South Korea in mourning: Air crash shakes nation as 2024 draws to a close

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Updated 31 December 2024
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South Korea in mourning: Air crash shakes nation as 2024 draws to a close

South Korea in mourning: Air crash shakes nation as 2024 draws to a close
  • 179 people were killed in the deadliest aviation on South Korean soil on Sunday
  • Families are still waiting at Muan airport to receive the bodies of their relatives

MUAN, South Korea: South Koreans ended the year in nationwide mourning on Tuesday, with bereaved families gathered at Muan Airport to receive the bodies of their loved ones killed in the deadliest-ever aviation disaster on the country’s soil.

The crash of Jeju Air flight 7CC216 from Bangkok to the southern Muan County on Sunday killed 179 people when the plane skidded off the runway, hit a concrete mound and exploded into flames. Only two people — both flight attendants — survived.

Investigators have recovered over 600 body parts from the crash site so far, as relatives and friends waited at the airport for authorities to release the victims’ remains.

“I am sorry the identification process took longer than initially promised,” said Na Won-oh, head investigator of the police in Jeonnam Province, where the airport is located.

All but five bodies have been identified as of Tuesday afternoon, as officials began to release the remains in the process expected to take another few days.

All the passengers were South Koreans, except for two Thai nationals.

“I am so heartbroken, and this is so tiring. It is really, really difficult for me,” said Park Han-shin, who lost his younger brother in the disaster.

Cries of angry relatives scolding authorities echoed through the airport, after they discovered that the bodies were spread out on the ground and not placed in refrigerators as officials had promised to do earlier.

“Our brothers, siblings and family are lying on the floor. We had demanded a cold storage unit, but (the government) did not provide it. We have to take back the bodies in good condition,” Park said.

The units were brought in later, following the complaints.

During another round of identification on Tuesday morning, people embraced one another and began to cry as officials read out the victims’ names.

“My daughter is really dead,” a woman said, hugging her husband after they heard their child’s name.

When several lawmakers made their way through the airport’s halls to meet the grieving families, a father cried:

“I just want him to find peace. He is lying there … God knows where … I want to take my son home.”

Another man showed a photo of his son to Korean lawmaker Jung Chung-rae as he fell into sobs.

“He was so handsome. Now I can’t see him,” he said. “We are all just holding it in. We are all just hanging on because we are all going through the same thing.”

South Korea is observing seven days of mourning, with flags flying at half-mast and memorials set up across the nation.

The crash on Sunday was the deadliest aviation accident ever on South Korean soil.

At the Muan airport, families were overseeing the set-up of a memorial, with dozens of black-and-white flowers filling the area. Mourners were trickling in to pay respects for the victims.

“A few people from my neighborhood were also killed. There is a memorial in our town as well, but I wanted to come support the bereaved,” said Nam Eun-hui, who drove almost two hours to reach the site.

“When I first heard of the accident on the news, I thought more people would be saved. I didn’t know it would be such a big tragedy.”


Indian hotel suppliers plan to use Jeddah expo to enter Saudi market

Indian hotel suppliers plan to use Jeddah expo to enter Saudi market
Updated 4 sec ago
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Indian hotel suppliers plan to use Jeddah expo to enter Saudi market

Indian hotel suppliers plan to use Jeddah expo to enter Saudi market
  • Jeddah hosts 2025 Hotel and Restaurant Supplies Expo from Dec. 9-11
  • Event will feature ‘Made in India’ display to spotlight Indian hospitality goods 

NEW DELHI: Indian hotel suppliers are planning to display their products at a supplies expo in Jeddah in December, as they seek to enter the growing Saudi hospitality market. 

The Saudi port city is hosting the 2025 Hotel and Restaurant Supplies Expo from Dec. 9-11. This will be the seventh edition of the exhibition, which connects international suppliers with hospitality players in the Kingdom. 

For the first time, the event will feature a “Made in India” showcase to highlight India’s role as a “rapidly emerging” and “go-to” sourcing hub for the global hospitality sector. 

“We are expecting high interest from Indian manufacturers to enter the Saudi market as India has the best quality with the manufacturing (of) hospitality (products),” Zeinab Ayoub, marketing manager of Jeddah-based exhibition organizer Wehdat Al-Ertikaz, told Arab News. 

