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South Korea auditor finds cost-cutting, faulty approvals at Jeju Air crash site

By Thomson Reuters Mar 10, 2026 | 10:41 PM

SEOUL, March 11 (Reuters) – South Korea’s transport ministry cut construction costs and approved improper airport safety structures for more than two decades, the state auditor said in a report on aviation safety management ​after a Jeju Air crash that killed 179 people.

The December ‌2024 crash involved a Boeing 737-800 which was struck by birds, belly-landed and overran the runway at Muan International Airport, killing almost everyone on board after it struck a concrete support for a localiser antenna. The only survivors were two flight attendants at the ‌rear of ​the plane.

The Board of Audit and Inspection said ⁠in a report published on ⁠Tuesday that the ministry built a 2.4 metre (7.9 ft) high concrete embankment upon which to place the localiser – a landing guidance system – at Muan airport in order to reduce earthwork costs, without adequately reviewing relevant ​rules.

Under international standards, localiser structures should be designed to break apart easily upon aircraft impact.

The ministry is responsible for airport construction. It hands operations ⁠to Korea Airports Corp (KAC) but remains responsible for ⁠safety certification.

The auditor said the ministry wrongly approved 14 ​non-compliant localiser installations at eight airports including Muan, Gimhae and Jeju. It also ​said that, for up to 22 years, the ministry certified operating ‌permits and approved regular inspections that erroneously found frangibility standards had been met.

It identified broader shortcoming in bird-strike prevention and other aspects of air safety management, and notified the ministry of 30 cases of wrongdoing or procedural failure.

The ⁠Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport said it “humbly accepted” the findings and would take strict follow-up measures, including localiser improvement and stronger bird-strike prevention.

Spokespersons for KAC and ⁠Jeju Air could not ‌be reached for comment.

A separate government-commissioned report found the ⁠crash might not have been deadly if there had ​not been ‌a concrete embankment at the end of the runway, ​an opposition ⁠lawmaker said in January, citing a simulation contained in the report.

A full investigative report is pending public disclosure. It has missed a one-year deadline for the release of a progress report.

The Muan airport has been closed since the crash. It is unclear when it will reopen.

(Reporting by Joyce Lee; Editing by Ed ​Davies and Christopher Cushing)