Gulf Today

South Korea marks 10th anniversar­y of ferry disaster

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SEOUL: South Korea on Tuesday marked the 10th anniversar­y of the country’s worst-ever maritime disaster, when hundreds of schoolchil­dren died ater the overloaded Sewol ferry capsized and sank.

The disaster and botched rescue efforts dealt a crushing blow to then-president Park Geun-hye, who was eventually impeached in 2017, and the tragedy remains divisive and politicall­y sensitive in South Korea even now.

A Coast Guard vessel took some of the victims’ families to the site of the sinking early on Tuesday for a special ceremony.

At the site off South Korea’s south coast — marked by a yellow buoy — the families called out the names of the deceased and threw flowers into the water, followed by a moment of silence.

“People say: ‘It’s been 10 years, bury it (in your memory). Otherwise how can you move on?’” Park Jeong-hwa, who lost her daughter Cho Eun-jung to the tragedy, said ahead of the Tuesday anniversar­y.

“I thought I was going to be able to do it, thinking maybe ater 10 years, the pain would fade a bit. But instead, it’s even more painful now. I want to hear her voice badly so that I don’t forget.

“There’s this longing and emptiness.” President Yoon Suk Yeol, whose party was dealt a crushing defeat in parliament­ary elections last week, offered his condolence­s to the families of victims at a Tuesday cabinet meeting.

“Even though 10 years have passed, the events of April 16, 2014, remain vivid in my memory,” he said.

“I pray for the repose of the unfortunat­e victims and once again extend my deepest condolence­s to the bereaved families.”

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 — from the Sewol ferry to the 2022 Itaewon Halloween crowd crush, which killed more than 150 mostly young people — has shaken public confidence in authoritie­s.

Last year, a 20-year-old marine died ater he was swept away while doing relief work during major floods, with reports saying he had never been given a life jacket by the authoritie­s. Experts say that the current government’s handling of the Itaewon disaster and the marine’s death — including the president’s vetoing of a bill that would have allowed a special investigat­ion into the Seoul crowd crush — proved an electoral liability.

Opposition leader Lee Jae-myung slammed what he described as government failures leading to loss of life.

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