Seoul, May 29: A South Korean navy plane crashed during a training flight on Thursday, killing all four crew members on board, the navy said. The P-3 patrol plane took off from its base in the southeastern city of Pohang at 1:43 pm and crashed due to unknown reasons, the navy said in a statement. It said it had identified the bodies of the four crew members and was in the process of recovering them.
There were no immediate reports of civilian casualties on the ground. The navy set up a task force to investigate the crash and temporarily grounded its P-3s. An emergency office in Pohang said that rescuers and fire trucks were dispatched to the site after receiving reports from residents that an aircraft crashed on a hill near an apartment complex and caused a fire. Jeju Air Plane Crash Probe: South Korean Plane Crash Report Says Bird Remains Belonging to ‘Baikal Teals’ Were Found in Engines, but No Cause Yet Revealed.
South Korea Plane Crash
#BREAKING: SOUTH KOREAN NAVY PATROL PLANE CRASHES INTO MOUNTAIN NEAR POHANG
A Republic of Korea Navy anti-submarine patrol aircraft, identified as a Lockheed P-3CK Orion, tragically crashed into a mountain in Donghae-myeon, Nam-gu, Pohang-si on May 29, 2025. The plane had taken… pic.twitter.com/ZRkJbTwEV8
— Turbine Traveller (@Turbinetraveler) May 29, 2025
South Korea Navy Plane Crash
P-3C Navy patrol aircraft with 4 crew members onboard crashed near Pohang Airport
Crash occurred in hilly terrain near Seokgye-ri, Nam-gu, Pohang. Cause of the crash is still under investigation
Rescue ops underway. Survival status of… pic.twitter.com/leOnjLnZn0
— Nabila Jamal (@nabilajamal_) May 29, 2025
Photos showed firefighters and emergency vehicles near the crash site with flames flickering as a smoke engulfed trees. Fire crews sprayed water on what appeared to be the aircraft debris. In December, a Jeju Air passenger plane crashed at Muan International Airport in southern South Korea, killing all but two of the 181 people on board. It was one of the deadliest disasters in South Korea's aviation history.