- Osaka retires with abdominal injury from Australian Open warm-up
- Cummins lauds 'special' Australia team after India series win
- Naomi Osaka retires injured from Auckland Classic final
- NYC starts driver congestion charging despite opposition
- S. Korea's Yoon ignored cabinet opposition to martial law: prosecutors
- Ravens secure AFC North, Bengals stay alive
- Frustrated Bumrah says India will benefit from Australia defeat
- Crowds, cracking cricket: Five talking points from Australia v India
- Henry, Young power New Zealand to nine-wicket ODI win over Sri Lanka
- Australia win gripping fifth India Test to take series 3-1
- Pistons top Timberwolves despite Edwards's 53 points
- South Koreans protest in snow as Yoon arrest deadline nears
- Australia win riveting fifth India Test to take series 3-1
- Henry takes four as Sri Lanka slump to 178 all out in New Zealand ODI
- Fresh South Korea protests expected as president arrest deadline nears
- Matsuyama maintains one-shot lead over Morikawa on low-scoring day at Sentry
- Australia 91 runs from victory in knife-edge fifth India Test
- Bezos's Blue Origin poised for first orbital launch next week
- Hollywood A-listers set to shine at Golden Globes
- Ravens secure AFC North with win over Browns
- Thousands line Suriname streets in homage to late dictator Bouterse
- Lille keep heat on Ligue 1 leaders, Lyon escape against Montpellier
- Bordeaux back on Top 14 summit as Toulouse frustrated at La Rochelle
- Messi misses Presidential Medal ceremony with Biden
- Blinken wades into political crisis with stop in South Korea
- Arteta aghast at Brighton penalty as Arsenal stumble in Premier League title race
- Gaza truce talks resume in Qatar as violence shows no let-up
- Austria's chancellor to step down after coalition talks collapse
- Bono, Messi, Soros awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom by Biden
- Arsenal stumble in Premier League title race as Man City stroll
- Arsenal draw at Brighton edges Liverpool closer to Premier League title
- Exiled Venezuelan opposition leader to speak with Biden, visit US
- Napoli see off Fiorentina to top Serie A in rivals' absence
- Bordeaux take Top 14 lead as Toulon win overshadowed by Ollivon injury
- World's oldest person dies at 116 in Japan
- Man City still not 'like we were' despite West Ham rout: Guardiola
- Cartoonist quits Washington Post over rejected sketch mocking owner, Trump
- Haaland doubles up in Man City stroll as Spurs fume
- 39 bell tolls begin final national sendoff for Jimmy Carter
- Gaza rescuers says 31 killed in Israeli strikes
- Pakistan in trouble after Rickelton leads South African run feast
- Postecoglou angered by Newcastle snatch and grab at struggling Spurs
- Shah Test century tips tide in favour of Afghanistan
- Egypt apprehensive over Islamist win in Syria
- Gaza rescuers says 26 killed in Israeli strikes
- Quintero wins Dakar 1st stage as big guns keep powder dry
- Isak fires Newcastle to victory at struggling Spurs
- Rickelton hits 259 as South Africa take control against Pakistan
- Barcelona's Olmo suffers fresh registration setback
- Chicherit wins Dakar 1st stage as big guns keep powder dry
South Korea begins lifting Jeju Air wreckage after fatal crash
South Korean investigators on Friday began lifting the wreckage of the Jeju Air plane that crashed five days ago, killing 179 people in the worst aviation disaster on its soil, AFP reporters saw.
The flight was carrying 181 passengers and crew from Thailand to South Korea on Sunday when it issued a mayday call and belly-landed before slamming into a barrier, killing all aboard except two flight attendants.
The exact cause of the flight's crash is still unknown, but investigators have pointed to a bird strike, faulty landing gear, and an installation at the end of the runway that the plane struck as possible issues.
Using a large yellow crane, investigators began lifting sections of the plane's burned-out wreckage, AFP reporters near the crash site saw, including what appeared to be an engine.
"Today, we will lift the tail section of the plane," Na Won-ho, South Jeolla provincial police's head of investigations, told a press conference at Muan International Airport where the crash happened.
"We expect there may be remains found in that section," Na said.
"For all that to be complete and to have the results, we must wait until tomorrow."
All 179 victims have been identified and some of the bodies have been released to families for funerals to begin.
But due to the nature of the crash, officials have warned that some of the bodies suffered extreme damage, and it was taking investigators time to piece them together, while also preserving crash site evidence.
- More raids -
Police had vowed to quickly determine the cause and responsibility for the disaster, while officers, soldiers and white-suited investigators combed the crash site.
But the transport ministry said it could take six months to three years to determine the precise cause of the crash.
Police conducted a series of raids on Thursday and Friday of the offices of Jeju Air and the Muan airport operator as they stepped up their probe.
Police were securing evidence from the airport's localizer -- a concrete wall housing an antenna array -- as well as the communication record between the control tower and pilot shortly before the plane crash, Yonhap reported.
South Korea has also announced it will inspect all Boeing 737-800 aircraft operated by its carriers, focusing on the landing gear, which appears to have malfunctioned during the Sunday crash.
The investigation is headed by South Korean air safety officials, with the assistance of the US Federal Aviation Administration, which frequently aids with probes into global plane crashes.
Relatives of the victims have flooded to the crash site to pay their respects and collect the belongings of their loved ones.
The country's acting president, Choi Sang-mok, who has only been in office for a week, said all victims were identified and more bodies had been handed over to relatives so they could hold funerals.
A.Gasser--BTB