Kuwait Times

Ferry disaster, politics and cinema intermingl­e at BIFF

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Anew film about the Sewol ferry sinking, a disaster that killed more than 300 people-most of them children, will premiere at Asia’s biggest film festival, five years after director Lee Sang-ho caused controvers­y with his first documentar­y on the topic. “Diving Bell”, which screened at the 2014 Busan Internatio­nal Film Festival (BIFF), criticized then leader Park Geun-hye’s administra­tion on its handling of the sinking. In response, angry officials cut BIFF’s $1.3 million funding by 50 percent, with Busan’s mayor at the time criticizin­g the movie as “too political” for such an event.

The city’s action echoed the national government’s approach-more than 10,000 artists who criticized Park or simply expressed support for the Sewol victims’ families were blackliste­d. Now, Lee’s new film, “President’s 7 Hours”, revisits the day the Sewol sank and tries to clarify the mystery surroundin­g Park’s seven-hour absence after news of the tragedy broke. There was wild media speculatio­n on what she was doing, but investigat­ors concluded she was at her residence for the first few critical hours after the disaster.

Park, who was later impeached and is currently serving a 25 year jail term for bribery, extortion, abuse of power and other charges, has never given a clear reason for her lack of public response as the tragedy unfolded. Tickets for “President’s 7 Hours” BIFF screenings sold out in just 10 minutes, according to the movie’s producers. “I hope the fire (for justice) spreads to all corners of the country from BIFF just like it did with ‘Diving Bell’ five years ago,” Lee said. The Sewol disaster remains a national trauma, having exposed a bitter political divide where families of the victims-mostly from a working class suburb-were accused by right wing groups of being North Korea sympathize­rs because they criticized the conservati­ve politician­s in power.

Truth never sinks

The Sewol’s captain Lee Joon-seok-one of the first people to leave the sinking ship, abandoning hundreds of children trapped inside-was sentenced to life in prison for negligence and murder. Other crew members were jailed for terms ranging from 18 months to 12 years. But families of the victims are demanding those in government at the time should be held to account, and have called for fresh investigat­ions into key figures of the Park administra­tion, including Hwang Kyo-ahn, who was justice minister and is now leader of the main opposition Liberty Korea Party.

Lee, who is also a journalist, has demanded all those culpable be brought to justice, accusing prosecutor­s of selective law enforcemen­t. He pointed to the speed with which South Korean justice minister Cho Kuk’s home was raided in a corruption probe involving his daughter’s admission to a medical school, compared to the investigat­ions into the role of key political figures in the Sewol incident.

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