presse. 28 December 2024. Retrieved 29 December 2024.