South Korea manufacturer of crashed Indonesia jet ready to join probe
[SEOUL] The South Korean manufacturer of the Indonesian military plane that crashed over the weekend, killing two pilots on board, said Tuesday it was prepared to take part in a probe into the accident.
"We have our experts who are on standby in the country. They are ready to respond immediately if they are asked to join the probe," a spokeswoman for Korea Aerospace Industries (KAI) told AFP.
Sunday's crash of a T-50 Golden Eagle fighter jet during a demonstration in central Java marked the third crash involving the South Korea-developed supersonic training aircraft, which debuted in 2002.
Both of the two previous crashes occurred in South Korea. In 2012, a pilot was killed, and two pilots died in another crash in 2013.
KAI has since 2011 exported 56 T-50s to four countries including the Philippines, Thailand, Iraq and Indonesia. Indonesia in particular has bought 16 of them.
The South Korean firm has also been seeking to bid for a American multi-billion-dollar advanced training jet project.
"It's too early to comment as to whether the latest crash would affect our chances in the bid. We have to wait and see the results of the investigation into the accident," the spokeswoman added.
AFP
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Transport & Logistics
Air China orders homegrown C919s in challenge to jet duopoly
Huawei’s smart car tech offers automakers route to China sales
Sri Lanka to hand management of China-built airport to India, Russia companies
Tesla’s plan for affordable cars takes page from Detroit rivals
Toyota is investing US$1.4 billion to build another all-electric SUV in US
Airbus net profit soars 28% in first quarter