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Korean-Air-Flug 801

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Vorlage:Infobox Airliner accident Korean Air Flight 801 (KE801, KAL801) crashed on August 6, 1997 on approach to Antonio B. Won Pat International Airport, Guam (a United States insular area).

Flight 801 was normally flown by an Airbus A300; since Korean Air had scheduled the August 5-6 flight to transport Guamanian athletes to the South Pacific Mini Games in American Samoa, the airline designated HL7468, a Boeing 747-300 delivered to Korean Air on December 12, 1984,[1] to fly the route that night. [2][3] The aircraft crashed on Nimitz Hill in Asan.[4]

Passengers

Many of the passengers consisted of vacationers and honeymooners flying to Guam.[5][6]

Nationality Passengers Crew Total
Total Killed Total Killed Total Killed
Korea Sud Südkorea 218 199 17 14 235 213
Neuseeland Neuseeland 1 0 0 0 1 0
Vereinigte Staaten Vereinigte Staaten 13 10 0 0 13 10
Unknown 5 5 0 0 5 5
Total 237 214 17 14 254 228

Rika Matsuda, a South Korean passport holder, was described as Japanese in many press reports[5]. One South Korean lived in Guam,[7] while New Zealander Barry Small worked in Guam.[8]

Notable passengers

Disaster

Wreckage of HL7468 burns at the Sasa Valley crash site.

Flight 801 departed from Seoul-Kimpo International Airport (now Gimpo Airport) at 8:53 pm (9:53 pm Guam time) on August 5 on its way to Guam. It carried 2 pilots, 1 flight engineer, 14 flight attendants, and 237 passengers [11], a total of 254 people. Of the passengers, 3 were children between the ages of 2 and 12 and 3 were 24 months old or younger [12]. Six of the passengers were Korean Air flight attendants who were "deadheading" (traveling off-duty).[13]

The flight, headed by 42-year old Captain Park Yong-chul (Hangul: 박용철, RR: Bak Yong-cheol, M-R: Pak Yongch'ŏl)[14] 40-year old First Officer Song Kyung-ho (Hangul: 송경호, RR: Song Gyeong-ho, M-R: Song Kyŏngho) and 57-year old flight engineer Nam Suk-hoon (Hangul: 남석훈, RR: Nam Seok-hun, M-R: Nam Sŏkhun)[15], experienced some turbulence but was uneventful until shortly after 1:00am on August 6, as the jet was preparing to land. Park had originally been scheduled to fly to Dubai, United Arab Emirates; since he did not have enough rest for the Dubai trip, he was reassigned to Flight 801.[13] Earlier Park won a flight safety award for negotiating a 747 engine failure.[8]

There was heavy rain at Guam so visibility was significantly reduced and the crew was attempting an instrument landing. Air traffic control in Guam advised the crew that the glideslope Instrument Landing System (ILS) in runway 6L was out of service. Air traffic control cleared Flight 801 to land in runway 6L at around 1:40 am. The crew noticed that the plane was descending very steeply, and noted several times that the airport "is not in sight". At 1:42 am, the aircraft crashed into Nimitz Hill, about 3 miles (5 km) short of the runway, at an altitude of 660 feet (201 m).

36-year-old Hong Hyun Seong (also spelled Hong Hyun Sung), a survivor who occupied Seat 3B in first class, said that the crash occurred so quickly that the passengers "had no time to scream"[7] and compared the crash to "a scene from a film".[16]

The rescue effort was hampered by the weather, terrain, and other problems. Emergency vehicles could not approach due to a fuel pipeline destroyed by the crash and blocking the narrow road. There was confusion over the administration of the effort; the crash occurred on land owned by the United States Navy but civil authorities initially claimed authority. The hull had disintegrated, and jet fuel in the wing tanks had sparked a fire which was still burning eight hours after impact.

The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board investigation report stated that the Minimum Safe Altitude Warning (MSAW) system had been deliberately modified and would not detect the plane that close to the runway. The captain failed to brief his non-precision approach and prematurely descended to decision height. Contributing to the accident were the captain's fatigue, Korean Air's lack of flight crew training, as well as the intentional inhibition of the Guam ILS. The crew had been using an outdated flight map, which stated that the Minimum Safe Altitude for a landing plane was 1,770 feet (540 m) as opposed to 2,150 feet (656 m). Flight 801 had been maintaining 1,870 feet (570 m) when it was waiting to land.

