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South Korea to discipline officials over delays in recovering remains of Jeju Air crash victims

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SEOUL, March 12 (Reuters) - South ‌Korean President Lee Jae Myung has ordered tough disciplinary ​action against officials responsible for delays in recovering the remains of victims from the ⁠2024 Jeju Air crash that killed 179 people, his office said Thursday.

Lee had expressed regret and offered condolences after an additional probe into the ​crash found that only nine body parts belonging to seven victims had been discovered ‌more than a year after the accident, a presidential aide told a briefing.

The president had instructed authorities to determine why those remains, along with 648 personal ⁠items and 155 pieces of aircraft debris, were left ⁠unattended for so long, the official said.

A full investigative report into the disaster is pending public disclosure, after missing a one-year deadline.

The transport ministry issued an apology on Monday for the delays, but victims' families have criticised ‌the government for leaving remains and belongings abandoned in an open storage ⁠area and demanded accountability.

The December 2024 crash involved ‌a Boeing 737-800 which was struck by ​birds, belly-landed and overran the runway at Muan International Airport, killing almost everyone on board after it struck a concrete support for a localiser ‌antenna. The only survivors were two flight attendants ​at the rear of the plane.

Thursday's ⁠announcement comes after a state audit released this week found ‌that the transport ministry had approved ⁠faulty airport‑safety structures for more than two decades, failures linked to the crash.

The audit concluded that a concrete embankment built under a localiser antenna at ​Muan airport — rather than ‌a frangible structure required under international rules — contributed to the scale of the ⁠fatalities.

It also found years of ​improper certifications and missed inspections involving similar installations at multiple airports.

(Reporting ​by Kyu-seok ShimEditing by Ed Davies)

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