South Korean authorities said Thursday all airports across the country will be ordered to install bird detection cameras and radars after the Jeju Air crash that left 179 people dead.
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Hosted on MSNKorean Air swings to black in Q4 on cargo demandKorean Air Co., South Korea's leading airline, said Friday it has swung to the black in the fourth quarter from a year ...
Korean Air anticipates uncertainties in the business environment this year due to shifts in the global political landscape, ...
Korean Air has attributed a dip in its fourth-quarter passenger revenue to global supply chains that are still experiencing ...
The U.S. Indo-Pacific Command said on May 30, 2023, of China's unprofessional intercept of U.S. aircraft over the South China Sea: "The United States will continue to fly, sail, and operate—safely and ...
All South Korean airports to install thermal imaging cameras and bird detection radars in bid to prevent future bird strikes ...
South Korean authorities said Thursday that all airports in the country would be required to deploy thermal imaging cameras ...
North Korean ballistic missiles fired at Ukraine by Russian forces since late December have been far more precise than salvos ...
Although its numbers have thinned, ten airlines still operate the enormous, graceful Airbus A380 for international luxury ...
North Korean troops, largely special ops forces, have suffered high casualty rates in bloody assaults, not unlike prison ...
But officials enforcing the no-liquids rule at South Korea’s Incheon International Airport have been busy seizing another ...
When Ukrainian soldiers captured two North Korean prisoners of war last month, it provided the first undeniable proof of ...
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