The Philippine Star

SoKor’s Moon visits hospital fire scene

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SEOUL (Reuters) — South Korean officials yesterday rushed to identify 37 victims of a hospital blaze last Friday and pinpoint its cause as President Moon Jae-in visited the burnt-out building and decried “one tragedy after another” to strike the country.

Moon visited the fire scene where he spoke to grieving family members and firefighte­rs.

“It’s tragic, and it hurts me to see this kind of one tragedy after another, even as the government has vowed to make this country safe,” he said, as he ordered a full inquiry and said “utmost government efforts” were needed to support the injured and families of the victims.

The government of Asia’s fourth-largest economy, with one of the world’s fastest ageing population­s, has faced criticism in recent years over poor safety standards, including the Sewol ferry disaster of 2014 in which more than 300 people, mostly schoolchil­dren, drowned.

Hospital director Song Byeongcheo­l said the six-storey hospital did not have a sprinkler system and was not large enough to require one under the law.

The opposition Liberal Party was quick to condemn Moon for the disaster.

“The Moon administra­tion should have at least kept South Koreans safe, to justify the launch of this government,” the party said in a statement, demanding a “master plan” to protect citizens.

Moon’s ruling Democratic Party said it would “embark on parliament­ary discussion­s to legally support and protect citizens lives and safety,” a spokesman said.

Ham Eun-gu, a professor at Open Cyber University of Korea, said safety checks at many private hospitals, including Sejong Hospital, were often carried out as a formality and not strictly enforced.

In 2014, a fire at a rural hospital killed 21 people, while a 2008 warehouse fire outside Seoul killed 40.

Many survivors of Friday’s blaze “walked though fire and smoke” to escape, a city official told Reuters last Friday. Those on upper floors used fire engine ladders and plastic escape slides, while firefighte­rs carried some who could not walk.

 ?? AFP ?? South Korean President Moon Jae-in (center) consoles relatives of those killed in a hospital fire during a visit to a joint memorial altar for the victims at a gymnasium in Miryang yesterday.
AFP South Korean President Moon Jae-in (center) consoles relatives of those killed in a hospital fire during a visit to a joint memorial altar for the victims at a gymnasium in Miryang yesterday.

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