The coffee chain has apologised for its manager's behaviour. 'The investigation revealed that the incident was due to the inappropriate personal actions of a franchise manager,' it stated.
Investigators found bird feathers and blood in the two engines of the Boeing jet that crashed in South Korea on Dec. 29, a person familiar with the probe told Reuters on Friday. Jeju Air 7C2216, which departed from the Thai capital Bangkok for Muan county in southwestern South Korea,
SEOUL (Reuters) - The flight data and cockpit voice recorders on the Jeju Air jet that crashed on Dec. 29 stopped recording four minutes before the airliner hit a concrete structure at South Korea's Muan airport, the transport ministry said on Saturday.
Investigators found bird feathers and blood in both engines of the Jeju Air jet that crashed in South Korea last month, killing 179 people, a person familiar with the probe said on Friday. The Boeing 737-800 plane,
South Korea will extend runway safety areas and redesign infrastructure after the crash of a Jeju Air Co flight last month that killed almost everyone on board, sparking criticism that the design of the airport might have exacerbated the accident.
A South Korean court has sentenced three men to lengthy jail terms for the gruesome murder of a compatriot near Pattaya last year.
A total of 179 died in the crash, with just two crew members surviving in one of the nation’s worst aviation disasters.
Police arrested four South Korean nationals for working illegally at a renowned hair salon in the Sukhumvit area of Bangkok.
Authorities investigating the disaster plan to look into what caused the black boxes to stop recording, South Korea's transport ministry says.
Recording of flight data ceased four minutes before Jeju Air crash that killed 179 people, says transport ministry.
South Korean authorities are still investigating the cause of the recent air disaster at Muan International Airport. Some are blaming a concrete embankment at the end of the airport runway, which will now be removed.
The two flight recorders on board a South Korean airliner stopped working before the jet crashed during an emergency landing and subsequent crash that killed 179 of the 181 people on board, officials said Saturday.