SAN FRANCISCO/SEOUL (Reuters) - The pilot of the
Asiana plane that crashed at San Francisco International Airport was still in
training for the Boeing 777 when he attempted to land the aircraft under
supervision on Saturday, the South Korean airline said.
Lee Kang-kuk was the second most junior pilot of
four on board the Asiana Airlines plane. He had 43 hours of experience flying
the long-range jet, the airline said on Monday.
The plane's crew tried to abort the descent less
than two seconds before it hit a seawall on the landing approach to the
airport, bounced along the tarmac and burst into flames.
It was Lee's first attempt to land a 777 at San
Francisco airport, although he had flown there 29 times previously on other
types of aircraft, said South Korean Transport Ministry official Choi
Seung-youn. Earlier, the ministry said Lee, who is in his mid-40s, had almost
10,000 flying hours.
Two teenage Chinese girls on their way to summer
camp in the United States were killed and more than 180 people injured in the
crash, the first fatal accident involving the Boeing 777 since it entered
service in 1995.
The Asiana flight from Seoul to San Francisco,
with 16 crew and 291 passengers, included several large groups of Chinese
students.
Asiana said Lee Kang-kuk, whose anglicised name
was released for the first time on Monday and differed slightly from earlier
usage, was in the pilot seat during the landing. It was not clear whether the
senior pilot, Lee Jung-min, who had clocked up 3,220 hours on a Boeing 777, had
tried to take over to abort the landing.
"It's a training that is common in the
global aviation industry. All responsibilities lie with the instructor
captain," Yoon Young-doo, the president and CEO of the airline, said at a
news conference on Monday at the company headquarters.
The plane crashed after the crew tried to abort
the landing with less than two seconds to go, the U.S. National Transportation
Safety Board said.
NTSB Chairwoman Deborah Hersman said information
collected from the plane's cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder
indicated there were no signs of problems until seven seconds before impact,
when the crew tried to accelerate.
A stall warning, in which the cockpit controls
begin to shake, activated four seconds before impact, and the crew tried to
abort the landing and initiate what is known as a "go around"
manoeuvre 1.5 seconds before crashing, Hersman said.
She said the plane was "well below" the
target air speed of 137 knots (157 miles per hour or 253 kph). "It wasn't
just give or take a few knots," she told MSNBC's "Morning Joe"
show on Monday. "They were very slow in this critical phase of
flight."
TRAGIC TWIST
In a tragic twist, the San Francisco Fire
Department said one of the Chinese teenagers may have been run over by an
emergency vehicle as first responders reached the scene.
"One of the deceased did have injuries
consistent with those of having been run over by a vehicle," fire
department spokeswoman Mindy Talmadge said.
The two dead girls, Ye Mengyuan and Wang Linjia,
were friends from the Jiangshan Middle School in Quzhou, in the prosperous
eastern coastal province of Zhejiang.
They were among a group of 30 students and five
teachers from the school on their way to attend a summer camp in the United
States, the official Xinhua news agency said.
Ye, 16, had an easy smile, was an active member
of the student council and had a passion for biology, the Beijing News
reported.
"Responsible, attentive, pretty,
intelligent," were the words written about her on a recent school report,
it said.
Wang, a year older than Ye, also was known as a
good student and was head of her class, the newspaper said. The last post on
Weibo, China's Twitter-like microblogging site, simply read in English;
"go."
Twelve parents, including those of Ye and Wang,
were due to leave China for San Francisco on Monday, Xinhua reported. The other
students in Ye and Wang's group who are well enough to travel will return to
China as the rest of their trip has now been cancelled, the People's Daily said
on its official microblog.
More than 30 people remained hospitalized late on
Sunday. Eight were listed in critical condition, including two with paralysis
from spinal injuries, hospital officials said.
The charred aircraft remained on the airport
tarmac as flight operations gradually returned to normal. Three of the four
runways were operating by Sunday afternoon.
Hersman said it was too early to speculate on the
cause of the crash. The data recorders corroborated witness accounts and an
amateur video, shown by CNN, indicating the plane came in too low, lifted its
nose in an attempt to gain altitude, and then bounced violently along the
tarmac after the rear of the aircraft clipped a seawall at the approach to the
runway.
Asiana said mechanical failure did not appear to
be a factor. Hersman confirmed that a part of the airport's instrument-landing
system was offline on Saturday as part of a scheduled runway construction
project, but cautioned against drawing conclusions from that.
"You do not need instruments to get into the
airport," she said, noting that the weather was good at the time of the
crash and the plane had been cleared for a visual approach.
SERIOUS INTERIOR DAMAGE
The flight's passengers included 141 Chinese, 77
South Koreans, 64 Americans, three Indians, three Canadians, one French, one
Vietnamese and one Japanese citizen.
Pictures taken by survivors showed passengers
hurrying out of the wrecked plane, some on evacuation slides. Thick smoke
billowed from the fuselage and TV footage showed the aircraft gutted by fire.
Much of its roof was gone.
Interior damage to the plane was extreme, Hersman
said on CNN earlier on Sunday.
The NTSB released photos showing the wrecked
interior cabin with oxygen masks dangling from the ceiling.
Hersman said the first emergency workers to
arrive at the scene included 23 people in nine vehicles. San Francisco Mayor Ed
Lee said a total of 225 first-responders were involved.
"As chaotic as the site was yesterday, I
think a number of miracles occurred to save many more lives," Lee said at
the airport news conference. Appearing later at San Francisco General Hospital,
he declined to address whether one of the Chinese teenagers may have been run
over.
It was the first fatal commercial airline
accident in the United States since a regional plane operated by Colgan Air
crashed in New York in 2009.
Asiana, South Korea's junior carrier has had two
other fatal crashes in its 25-year history.
Source: Yahoo! News
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