>> ASIAONE / NEWS / LATEST NEWS / ASIA / STORY
Hunt for missiles after S.Korean jets collide
Tue, Nov 04, 2008
AFP

SEOUL - South Korea's air force was hunting for live missiles after two jet fighters collided north of Seoul on Tuesday, the defence ministry said.

Two F-5E jets brushed against each other during a training exercise and one crashed into a rice paddy after the pilot had ejected safely. The other suffered damage to its tail but managed to return to its home base.

Four undetonated air-to-air missiles - two from each jet - fell to the ground after the impact near Pocheon, 46 kilometres (29 miles) north of Seoul, the ministry said.

"One of the four missing AIM-9 missiles has been recovered and we are trying to locate the other three," air force spokesman Moon Chae-Wook told AFP.

The spokesman said there was "a very low possibility" of the missiles exploding on the ground because they were designed to be detonated only by a switch inside the jet.

The planes had taken off from an air base in Wonju earlier in the day for routine training. The cause of the collision was not immediately known.

The military suspended all flights by F-5E jets, manufactured by US firm Northrop-Grumman, following the accident, the ministry said.

The air force has about 200 of the F-5E jets.


 
 
STORY INDEX
 
  Thai transvestite beauty pageant cancelled amid political turmoil
   
 
  Blogger's remand extended
   
 
  More S'pore-Japan flights
   
 
  Transvestite teacher to be transferred
   
 
  China used planes, rockets to prevent wet end of Games
   
 
  Australian plan to create 'homophobia free-zones' attacked
   
 
  Philippines leader gets oil firms to cut diesel prices
   
 
  Taiwan's anti-China ex-president accuses incumbent of sedition
   
 
  China city plans bigger fares for striking cabbies
   
 
  China top target for computer attacks
   
>> RELATED STORY
Hunt for missiles after S.Korean jets collide
Fighter jet crash confirmed
Video: Plane flight terror
Video: Two UK lovers take the plunge

Elsewhere in AsiaOne...

Travel: More executives choosing Jetstar

Digital: An iPod as a flight recorder?

 

We welcome contributions, comments and tips.
a1admin@sph.com.sg