Ayoub attended at the International Hospitality Expo in the Indian city of Greater Noida this week to encourage potential Indian suppliers to join the Jeddah expo in December. 

“Lots of exhibitors are interested to join the exhibition because they want to enter the Saudi market. For most of them it is the first time to enter Saudi Arabia, so this is an opportunity,” she said. 

“We have met lots of exhibitors from different categories; mattresses, F&B, horeca (hotels, restaurants, cafes) suppliers, tableware, textiles, hotel amenities.” 

Indian manufacturers see the Jeddah event as their opportunity to enter the Saudi market, especially after businesses from the Kingdom and the wider Gulf region showed interest for their products at the event in Noida. 

“If we get an opportunity to work with the Saudi people we will love to do that. We have got few clients, few enquiries from the Saudi people. There is another show that is happening in Jeddah and we are definitely going to participate in that show,” Pawan Kumar Verma, owner of 17 Nakshtra Art Works manufacturer, told Arab News. 

“Saudi is a big market, it’s a big lucrative market. Definitely we will look forward to seeing that market and we are very keen to work with the Saudi people … there are new hotels, upcoming hotels. So we will have good opportunities out there.” 

Under Vision 2030, Saudi Arabia aims to develop the tourism industry — its second largest after oil — to make the Kingdom one of the most prominent tourist destinations in the world. 

The government’s strategy appears to focus on building high-end properties, with global real estate consultancy Knight Frank expecting more than 58,000 new hotel rooms developed in the next five years. 

Yash Nagpal, owner of a mirror manufacturing company, sees the Saudi pivot to upscale properties as an opportunity for his products. 

“Saudi Arabia has taken a lot of initiative towards tourism and all that. It is good to see a country improving in terms of tourism. It is helping us also that the hospitality industry is growing,” he told Arab News. 

“From the past few years it has been one of the main markets for Indian business exports … I would like to work with Saudi Arabia, even with the mirrors, we have a luxury feel, so (in line) with the Saudi Arabian vibes.” 

Navneet Kamra, owner of Delhi-based Iris Hotel Craft, also sees the Saudi market as key to his business growth. 

“Saudi Arabia is a good country, they are expanding. It’s a bigger opportunity for us. There is a huge demand in the coming years and we can fulfil,” he told Arab News. 

“Saudis are growing so we can also grow with them.” 


Spain favors European options over US-made F-35 fighter jets

Spain favors European options over US-made F-35 fighter jets
Updated 6 sec ago
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Spain favors European options over US-made F-35 fighter jets

Spain favors European options over US-made F-35 fighter jets
The decision comes after the tension between Madrid and Washington
The aircraft are made by US aerospace giant Lockheed Martin

MADRID: Spain has decided against purchasing US-made F-35 fighter jets and will instead opt for European-made options, the defense ministry said Wednesday, confirming a report in El Pais newspaper.

The decision comes after the tension between Madrid and Washington over Spain’s refusal to raise defense spending to 5.0 percent of economic output, as demanded by US President Donald Trump.

El Pais reported earlier Wednesday, citing unnamed government sources, that Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez’s leftist government had shelved plans to buy the F-35 jets and would explore European alternatives.

The government had earmarked 6.25 billion euros ($7.25 billion) in its 2023 budget to buy new fighter jets. British defense publication Janes had reported that Spain was considering the purchase of up to 50 F-35 units, the newspaper said.

But government’s plan to spend the bulk of the additional 10.5 billion euros in defense spending announced for this year rules out the purchase of the F-35 jets, it added.

The aircraft are made by US aerospace giant Lockheed Martin.

A defense ministry statement said the Spanish option involved the European-made Eurofighter and fighter jets made by the European Future Combat Air System (FCAS) project, whose primary industrial partners are Dassault Aviation and Airbus.

Sanchez announced earlier this year plans to increase spending on defense to this year meet the NATO target of 2.0 percent of economic output set in 2024.

But he later refused to raise spending in the longer run to 5.0 percent, prompting Trump to threaten Spain with additional tariffs.

Kremlin calls Putin-Witkoff talks ‘constructive’ ahead of US sanctions deadline

Kremlin calls Putin-Witkoff talks ‘constructive’ ahead of US sanctions deadline
Updated 51 min 41 sec ago
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Kremlin calls Putin-Witkoff talks ‘constructive’ ahead of US sanctions deadline

Kremlin calls Putin-Witkoff talks ‘constructive’ ahead of US sanctions deadline
  • Witkoff held around three hours of talks with Putin in the Kremlin

MOSCOW: Talks between Russian President Vladimir Putin and US special envoy Steve Witkoff were “useful and constructive,” Kremlin foreign policy aide Yuri Ushakov said on Wednesday.

