Air China Flight 129
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Air China Flight 129
Summary
Air China Flight 129 is an aviation accident[1]. It ranks in the top 8% of aviation_accident entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (850 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Air China Flight 129 is in the country of South Korea[3].
- Air China Flight 129's instance of is recorded as aviation accident[4].
- Air China Flight 129 is operated by Air China[5].
- The location of Air China Flight 129 was Gimhae[6].
- Air China Flight 129's Commons category is recorded as Air China Flight 129[7].
- Air China Flight 129's aircraft registration is recorded as B-2552[8].
- Air China Flight 129 occurred on April 15, 2002[9].
- Air China Flight 129's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 35.2327, 'lon': 128.928}[10].
- A participant in Air China Flight 129 was Air China[11].
- Air China Flight 129's has cause is recorded as controlled flight into terrain[12].
- Air China Flight 129's has cause is recorded as pilot error[13].
- Air China Flight 129 resulted in {'amount': '+129'} deaths[14].
- Air China Flight 129's depicted by is recorded as Turning Point[15].
- Air China Flight 129 caused {'amount': '+37'} injuries[16].
- Air China Flight 129's start point is recorded as Beijing Capital International Airport[17].
- Air China Flight 129's destination point is recorded as Gimhae International Airport[18].
- Air China Flight 129's number of survivors is recorded as {'amount': '+37'}[19].
- Air China Flight 129's investigated by is recorded as Korea Aviation Accident Investigation Board[20].
- Air China Flight 129's vessel is recorded as Boeing 767-200ER[21].
- Air China Flight 129's flight number is recorded as CA129[22].
Body
When and Where
Air China Flight 129 occurred on April 15, 2002[9]. It took place at Gimhae[6]. It is in the country of South Korea[3].
Context
Air China Flight 129's instance of is recorded as aviation accident[4].
Participants
Among those involved in Air China Flight 129 was Air China[11].
Outcome and Impact
Air China Flight 129 resulted in {'amount': '+129'} deaths[14]. It caused {'amount': '+37'} injuries[16].
Why It Matters
Air China Flight 129 ranks in the top 8% of aviation_accident entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (850 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 17 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23] It is known by 13 alternative names across languages and contexts.[24]