Rika Matsuda

Governor Carl T.C. Gutierrez found Rika Matsuda, a South Korean citizen from Japan who boarded the flight with her mother, Cho Sung-yeo (also known as Shigeko [5][17]). Rika Matsuda described what happened to her and her mother to interpreters.[7] Cho could not free herself from the aircraft and told Rika to run away. Luggage piled on the girl and her mother as the crash occurred; Rika Matsuda said her mother, unable to free herself, asked her to leave.[7] Cho died in the fire as a surviving flight attendant, Lee Yong Ho, found Rika Matsuda and traveled with her until the two encountered Gutierrez. [18] Jesus C. Taitingfong, a Guamanian firefighter, stated that he believes that Gutierrez exaggerated his contribution to the rescue operation and used the news story as a political advantage. [19] Rika Matsuda, treated at Guam Memorial Hospital in Tamuning, was released on August 7, 1997. The girl and her father, Tatsuo Matsuda, were escorted to the Governor House where they were the guests of Gutierrez and the First Lady of Guam for several days; afterwards Rika and Tatsuo Matsuda flew to Japan.[4][20]

Deaths and injuries

Seat plan for the lower deck of Korean Air 801 from the NTSB, indicating surviving passengers and flight attendants. There were no survivors on the upper deck of the airplane.

Of the 254 people on board, 223 people, including 209 passengers and 14 crew members (3 flight crew and 11 cabin crew) were killed at the crash site. [12]

Of the 31 occupants found alive by rescue crews, 2 passengers died en-route to the hospital and 3 other passengers, including one off-duty flight attendant, survived the crash and the transportation to the hospital but died of their injuries within 30 days of the crash.[12][13] 16 survivors received burn injuries. Of the 26 listed as survivors by the NTSB, 12 (all South Korean citizens, 11 residents of South Korea, 1 a resident of Japan) were initially treated at Guam Memorial Hospital (GMH) in Tamuning and 14 (10 South Koreans, 3 Americans, 1 New Zealander) were initially treated at the U.S. Naval Hospital in Agana Heights. Of the passengers who arrived at the hospital, 12 of them were transported to South Korea, and four severely burned passengers were transported to the U.S. Army Burn Center in San Antonio, Texas.[4][21] Of those transported to South Korea, 8 passengers from the Naval Hospital who had minor to serious burns were placed on a medivac to Seoul at 10:00 PM on August 7, 1997. A medical team from Yokosuka, Japan escorted the passengers to University Hospital in Seoul. By August 10, all of the GMH passengers were out of Guam. Three local residents and the New Zealander were treated entirely within the Naval Hospital in Guam.[4]

All of the crash victims transported to San Antonio died. At 5:10 pm U.S. Central Time on August 10, 1997, 11-year old Grace Chung, a Marietta, Georgia girl who had received burns on around 50 to 60 percent of her face and received the first of four planned skin graft surgeries, died.[22] On August 30, 1997, flight attendant Han Kyu-hee, who had been transferred from the Naval Hospital in Guam, died in San Antonio. 40-year old Chung Yong-hak died in San Antonio on September 3, 1997.[4][23] Ju Sejin died there on October 10, 1997; since the passenger who died on October 10 died more than 30 days after the crash, the passenger is not listed as a fatality.[13][24]

One of the two passengers who died en-route to the hospital was a female who had sustained multiple internal injuries but had no burns and no soot in her airway; this lead to an autopsy that classified her death as not of any one cause. Upon discovery she was alive and treated by rescuers [12]. 23 passengers and 3 flight attendants survived the crash with serious injuries [1] (Pg. 11, 23 of 226). Of the survivors, 7 passengers and 1 flight attendant were in first class, 1 flight attendant was in the prestige class section, 7 passengers were in the forward economy class section, and 9 passengers and 1 flight attendant were in the aft economy section. 13 of the surviving passengers and 2 of the surviving flight attendants were seated in the right side of the airplane, and 6 of the 13 passengers were seated over the right wing. None of the passengers or crew on the upper deck of the airplane survived. [12]

Identification and repatriation of bodies

On August 13, 1997, 12 sets of remains were brought to Guam's airport to be readied to be flown back to Seoul. Clifford Guzman, a governor's aide, said that 2 of the 10 were taken back to the morgue. Of the 10, one was misidentified and had to be switched before takeoff. The 10 bodies transported to Seoul were of 7 passengers and 3 female flight attendants. On the same date, an NTSB family affairs official named Matthew Furman said that in total, by that date, 46 bodies had been identified.[25]

After the crash

Vorlage:Refimprove On August 13, 1997, 50 protesters staged at a sit-in at Guam Airport, saying that the recovery of the dead was taking too long; they sat on blankets and sheets of paper at the Korean Air counter.[25]

On August 6, 2000, the third anniversary of the crash, a black marble obelisk was unveiled on the crash site as a memorial to the victims.

