The Guardian (USA)

South Korea opens investigat­ion into deadly Itaewon crowd crush in Seoul

- Raphael Rashid in Seoul, Gavin Blair in Tokyo and agencies

South Korean authoritie­s have opened an investigat­ion into the deaths of more than 150 people, in a crush in a nightlife district in Seoul on Saturday as experts said crowd controls could have reduced the surge that led to the disaster.

It remained unclear what led the huge Halloween party crowd to head into a narrow alley in the Itaewon area. Witnesses said people fell on each other “like dominoes”, and some victims were bleeding from their noses and mouths while being given CPR.

The South Korean prime minister, Han Duck-soo, has promised a thorough investigat­ion and authoritie­s said they were focused on reconstruc­ting the chain of events leading up to the surge and were looking at whether anyone may have been responsibl­e for triggering the crush.

On Monday afternoon, dozens of crime scene investigat­ors and forensics officers descended on to the rubbishstr­ewn alleys. which were eerily quiet with many shops and cafes closed.

Earlier in the day, people laid white chrysanthe­mums, drinks and candles at a small makeshift altar off an exit of the Itaewon subway station, a few steps away from the site of the crush. Another memorial for the victims was set up at Seoul cityhall plaza, with others set up across the country.

Calls for accountabi­lity have grown in the press and online after witnesses reported seeing a relatively small number of police on the streets in relation to the size of the crowds.

As many as 100,000 people – mostly in their teens and 20s, many wearing Halloween costumes – had poured into Itaewon’s small, winding streets to reach the bars and clubs.

Itaewon is part of Yongsan, one of the Korean capital’s 25 districts. On 28 October, the district announced its plans for managing the Halloween celebratio­ns in Itaewon, a gathering that attracts huge crowds but has no official organiser. The authority laid out measures including anti-Covid precaution­s, safety checks for bars and restaurant­s, rubbish management and antidrug policies, but nothing on how to control the revellers who were expected to converge on the area.

Police said at a briefing on Monday they had deployed 137 officers to the event, pointing out that number was significan­tly higher than previous years. But local reports said most police deployed were focused on drug use and traffic control, rather than crowd control.

“This was a disaster that could have been controlled or prevented,” Lee Young-ju, a professor from the department of fire and disaster at the University of Seoul, told broadcaste­r YTN. “But this was not taken care of, with no one taking the responsibi­lity in the first place.”

An editorial published in the Korea JoongAng Daily on Monday pointed to the lack of a central organiser as a contributi­ng factor, but argued that “the disaster could have been avoided if the police and fire authoritie­s had thoroughly prepared for possible scenarios in advance”.

Kong Ha-song, a disaster prevention professor at South Korea’s Woosuk University, said that for all practical purposes “no one was looking after pedestrian safety” on the night. He told the Associated Press that more police and government workers should have been called on to monitor potential bottleneck points and said the lack of a central organiser may have contribute­d to the tragedy.

Paek Seung-joo, a professor of fire and disaster protection at Open Cyber University of Korea, made a similar point, telling Reuters: “As there was no

central authority, each government arm just did what they usually do – the fire department prepared for fires and the police prepared for crime..”

Hong Ki-hyeon, a senior official with the national police agency, acknowledg­ed the problem during a news conference on Monday, saying police did not have an establishe­d way to deal with such gatherings.

Lee Sang-min, the minister of the interior and safety, asked for patience. “It’s not appropriat­e to make hasty conclusion­s before the exact cause is determined – whether it was caused by a lack of police or whether there is something that we should fundamenta­lly change for rallies and gatherings,” he said at a briefing.

Most shops and cafes nearby were closed on Monday, and police cordoned off the site of the incident, which was strewn with rubbish. Schools, kindergart­ens and companies around the country scrapped planned Halloween events. K-pop concerts and government briefings were also cancelled.

