Truro News

Civilian drills grow lax among South Koreans used to threats

-

Once or twice a year, activity on the streets of South Korea’s capital freezes as a wailing siren marks a nationwide drill aimed at preparing against a North Korean attack. Cars stop on roads. Pedestrian­s move into buildings and subway stations. Government buildings are evacuated.

The scenes during the latest airraid drill on Wednesday are remarkable for turning parts of this usually bustling city into a ghost town. But a closer look raises questions about whether the exercises are adequately preparing South Koreans while the threat from North Korea’s nuclear and missile program grows.

For many, there’s no real training, just people standing around in schoolyard­s or other gathering spots, staring into their smartphone­s, chatting amiably or just looking bored or frustrated.

Many schools don’t participat­e in the air-raid drills and those that do often escort children outside. Leaving their buildings would be a good idea during earthquake­s, but a terrible decision during attacks.

The country has nearly 19,000 evacuation shelters, mostly built in subway stations and the parking garages of apartments and large buildings. Yet a 2014 government survey found that an overwhelmi­ng number of South Koreans did not know which shelters were closest to their homes.

“No, I don’t know. I don’t think anybody knows,” 31-year-old Park Ji-na said shortly after Wednesday’s drill.

The 2014 survey, by the National Disaster Management Research Institute, also found that only 10 per cent of the 145 adults polled had CPR experience, and just seven per cent owned gas masks.

Most South Koreans have lived their entire lives facing threats from North Korea, and few show great worry.

“Realistica­lly, the people who live in this country aren’t thinking much about” the threats, Park said. “They are on the news all the time, but it’s not like they are real threats affecting our lives.”

National and local government­s and even companies organize the exercises. South Korea launched its current civil defence program in 1975, when the country was still run by a military dictator. Through the 1980s, nationwide evacuation drills were held on the 15th of nearly every month.

In decades past, civil servants wearing yellow armbands whistled people off the streets and teachers ordered school children to crouch under their desks for exercises that lasted 30 minutes. There were even nighttime drills where people were instructed to turn off the lights and television­s at their homes to deter an imaginary attack by North Korean bombers.

The drills became less frequent and more casual after the 1990s amid rising public complaints and a temporary improvemen­t in relations between the rival Koreas. Today, though North Korea’s nuclear weapons developmen­t and fierce rhetoric have drawn deep internatio­nal concern, South Koreans are both inured to the threats and distracted by life in a country that is now about Asia’s busiest and most vibrant.

Kim Dae Young, a military expert at the Korea Research Institute for National Strategy, said the drills are failing to equip people with even basic informatio­n, such as how and where to evacuate and how to secure drinking water and other supplies during times of crisis.

Noh Sang-yeol also was among those who did not know the shelter closest to his home. The 65-year-old said there’s a need to strengthen training programs because the current drills are doing “nothing at all” to prepare people.

“I read from the newspapers that people in Japan, Guam or Taiwan are preparing well and even stacking up on food in case of emergency, and that made me think whether I should begin buying water or battery supplies,” he said.

An official from Seoul’s Ministry of Interior and Safety said that although South Korea is considerin­g whether its civil defence programs should be strengthen­ed, it would be impossible to bring quick changes.

“These drills are intended for the entire nation and changes can’t be made overnight by one or two people sitting on a desk,” said the official, who didn’t want to be named, citing office rules. “There should be close and comprehens­ive studies on people’s willingnes­s to participat­e and their awareness of national security issues before we could specifical­ly determine what kind of training would be possible.”

Wednesday’s air-raid drill followed North Korea’s two interconti­nental ballistic missile tests in July and its threat to lob missiles toward Guam earlier this month. The government had planned to send military planes over major cities emitting colored smoke to simulate an attack, but the flights were cancelled in Seoul and many other areas due to heavy rain and low clouds, according to the interior ministry.

Government workers during the drill distribute­d leaflets instructin­g people what to do during an attack, which included recommenda­tions to prepare to gas masks, raincoats and soap in case of nuclear, biological or chemical attacks.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? People stand at the entrance to a shelter during a civil defense drill in Seoul, South Korea on Wednesday.
AP PHOTO People stand at the entrance to a shelter during a civil defense drill in Seoul, South Korea on Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada