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S. Korea to overhaul some airports after Jeju Air crash

South Korean authorities said on Wednesday  they will change the concrete barriers used for navigation at some airports  across the country after the Jeju Air crash that left 179 people dead.

The Boeing 737-800 was flying from Thailand to Muan in the southwest on  December 29 carrying 181 passengers and crew when it belly-landed at Muan  airport and exploded in a fireball after slamming into a concrete barrier.

It was the worst-ever aviation disaster on South Korean soil.

South Korean and US investigators are still probing the cause of the crash,  which prompted national mourning with memorials set up across the country.

Attention has focused on several possible causes but questions have been  raised about why the concrete barricade, known as a localiser and used to  help planes navigate their landings, was at the end of the runway.

The Ministry of Land said in a statement that “a special safety inspection  revealed that improvements are needed for localisers at seven airports around the country”.

These include Muan and Jeju International Airport — a popular tourist  hotspot and the country’s second-largest airport, after Incheon which serves  the capital Seoul.

The measures include “relocating the foundations underground and replacing  them with lightweight steel structures”.

Muan International Airport’s existing concrete mounds will be removed  entirely and the localiser will be “reinstalled using breakable structures”.

“This measure prioritises actions requiring immediate attention,” said  Transport Minister Park Sang-woo.

“We plan to establish measures for bird strike prevention improvement and an aviation safety innovation plan through further investigations and reviews,”  he said.

At the moment of the accident, the pilot warned of a bird strike before  pulling out of a first landing attempt. The plane crashed on its second  attempt when the landing gear did not emerge.

Feathers were found in both engines, according to South Korean media reports,  with a bird strike being examined as one possible cause.

According to the ministry, a comprehensive survey of bird-attracting  facilities around airports began on Monday as part of the “bird strike  prevention improvement plan”.

The investigation was further clouded when the transport ministry said the  black boxes holding the flight data and cockpit voice recorders for the crashed flight stopped recording four minutes before the disaster.

The land ministry said on Saturday that Muan airport’s closure period had been extended three more months until April 18.

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