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WSWS : News
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Korean Air jumbo jet crashes near London
By Julie Hyland
24 December 1999
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As British accident specialists began investigating the cause
of Wednesday's crash of a Korean Air (KAL) cargo plane near Stansted
Airport, London, speculation focussed on the plane's cargo.
All four crewmen were killed in the crash that occurred on
Wednesday evening at 18:40, shortly after the plane took off from
Stansted, en route for Seoul via Milan, Italy. The dead men were
named as pilot Park Duk-kyu, 57, co-pilot Yoon Ki-sik, 33, engineer
Park Hun-kyu, 38, and maintenance mechanic Kim Il-suk, 45.
Eyewitnesses reported that the Boeing 747 appeared to explode
in a "huge fireball". It then hurtled over homes near
Great Hallingbury, three miles southeast of the airport, and the
M11 motorway. Stansted is London's third and newest airport, operating
passenger flights to Europe and international freight. A far greater
disaster was avoided only because the plane crashed in Hatfield
Forest, rather than a residential area, scattering debris over
a wide area. The pilots did not have time to issue a mayday call.
Motorists on the busy M11 described seeing a "large flash
followed by a large bang", followed by what looked like a
giant mushroom cloud. Residents in the villages of Great Hallingbury
and Little Hallingbury said that they could feel their houses
shake as the plane landed. The jet brought down power lines, throwing
local homes into darkness.
Reporting from the scene, James Blatch of the British Broadcasting
Company said the debris was strewn for hundreds of yards. "There
are bits of metal and twisted fragments in the trees. This Boeing
747 appears to have been completely and utterly destroyed."
The crash forced the closure of Stansted Airport and the cancellation
of 80 flights. Thousands of passengers had to be diverted to other
airports. Many travellers were stranded overnight at the airport,
which finally reopened on Thursday morning. Disruptions were expected
to continue throughout the holiday period.
Early reports focussed attention on the poor safety record
of KAL, South Korea's national airline, whose rapid expansion
has matched that of the South East Asian economies. The company
carries cargo to 32 cities in 21 countries, but it has one of
the worst aviation safety records in the world. An estimated 700
people have died in crashes involving its planes over the past
20 years.
In 1997, more than 200 people were killed when a KAL jet crashed
on the Pacific island of Guam. After another crash in April this
year, the US Department of Defence advised its staff not to use
KAL. The company's partners Air Canada, Air France and Delta Airlines
suspended their marketing link-ups with the airline.
KAL head Cho Yang-Ho was forced to step down after South Korean
President Kim Dae-jung instructed the company to change its management
structure. In November Cho, whose family retains a controlling
stake in KAL, was indicted for tax evasion and embezzlement.
KAL's new head, Yi Taek-shim, promised to make the airline
one of the safest in the world, and a reported £120 million
was spent retraining pilots. Following Wednesday's crash, the
South Korean Ministry of Construction and Transportation announced
it had imposed a six-month ban on the airline opening new international
routes. This is in addition to a one-year penalty already in place,
limiting KAL's domestic routes. This restriction is due to expire
next November.
The Ministry said that if the airline were found to be responsible
for the latest crash, additional action could include route closures,
the suspension of some routes and fines. The South Korean government
and KAL are sending teams to Britain to help in the investigation.
One of the plane's black-box flight recorders was located by Thursday
morning, but another was still missing.
Press reports also drew attention to Boeing's safety standards.
The KAL crash came less than two months after the EgyptAir Flight
990 disaster, which killed all 217 people on board. The EgyptAir
jet was a Boeing 767 and was the third Boeing plane operating
from John F. Kennedy Airport to be involved in such a tragedy
in as many years.
The 747-200 used by KAL is one of Boeing's older aircraft,
and was designed to carry a combination of freight and passengers
as needed. 747s have been involved in three recent accidentsone
in Bangkok and two in India. An Air France-operated 747-200 cargo
plane of the same type as the KAL jet crashed and exploded in
southern India in March 1999. Boeing and American aviation authorities
are also to take part in the KAL investigation.
By Thursday morning, attention turned to the KAL jet's cargo.
The airline originally claimed that the load was "general",
but refused to reveal its cargo list. Immediately following the
crash, residents were told to stay indoors and keep their windows
closed. A radio ham operator reported hearing mention of low-grade
explosives on board the jet as he was listening in to emergency
frequencies. An eyewitness, Richard Smith, said he had been "stopped
in his tracks" a quarter of a mile from the crash scene,
where he had been going to help, by a "toxic stench".
Later, KAL spokesman Han Sang-Bum reported that the cargo had
included chemicals, adding, "we cannot rule out the possibility
of the special cargo triggering the crash." According to
the airline, just 199 kilograms of the cargo was labelled "dangerous
goods". This is said to consist of paint, "benzyl type
products and other chemicals. Benzene is highly flammable and
poisonous.
See Also:
Why the rush to judgement
in the crash of EgyptAir Flight 990?
[19 November 1999]
EgyptAir
crash
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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