Shares of Boeing fell in early trading on Monday, one day after a Boeing model 737-800 was involved in the Jeju Air plane crash in South Korea that killed scores of passengers. The stock price dropped more than 4% at the open of trading on Monday morning.
The acting president ordered an emergency safety inspection of the airline operation system as investigators worked to identify victims and find out what caused the country's deadliest air disaster.
The Jeju Air crash in South Korea is an outlier in a country considered to be a gold standard for airline safety.
South Korean officials will conduct safety inspections of all Boeing 737-800 aircraft operated by the country's airlines after a deadly Jeju Air crash.
South Korean officials plan to conduct safety inspections of all Boeing 737-800 aircraft operated by the country’s airlines
A Jeju Air passenger plane carrying 181 people crashed into a concrete wall at a South Korean airport Sunday, killing all but two people on board after its front landing gear apparently failed to deploy. The Boeing 737-800 arrived from Bangkok and crashed ...
A Jeju Air Boeing 737-800 skidded down the runway and crashed in a fireball in South Korea, and investigators are just beginning the process of figuring out why.
A flight operated by Jeju Air crashed at 9:03 a.m. local time on Sunday while the plane was attempting to land at Muan International Airport near the southern tip of South Korea.
On Dec. 29, all passengers aboard a flight on South Korean carrier Jeju Air were killed when a plane skidded down a runway and burst into flames. The incident happened at Muan International Airport (MWX) in the country's southernmost region.
South Korean officials are looking for the cause of a passenger jet crash that killed 179 people, in one of the deadliest disasters in the country’s aviation history.
Investigators from the NTSB and Boeing were expected to join the investigation into South Korea's deadliest air crash.