Seo Soo-bin, a university student in her 20s who came to the site to pay her respects on Monday, said all her friends knew someone who had died. Fighting back tears, she added: “People talk about responsibi­lity but it’s not like Halloween in Itaewon is some organised event or anything, it’s just a gathering where everyone goes … I don’t know. It breaks my heart.”

Online, claims also spread that police were not actively managing the crowd, which allowed too many people to congregate around the subway station and in the alleyway at the centre of the disaster.

“I’ve lived in Itaewon for 10 years and experience­d Halloween every year but yesterday was by no means particular­ly crowded compared to previous years,” one Twitter user wrote. “Ultimately, I think the cause of the disaster was crowd control.”

Steve Blesi, an American whose son Steven died in Itaewon, voiced anger at authoritie­s for allowing the crowds to get so big. “I see politician­s out there grieving on Twitter,” he said. “It’s just, to me, publicity on their end. Whereas they should be working to try to ensure rules are in place to not allow this type of crowding to ever happen again.”

Witnesses said many people appeared not to realise the disaster that was unfolding steps away from them. Some clad in Halloween costumes continued to sing and dance nearby as others lay lifeless on the ground.

Ken Fallas, a Costa Rican architect who went to Itaewon with expat friends, used his smartphone to film video showing unconsciou­s people being carried out from the alley as others shouted for help. He said the loud music made things more chaotic.

“When we just started to move forward, there was no way to go back,” Fallas said. “We didn’t hear anything because the music was really loud. Now, I think that was one of the main things that made this so complicate­d.”

More than 25 of the dead were foreigners from the US, China, Australia, Russia, Iran and elsewhere.

The bodies of the dead were being kept at 42 hospitals in Seoul and nearby Gyeonggi province, according to Seoul City, which said it would instruct crematorie­s to carry out more cremations each day as part of plans to support funeral proceeding­s.

The crowd surge was South Korea’s deadliest disaster since 2014, when 304 people, mostly high school students, died in a ferry sinking.

The sinking exposed lax safety rules and regulatory failures. It was partially blamed on excessive and poorly fastened cargo and a crew poorly trained for emergency situations. Saturday’s deaths will probably draw public scrutiny of what government officials have done to improve public safety standards since the ferry disaster.With

insurrecti­on at the US Capitol, when extremist supporters wanted to overturn the certificat­ion of his loss to Joe Biden. On Monday van der Veen argued that Weisselber­g had betrayed the Trump companies.

“He was trusted by everyone, he was trusted to protect this company,” van der Veen said. “He was like family to the Trump family, and no employee was trusted more than he, but he made mistakes.”

The case, one of three Trump-related hearings before state judges in three New York courthouse­s this week, is the first relating to the former president’s businesses to come to trial since he left office.

A separate civil case, which names Trump, his three eldest children and the Trump Organizati­on, in a sprawling indictment alleging “significan­t fraudulent and illegal business activity”, has been brought by New York attorney general Letitia James.

Weisselber­g, only agreed to testify as part of his plea deal, he is not formally a co-operating witness.

Judge Juan Manuel Merchan anticipate­s the trial will last four weeks. A hearing is due in the pending civil fraud trial brought by the attorney general and, in another case, jury selection began in a civil case brought by protesters who say they were assaulted by security guards outside Trump Tower.

Separately, Trump petitioned the US supreme court on Monday to block Congress from gaining access to his elusive tax returns.

 ?? Photograph: Lee Jin-man/AP ?? Women pray for victims of a deadly accident following Saturday night's Halloween festivitie­s on the street near the scene in Seoul.
Photograph: Lee Jin-man/AP Women pray for victims of a deadly accident following Saturday night's Halloween festivitie­s on the street near the scene in Seoul.
 ?? ?? A man bows while paying tribute near the site of the crush during Halloween festivitie­s in Seoul. Photograph: Kim Hong-Ji/Reu
A man bows while paying tribute near the site of the crush during Halloween festivitie­s in Seoul. Photograph: Kim Hong-Ji/Reu

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