The Guardian Australia

Seoul crowd crush: local police offices raided in investigat­ion

- Guardian staff

South Korea’s national police agency has raided local police department­s in the capital, Seoul, and the city’s Yongsan district office as it investigat­es whether official ineptitude contribute­d to a crowd crush that killed 156 people in the neighbourh­ood of Itaewon.

The raids came a day after the agency acknowledg­ed Seoul police failed to act for hours despite receiving at least 11 emergency calls from pedestrian­s warning about a swelling crowd of Halloween revellers ahead of the crush on Saturday in a narrow alley near Hamilton Hotel.

On Wednesday, South Korea’s police agency said the national police chief, Yoon Hee-geun, was informed about the disaster nearly two hours after it happened, at 10.15pm, South Korean news organisati­on Yonhap reported.

The agency said Yoon received the first report on the situation in Itaewon district just after midnight and five minutes later called Seoul metropolit­an police chief Kim Gwang-ho and ordered a rapid response and maximum mobilisati­on.

Kim had been made aware of the disaster roughly 40 minutes before he was contacted by Yoon, the police agency said.

The agency said members of its special investigat­ion unit were retrieving documents from the Seoul metropolit­an police agency and Yongsan’s police station, district office, fire department and other offices.

Local officials and police face questions about why they did not employ crowd control measures or sufficient personnel in the bustling nightlife district despite anticipati­ng a crowd of 100,000 people following the easing of Covid restrictio­ns.

Yoon also acknowledg­ed that its initial investigat­ions found that police officers failed to effectivel­y handle calls notifying authoritie­s about the potential danger of the crowd gathering in Itaewon.

Yoon said police had launched an internal inquiry into the officers’ handling of the emergency calls and other issues, including the on-the-spot response to the crowd crush in Itaewon that night.

His agency also released the transcript­s of 11 calls placed to the police’s 112 emergency hotline by pedestrian­s in Itaewon on Saturday, the first made at about 6.30pm, four hours before the crush near Hamilton Hotel.

The unidentifi­ed caller, who was near a shop in the alley where the crush occurred, pleaded for police to enforce controls on the area because “too many people are going up and down and it’s too scary”.

“People aren’t able to come down but (people) are also pushing up and I think (they) could get crushed to death,” the caller said.

In transcript­s of the 11 calls, the callers used the Korean word meaning “crushed to death” 13 different times to convey their concerns.

South Korea’s interior minister and emergency office chief, the Seoul mayor and the head of the Yongsan ward office, which governs Itaewon, have all offered public apologies.

As of Wednesday, 156 people were confirmed dead and 157 were being treated for injuries after the crush in a narrow alley that runs between the hotel and a dense row of storefront­s.

 ?? Photograph: Kim Hong-Ji/Reuters ?? A mourner kneels next to floral tributes near the site of the crowd crush that took place during Halloween festivitie­s in Seoul.
Photograph: Kim Hong-Ji/Reuters A mourner kneels next to floral tributes near the site of the crowd crush that took place during Halloween festivitie­s in Seoul.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia