Asiana Airlines to take legal action against TV station over fake names

Airline claims reputation was damaged by broadcasting incorrect names of pilots

The wrecked fuselage of Asiana Airlines flght 214 sits in a storage area at San Francisco International Airport  in San Francisco, California. Photograph: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
The wrecked fuselage of Asiana Airlines flght 214 sits in a storage area at San Francisco International Airport in San Francisco, California. Photograph: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Asiana Airlines said a California television station "seriously damaged" the carrier's reputation by broadcasting incorrect names of the pilots on its jet that crashed in San Francisco earlier this month.

Asiana decided to take "strong steps" to sue KTVU-TV because the report was racially discriminating, Lee Hyo Min, a spokeswoman for the South Korean airline, said in Seoul today.

The company will take legal action in the US, she said. KTVU channel 2 issued an apology last Friday after its noon newscast that misidentified the Asiana pilots.

The network said it made “several mistakes” when it got the information, according to a statement on its website. Calls to the TV station in Oakland were not answered outside regular office hours today.

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The US National Transportation Safety Board also apologised for “inaccurate and offensive names that were mistakenly confirmed” as those of the pilots of the crashed jet, the board said in a statement last week.

“In response to an inquiry from a media outlet, a summer intern acted outside the scope of his authority when he erroneously confirmed the names of the flight crew on the aircraft,” NTSB said.

Three people were killed while more than 300 survived the wreck at San Francisco International Airport, the first fatal airline accident in the US since 2009. It was Seoul-based Asiana's first crash since a Boeing 747 cargo plane went down at sea in July 2011.

The Asiana Boeing 777 crashed as it struck a seawall short of a runway, slammed to the ground and spun off the tarmac.

South Korean investigators plan to investigate the pilots after they undergo medical checkups, the transport ministry said. The pilots returned to Seoul last Friday, it said.