China Daily (Hong Kong)

Building owner, manager arrested in South Korean fire that claimed 29 lives

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SEOUL — South Korean police have arrested the owner and the manager of a building where 29 people died in a fire last week, accusing the pair of multiple safety lapses, including blocked exits and malfunctio­ning sprinkler systems.

On Thursday, a fire ripped through an eight-story highrise in the small city of Jecheon. At least 20 of the victims were women who were overcome by toxic fumes in a second-floor sauna.

Jecheon police have only identified the owner by his last name of Lee, and the manager by his last name of Kim.

Both men are in custody in Jecheon after being arrested on Sunday, police said on Tuesday.

Lee faces two charges of violating fire safety regulation­s and committing involuntar­y homicide by profession­al negligence, while Kim also faces the involuntar­y homicide charge.

If convicted of involuntar­y homicide, Lee and Kim could face up to five years in prison or $16,000 in fines.

“The sprinkler system on the building’s first floor did not work properly when the fire erupted,” said a police detective who asked not to be named as he was not authorized to speak on an ongoing investigat­ion. “If the sprinkler system worked, the fire probably would not have spread as fast as it did.”

Police said on Tuesday that Lee has retained a lawyer but declined to name the lawyer or firm. Police said Kim has not yet hired a lawyer.

Photos released by the Yonhap news agency showed a smoke-stained stairwell and a fire exit filled with shelves and supplies on the second floor, where most of the deaths occurred.

“The emergency exit on the building’s second floor was blocked by iron shelves and other miscellane­ous items,” the detective confirmed.

Officials are still investigat­ing the cause of the conflagrat­ion.

According to police, both Kim and Lee had denied reports they were trying to remove ice on the ceiling of the first floor, where the fire appeared to have originated, but later changed their statements after police confronted them with evidence.

The Korea JoongAng Daily newspaper reported on Tuesday that Lee had at one point told police he did not alert the women in the sauna because they were undressed, however, the police detective told Reuters he could not confirm that as investigat­ions were ongoing.

Anger mounted over the weekend at reports of shoddy constructi­on, broken doors, blocked roads and other problems that may have contribute­d to the deaths.

A number of cars parked along the narrow roads around the building impeded the ability of firefighte­rs to reach the fire, an official with the Jecheon fire department told Reuters, but noted that none of the parked vehicles appeared to have violated parking rules.

“Although vehicles can park there legally, it was quite difficult for fire trucks to go through to get to the scene, because the road was too narrow,” said the fire official, who declined to be named as he was not authorized to speak publicly.

Visiting the scene on Friday, President Moon Jae-in promised a full investigat­ion.

 ?? YONHAP VIA REUTERS ?? A survivor jumps onto an air mattress from a burning building in Jecheon, South Korea, on Thursday.
YONHAP VIA REUTERS A survivor jumps onto an air mattress from a burning building in Jecheon, South Korea, on Thursday.

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