Audio By Carbonatix South Korean authorities have found that two fighter jets collided mid-air in 2021 because the pilots were taking pictures and videos. The incident took place while the jets were on a flight mission in the central city of Daegu, according to Seoul's Board of Audit and Inspection. The pilots survived with no injuries, but the collision damaged the planes, costing the military 880 million won ($596,000; £440,500) in repairs. One of the pilots, who has since left the military, was made to pay a fine of 88 million won. The incident took place because that pilot had wanted to take photos to commemorate his last flight with his military unit. Taking photos of significant flights was "a widespread practice among pilots at the time", the audit board said in a report published on Wednesday. The pilot had declared his intent to do so in a briefing before the flight, according to the report. He was flying the wingman aircraft and was following the lead aircraft during the mission. While flying back to their base, he started taking pictures using his personal mobile phone. Upon noticing this, the pilot of the lead aircraft then asked another pilot on his plane to film a video of the wingman aircraft. The wingman pilot then abruptly flew his jet up higher and flipped it so that it could be better captured on camera. This manoeuvre brought the two planes very close to each other. To avoid a crash, the lead aircraft tried to rapidly descend. But the two F-15K jets eventually collided, damaging the lead aircraft's left wing and the wingman aircraft's tail stabiliser. South Korea's air force suspended the wingman pilot, who has since left the military to work for a commercial airline. Subsequently, the air force sought to fine the wingman pilot 880 million won to cover the full amount of the repair costs. When the pilot appealed against the fine, it prompted an investigation by the audit board. The wingman pilot acknowledged his sudden manoeuvre led to the collision, but argued that the lead aircraft's pilot had "tacitly consented" to the manoeuvre since he was aware that filming was taking place. The audit board eventually ruled that the wingman pilot should only pay a tenth of what the air force sought. It said that the air force should bear some responsibility for not properly regulating pilots' personal use of cameras. The board also took into account that the wingman pilot had a good track record prior to the incident, and that he had managed to prevent further damage by promptly commandeering a safe return of his aircraft to the base. The report did not mention whether any action was taken against the other pilots involved in the incident. DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited. Tags: Pictures Pilots South Korea DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited. Related to this story South Korea jails American YouTuber for public nuisance South Korea deploys thermal cameras to track escaped zoo wolf Airline pilots fear retribution over refusing to fly in Middle East, aviators’ group says South Korea police raid transport ministry over Jeju Air crash Mahama calls for peace, collaboration and hope during honorary degree conferment in South Korea President Mahama awarded an honorary doctorate by South Korea’s Yonsei University President Mahama commissions Sahara LPG Vessel in South Korea Photos: Mahama commissions Ghana-named Vessel in South Korea Mahama calls for a win-win partnership with South Korea Ghana, South Korea affirm shared values during bilateral talks Latest Stories US charges anti-extremism group over payments to informants in hate groups1 minute Thirteen killed in second India fireworks blast in three days2 minutes Economy faced significant slowdown in liquidity expansion in 2025 – BoG6 minutes Banks cut significantly loans to real sector, still prefers T-bills – BoG10 minutes South Korean fighter jets collided due to pilots snapping pictures, report finds11 minutes Ghana Beverage Awards celebrates 10th Anniversary in grand style18 minutes Stakeholders were not consulted before Publican AI rollout at ports – GUTA22 minutes Heath Goldfields rejects ‘misleading’ claims, affirms Bogoso-Prestea operations ongoing23 minutes Mentorship shaped my communications career – Sammi Awuku26 minutes Bad roads in Atonsu Bokro force residents to carry sick, elderly to hospital44 minutes Cabinet approves visa waiver agreements with Zambia, Maldives and Antigua and Barbuda45 minutes Oil prices dip as Trump extends Iran war ceasefire56 minutes Kpebu backs calls to terminate Bogoso-Prestea lease over ‘serious breaches’58 minutes Pesa boosts creativity among youth through art competition at Great Mission Rehab centre1 hour Government commends 3Farmate’s Ghana-made autonomous farming robot for modernized farming1 hour
politics
South Korean fighter jets collided due to pilots snapping pictures, report finds
MyJoyOnlineBy Emmanuel TettehWed, 22 Apr 2026 · 2h ago0 views
Share:

Photo credit: MyJoyOnline
Two South Korean F-15K fighter jets collided mid-air in 2021 near Daegu due to pilots taking photos and videos during a flight mission, a report found. The pilots survived, but the incident caused 880 million won in damages. One pilot, who took photos for his last flight, was fined. The audit board noted this was a widespread practice.
Source
MyJoyOnline
#["International"#"Pictures"#"Pilots"#"South Korea"]