Witkoff held around three hours of talks with Putin in the Kremlin, two days before the expiry of a deadline set by President Donald Trump for Russia to agree to peace in Ukraine or face new sanctions.

Ushakov told Russian news outlet Zvezda that the two sides discussed the conflict in Ukraine and the potential for improving US-Russia relations. He said Moscow had received certain “signals” from Trump and had sent messages in return.


Wildfire forces evacuations in Spanish tourist town

Wildfire forces evacuations in Spanish tourist town
Updated 55 min 8 sec ago
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Wildfire forces evacuations in Spanish tourist town

Wildfire forces evacuations in Spanish tourist town
  • Spanish public broadcaster TVE reported that the fire had started in a camper van at a local campsite, with strong winds spreading the blaze quickly

MADRID: Firefighters battled a wildfire Wednesday near the southern Spanish tourist town of Tarifa, where more than 1,500 people had to be evacuated as shifting winds hampered efforts to control the blaze.

Although fire crews managed to secure areas near hotels and tourist accommodation, the fire remained active and uncontained, said officials.

“What concerns us most right now is the wind — whether it shifts between the west and east,” said Antonio Sanz, interior minister for Andalusia’s regional government.

The wildfire broke out Tuesday afternoon near La Pena, a wooded area close to a beach just outside Tarifa. The town of about 19,000 residents on Spain’s southernmost coast, is known for its strong winds, which draw kite- and windsurfers.

Spanish public broadcaster TVE reported that the fire had started in a camper van at a local campsite, with strong winds spreading the blaze quickly.

The fire forced the evacuation of 1,550 people from campsites, hotels, and homes, as well as about 5,000 vehicles, mostly belonging to beachgoers, said Sanz.

Emergency crews worked overnight to prevent the fire from reaching coastal resorts, but residents and tourists evacuated have not yet been allowed to return, he added.

Spain is currently experiencing a heatwave, with temperatures nearing 40 degrees Celsius in many regions.

Civil protection authorities have warned that wildfire risk remains “very high” or “extreme” across much of the country.


Russian and Chinese navies practice destroying ‘enemy submarine’, days after Trump move

Russian and Chinese navies practice destroying ‘enemy submarine’, days after Trump move
Updated 06 August 2025
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Russian and Chinese navies practice destroying ‘enemy submarine’, days after Trump move

Russian and Chinese navies practice destroying ‘enemy submarine’, days after Trump move
  • The two countries signed a “no limits” strategic partnership to conduct regular military exercises in order to rehearse coordination between their armed forces and send a deterrent signal to adversaries

The Russian and Chinese navies have practiced hunting and destroying an enemy submarine in the Sea of Japan, Russia’s defense ministry said on Wednesday, days after US President Donald Trump said he had moved two US nuclear subs closer to Russia.

Russia said the exercise involved Chinese Y-8 anti-submarine aircraft and Il-38 planes from Russia’s Pacific Fleet, as well as helicopter crews.

“As a result of effective joint actions, the ‘enemy’ submarine was promptly detected and mock-destroyed,” the defense ministry said.

“After practicing anti-submarine tasks, the crews of the Russian and Chinese ships thanked each other for their fruitful work.”

Trump said his submarine order last Friday was made in response to what he called “highly provocative” remarks by former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev about the risk of war between the nuclear-armed adversaries.

The Kremlin this week played down the significance of Trump’s announcement, saying US submarines are on constant combat duty anyway, and said that “everyone should be very, very careful with nuclear rhetoric.”

The episode came at a delicate moment, with Trump threatening to impose new sanctions on Russia and buyers of its oil, including India and China, unless President Vladimir Putin agrees by Friday to end the 3-1/2-year war in Ukraine.

The anti-submarine exercise was part of a wider series of Russian-Chinese naval drills over the past week.

The two countries, which signed a “no-limits” strategic partnership shortly before Russia went to war in Ukraine in 2022, conduct regular military exercises to rehearse coordination between their armed forces and send a deterrent signal to adversaries.