Asiana to sue San Francisco TV station

Asiana Airlines says it will sue a San Francisco TV station but not the US National Transportation Safety Board over the broadcast of bogus pilot names.

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Asiana Airlines says it will sue a San Francisco TV station, accusing it of damaging the airline's reputation by using bogus and racially offensive names for four pilots on the plane that crashed in San Francisco.

An anchor for KTVU-TV read the names on the air on Friday and then apologised after a break.

The report was accompanied by a graphic with the phoney names listed alongside a photo of the burned-out plane that had crashed at San Francisco International Airport on July 6, killing three and injuring dozens.

Video of the report has spread widely across the internet since it was broadcast.

The National Transportation Safety Board has also apologised, saying a summer intern erroneously confirmed the names of the flight crew.

Asiana has decided to sue KTVU-TV to "strongly respond to its racially discriminatory report" that disparaged Asians, Asiana spokeswoman Lee Hyomin said.

She said the airline will likely file suit in US courts.

She said the report seriously damaged Asiana's reputation.

Asiana decided not to sue the NTSB because it said it was the TV station report, not the US federal agency that damaged the airline's reputation. Lee did not elaborate.

Neither the station nor the NTSB commented on where the names originated.

The four pilots, who underwent questioning by a US and South Korean joint investigation team while in the US, returned to South Korea on Saturday.

South Korean officials plan to conduct separate interviews with them, South Korea's Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport said.


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Source: AAP


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