The heartbreaking accident happened yesterday morning
The first words of one of two survivors from the tragic plane crash that happened yesterday morning in South Korea have been revealed.
On Sunday (29 December), all but two of those onboard the Jeju Air plane died after it crashed following complication coming in to land at an airport in the town of Muan.
Footage of the tragedy shows the Boeing 737-800 skidding along the runway before bursting into a fireball when it hits a concrete wall.
The plane had been attempting an emergency landing at Muan after the pilot reported the plane had struck a bird.
The only survivors from the crash were two cabin crew members who were rescued from the rear of the plane.
Now, the first words of one of the only two survivors, a 33-year-old male flight attendant named as Lee Mo have been revealed
The cabin crew member miraculously survived the wreckage with a fractured shoulder and head injuries.
According to doctors, his first words came as a question, as he asked “what happened” and “why am I here” after coming round.
He explained that he had been wearing his seatbelt before the plane careered into a concrete wall at the end of the runway, but had no recollection after that.
Meanwhile, fellow survivor and cabin crew member, a 25-year-old female, has only been identified by her last name ‘Koo’ and is currently being treated in Seoul.
She reportedly said in her initial statements: “Smoke came out of one of the plane’s engines and then it exploded.”
A British air safety expert has suggested one factor in particular was responsible for the tragic death toll though, labelling it “almost criminal.”
David Learmount, the operations and safety editor of Flight International magazine, said it was the concrete wall at the end of the runway which was the “defining moment” of the crash.
Speaking to Sky News, the aviation expert said despite the plane’s landing gear not deploying, everybody “might have survived” if it wasn’t for the wall.
He said there was “no justification” for the wall and that it is “verging on criminal to have it there.”
Learmount continued: “That kind of structure should not be there. That is awful. That is unbelievably awful.
“He [the pilot] has brought it down beautifully given the circumstances, they are going very fast but the plane is still intact as it slides along the ground.”
The concrete wall was part of a guidance system at the airport, designed to help pilots land during poor visibility.
But Learmount said the structure was far too close to the runway, and had it not been there the plane could have slowed down in a nearby field.
“To have a hard object about 200m or less into the overrun, I’ve never seen anything like this anywhere ever before,” he said.
“There was plenty of space for the aircraft to have slowed down, come to a halt,” Learmount continued. “And I think everybody would have been alive…the pilots might have suffered some damage going through the security fence or something like that.
“But I even suspect they might have survived.”
With an official death toll of 179, the plane crash is the deadliest in South Korean history. So far, authorities have identified 141 of the victims.
A national seven-day mourning period has been declared in South Korea, and the nation’s New Year’s celebrations are expected to be cancelled or scaled down, the BBC reports.