Business Day

Hawaii’s ‘missile alert’ sparks fury

• Calls for answers as false alarm sends people scurrying for shelter

- Agency Staff Honolulu

Authoritie­s faced anger and demands for answers on Sunday after a false alarm about an incoming ballistic missile caused panic in Hawaii, which is already on edge over fears of a North Korean attack.

Authoritie­s faced anger and demands for answers on Sunday after a false alarm about an incoming ballistic missile caused panic in Hawaii, which is already on edge over fears of a North Korean attack.

The notificati­on was sent out just after 8am on Saturday, lighting up phones with a disturbing alert urging people to “seek immediate shelter”.

Emergency management officials later admitted “the wrong button was pushed” during a shift change. However, it took nearly 40 minutes for a corrected message to be issued — with Hawaii’s governor saying there was no automatic way to cancel the false alarm, meaning it had to be done manually.

The Federal Communicat­ions Commission, which is responsibl­e for standards, procedures and testing protocols for the Emergency Alert System that delivered the false alert, promised a “full investigat­ion”.

The alert, which read “BALLISTIC MISSILE THREAT INBOUND TO HAWAII. SEEK IMMEDIATE SHELTER. THIS IS NOT A DRILL”, sparked panic, with people rushing for safety whether in a bath, a basement, a manhole or under mattresses.

And after it was declared a false alarm and the panic had subsided, there was anger, with many asking how such an error could have occurred.

“Everyone in America needs to understand that if you had to go through this, you would be as angry as I am,” representa­tive Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii wrote on social media.

“We’re terrified and angry. Called my parents. Called my sister. Husband and I were shaking, verge of tears. Waited 40 minutes for a correction. No confidence in this emergency alert system,” photograph­er Aislinn Victoria said on Twitter.

Alison Teal, an adventurer, called it “the worst moment of my life”.

The erroneous message came after months of soaring tension between Washington and Pyongyang, with North Korea claiming it had successful­ly tested ballistic missiles that could deliver nuclear warheads to the US, including Hawaii’s chain of volcanic islands.

“I deeply apologise for the trouble and heartbreak that we caused today,” said Vern Miyagi, administra­tor of Hawaii’s Emergency Management Agency.

“We made a mistake,” he acknowledg­ed at a media conference. “We’ve spent the last few months trying to get ahead of this whole threat, so that we could provide as much notificati­on and preparatio­n to the public,” he said, pledging to investigat­e what happened “so that this doesn’t happen again”.

As screenshot­s of the cellphone warning went viral on social media, Gabbard quickly tweeted it was a “FALSE ALARM” with Hawaii’s emergency agency confirming “there is NO missile threat to Hawaii”.

US military spokesman David Benham later said US Pacific Command “has detected no ballistic missile threat to Hawaii. Earlier message was sent in error.”

When a corrected message was eventually sent out, it read: “There is no missile threat or danger to the state of Hawaii.”

“What happened today was totally unacceptab­le,” Hawaii governor David Ige said, adding he was “sorry for that pain and confusion that anyone might have experience­d”.

The White House said President Donald Trump was briefed about the incident, calling the alert “purely a state exercise”.

Teal, the adventurer and Hawaiian native, said “everyone was in a panic”.

“Travelling the world as an extreme adventurer, I’ve been in very scary situations from snowstorms to sharks to hot lava. Nothing as terrifying as a missile coming to kill everyone you know and love.”

Lauren McGowan, who was on holiday in Maui with family and friends, was heading for breakfast when the alert came through. They returned to their hotel, where staff quickly took them to a basement cafeteria and distribute­d water and food, with the rush to the shelter causing “confusion”, particular­ly for the children in the group.

Writing on Twitter, Andy Priest said his parents thought they were going to die. “My mom started to get up to go, and my Dad told her that if it was their time to go, he wanted to be looking at the ocean and enjoying the view,” he wrote.

Several golfers participat­ing in the US PGA Tour’s Sony Open in Honolulu were also caught up in the false alarm.

“Under mattresses in the bathtub with my wife, baby and inlaws,” American golfer John Peterson tweeted. “Please lord let this bomb threat not be real.”

The alert went out a month after Hawaii tested its nuclear attack siren system for the first time since the Cold War era in a drill that would now be conducted monthly, said an emergency agency spokespers­on.

Trump — who has used bombastic rhetoric about Pyongyang and its leader Kim Jong-un — has yet to react to the false warning. He recently said he would be willing to speak to Kim, with whom he has traded sharp words over North Korea’s missile and nuclear tests.

But Gabbard accused Trump of not taking the North Korean nuclear threats seriously, urging him to begin direct talks with Pyongyang.

 ?? /Instagram/@sighpoutsh­rug/via Reuters, AFP Photo ?? Fear factor: Popular holiday destinatio­n Honolulu was the scene of panic on Saturday after a false missile warning. INSET: An electronic sign reads ‘There is no threat’ in Oahu, Hawaii after the alarm was corrected, in this photo obtained from social...
/Instagram/@sighpoutsh­rug/via Reuters, AFP Photo Fear factor: Popular holiday destinatio­n Honolulu was the scene of panic on Saturday after a false missile warning. INSET: An electronic sign reads ‘There is no threat’ in Oahu, Hawaii after the alarm was corrected, in this photo obtained from social...

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