The Borneo Post

Two Seoul police officers convicted over deadly Halloween crush

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SEOUL: A South Korean court sentenced two former senior police officers yesterday for destroying evidence linked to Seoul's deadly 2022 Halloween crush – the first police officials to be sentenced over the disaster.

Tens of thousands of people – mostly in their 20s and 30s – had been out on Oct 29, 2022, to enjoy the first post-pandemic holiday celebratio­ns in the popular Itaewon nightlife district.

But the night turned deadly when people poured into a narrow, sloping alleyway between bars and clubs, the weight of their bodies and a lack of effective crowd control leading to nearly 160 people being crushed to death.

The two former police officers were handed jail time for ordering in the aftermath of the disaster the deletion of four internal police reports which had identified in advance safety concerns over possible overcrowdi­ng in the area.

The Seoul Western District Court sentenced Park Sungmin, a former senior intelligen­ce officer at the Seoul Metropolit­an Police Agency, to 1.5 years in prison, and Kim Jin-ho, a former intelligen­ce officer at the Yongsan Police Station to one year in prison, suspended for three years.

"The defendants should have actively cooperated with the investigat­ion by preserving existing data, but on the contrary, they deleted or arbitraril­y destroyed internal reports written prior to the accident and destroyed evidence," the court said.

The court added that "harsh punishment" was inevitable as they "made it difficult to determine the substantia­l truth by minimising and concealing the responsibi­lity of the police."

Park and Kim are the first police officers to be convicted over the Itaewon disaster.

In January, Kim Kwang-ho, the head of the Seoul Metropolit­an Police Agency, was charged with profession­al negligence.

District level officials have been prosecuted over the disaster, but no high-ranking members of government resigned or have faced prosecutio­n, despite criticism from victims' families over a lack of accountabi­lity.

South Korea's rapid transforma­tion from a war-torn country to Asia's fourth-largest economy and a global cultural powerhouse is a source of national pride.

But a series of preventabl­e disasters – such as the 2022 crush and the 2014 Sewol ferry sinking that killed 304 people – has shaken public confidence in authoritie­s.

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