- Microsoft expects to spend $80 bn on AI this fiscal year
- Man arrested for supplying drugs to Liam Payne: Argentine police
- Breeding success: London zoo counts its animals one-by-one
- Biden blocks US Steel sale to Japan's Nippon Steel
- Wall Street stocks bounce higher, Europe retreats
- Neil Young says he will play Glastonbury after all
- Biden blocks US-Japan steel deal
- British novelist David Lodge dies aged 89
- Indonesia says 2024 was hottest year on record
- Indian duo self-immolate in Bhopal waste protest
- Indian food delivery app rolls out ambulance service
- European stock markets retreat after positive start to year
- UK electricity cleanest on record in 2024: study
- Biden to block US-Japan steel deal: US media
- Thai PM declares millions in watches and bags among $400 mn assets
- China says 'determined' to open up to world in 2025
- Asian shares rise defying slow Wall Street start to 2025
- 'Emilia Perez' heads into Golden Globes as strong favorite
- 'You need to be happy': graffiti encourages Cuban self-reflection
- Disaster-hit Chilean park sows seeds of fire resistance
- Mixed day for global stocks as dollar pushes higher
- Nick Clegg leaves Meta global policy team
- Tesla reports lower 2024 auto deliveries, missing forecast
- Meghan Markle's lifestyle show to premiere Jan 15 on Netflix
- Wall Street lifts spirits after Asia starts year in red
- UK's biggest dinosaur footprint site uncovered
- Most UK doctors suffer from 'compassion fatigue': poll
- Secret lab developing UK's first quantum clock: defence ministry
- US mulls new restrictions on Chinese drones
- Wall Street dons early green after Asia starts year in red
- Stock markets begin new year with losses
- Sales surge in 2024 for Chinese EV giant BYD
- Asian stocks begin year on cautious note
- Blooming hard: Taiwan's persimmon growers struggle
- Asia stocks begin year on cautious note
- Cosmetic surgery aficionado Jocelyne Wildenstein dies aged 79: partner
- Power restored to most of Puerto Rico: utility
- Tintin, Popeye, Hemingway among US copyrights expiring in 2025
- Finnish police probing seven sailors over cut cables
- End of Russian gas via Ukraine sparks unease in eastern Europe
- Island-wide blackout hits Puerto Rico on New Year's Eve
- Musk flummoxes internet with 'Kekius Maximus' persona
- US stocks slip as European markets ring out year with gains
- Syria's de facto leader meets minority Christians
- Panama marks canal handover anniversary in shadow of Trump threat
- US, European stock markets look to ring out year with gains
- US farmers fret over Trump's deportation plans
- Global markets rode AI, interest rate roller coaster in 2024
- European stock markets end year with gains
- Taiwan says 2024 was hottest year on record
Anguish for South Korea plane crash relatives amid grim salvage
Cries of anguish echoed through a lounge at Muan International Airport in South Korea on Monday as families waited for news of relatives killed in the weekend's Jeju Air plane crash.
The Boeing 737-800 from Thailand crashed Sunday while attempting an emergency belly landing, smashing into a wall and bursting into flames.
All but two of the 181 passengers and crew aboard were killed.
Grieving families are increasingly desperate -- and angry -- as they wait for formal identification of the remains of their loved ones, hoping to hold funerals and properly mourn.
"I apologise deeply... but the extent of the damage to the bodies is profound," an official told families at a briefing Monday, trying to explain the immense hurdles facing workers trying to recover remains while also preserving crash-site evidence.
"There are many cases in which arms and legs have been severed," he said, his words causing cries of shock and horror among the waiting families.
Using finger prints and DNA analysis, authorities have identified 146 of the victims, and are working hard on the 33 still to be verified.
- Human remains -
Soldiers were still combing through wetlands near the airport -- apparently looking for body parts -- and an AFP reporter saw blood-stained seats and splatters of human remains on the ground near the wreckage.
"We estimate that we can reconstruct 80 to 90 percent of the bodies if given a period of 10 days," the official said.
Relatives said they understood the process took time and that the bodies were "heavily damaged", but were desperate for progress.
"We want the authorities to bring our loved ones back, even if they are only 80 percent intact," Park Han-shin, who represents the victims’ relatives, told reporters.
"The temperature is rising rapidly, even though it is winter, which could lead to a situation where the remains decompose quickly," he said, calling for stepped-up search efforts in the crash zone.
He also called on the officials to bring more refrigerated containers for the remains.
The anger of the grieving relatives was palpable the night of the accident, when Jeju Air's CEO Kim E-bae, visited the families for the first time, bowing his head before them.
"With a heart full of sorrow, I express my condolences and sympathies to those who lost their lives in this accident. I also sincerely apologise to the bereaved families," he said.
- 'Save my daughter' -
But video circulating online showed family members shouting at Kim asking him why he came so late -- eleven hours after the accident.
"It only takes one hour and 40 minutes to get from Seoul to Gwangju by KTX, so what have you been doing? What are you trying to achieve by showing up only now?" yelled one family member.
Others shouted "save my daughter!" and "would you have done that if it was your own flesh and blood?"
At the crash site, the devastating impact of the accident was still evident Monday, with blood-stained debris -- seats, and twisted metal -- strewn across the site, and the smell of burning and blood lingering.
"It's heartbreaking," 71-year-old housewife Ms Yoo told AFP, saying her brother had been on the plane.
S.F.Lacroix--CPN