After the accident, Korean Air services to Guam were suspended for more than 4 years, leading to reduced tourist spending in Guam and reduced revenues for Korean Air.[26] When Seoul-Guam services resumed in December 2001[27], the flight number was changed to 805.

This incident was documented on Mayday (Air Emergency or Air Crash Investigation), episode "Final Approach" (known in other areas as "Missed Approach" and "Blind Landing.")

In 2000, a lawsuit was settled in the amount of $70,000,000 United States dollars on behalf of 54 families.[28]

New Zealander Barry Small, a helicopter pilot and a survivor of the accident, lobbied for safer storage of duty-free alcohol and redesigns of crossbars on airline seats; he says that the storage of duty-free alcohol on Flight 801 contributed to spreading of the fire and the crossbars injured passengers to the point where they could not escape from the aircraft.[8][29][30]

The Government of Guam moved its website about the Korean Air crash after the Spamcop program alerted the government that advance fee fraud spam from Nigeria used the website link as a part of the scam.[31] Scam e-mails used names of passengers, such as Sean Burke, as part of the fraud.[32]

Malcolm Gladwell discusses the crash in the context of ethnocentric power structures in his book Outliers.Vorlage:Citation needed

References

Vorlage:Reflist

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Koordinaten fehlen! Hilf mit.

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  1. http://www.ntsb.gov/publictn/2000/AAR0001.pdf (16, 28 of 226)
  2. "Official Guam Crash Site Center - Korean Air Flt 801," Government of Guam
  3. "Transcripts Between Guam Airport Tower and KA801 before Crash," Government of Guam
  4. a b c d e http://ns.gov.gu/guam/indexmain.html
  5. a b c "Honeymoon flight that ended in horror," The Independent
  6. "List of passengers aboard Korean Air Flight 801," CNN
  7. a b c d "Pilot Error Is Suspected in Crash on Guam," The New York Times
  8. a b c "Final Approach." Mayday.
  9. http://www.cnn.com/WORLD/9708/05/guam.late/
  10. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9801E1DC173CF934A3575BC0A961958260
  11. [2] (Pg. 11, 23 of 226)
  12. a b c d e [3] (Pg. 45, 57 of 226)
  13. a b c d [4] (Pg. 3, 15 of 226)
  14. "Two Systems Down in KAL 801 Crash," Honolulu Star-Bulletin
  15. "DOCKET NO.: SA-517 EXHIBIT NO. 2F." NTSB
  16. Anger and tears as Guam crash families beg to see dead, The Independent
  17. "Jet hell Rika's scars will last forever.," Daily Record
  18. "Korean Air Survivor - Rika's Miracle," Government of Guam
  19. "Guam's governor seizes main chance," The Independent, August 11, 1997
  20. "Korean Air Survivor - Rika's Miracle." Government of Guam. Retrieved on February 13, 2009.
  21. http://www.burncarerehab.com/pt/re/jburncr/abstract.01253092-200609000-00014.htm;jsessionid=LFjQcWfxBHX8YNpbJy95J2vMdcLZfTgyjpvz0bJbf6Jdxf35XTxz!-1004083789!181195629!8091!-1
  22. "Girl who survived Korean Air crash dies in hospital." Atlanta Journal-Constitution. August 11, 1997.
  23. http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19970902&slug=2558056
  24. http://www.defenselink.mil/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=41097
  25. a b "Guam Crash Aftermath Upsets Kin." The Seattle Times. August 13, 1997.
  26. "Specifics of Crash Site Information." Guam Government. Retrieved on December 9, 2008.
  27. "Korean Air resumes service to Guam for the first time in 4 years." Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Friday December 28, 2001. Retrieved on April 29, 2009.
  28. Current Cases & Our Successes - A Professional Corporation
  29. "Final Approach - Korean Air 801." Discovery Channel. Retrieved on June 26, 2009.
  30. "Exhibit 16C - Korean Air Flight 801." National Transportation Safety Board. Retrieved on June 26, 2009.
  31. "This webpage has been cancelled."Vorlage:Sic Government of Guam. Retrieved on April 29, 2009.
  32. Larson, Aaron. "False Promises of Inheritance - Spam Email Fraud." Law Offices of Aaron Larson at ExpertLaw. July 2004. Retrieved on May 13, 2009.