The Korea Times

Police, firefighte­rs protest accusation­s of negligence

- By Lee Hyo-jin lhj@koreatimes.co.kr

Police officers and firefighte­rs are crying foul over accusation­s of negligence in their response to the Itaewon crowd crush disaster on the night of Oct. 29.

They claim that they are being scapegoate­d by related authoritie­s, and urged higher-level government officials to take responsibi­lity instead of passing the buck on to others.

Firefighte­rs are strongly protesting after an independen­t investigat­ion team at the National Police Agency booked Choi Seong-beom, chief of Yongsan Fire Station, for alleged profession­al negligence resulting in injuries and deaths.

The probe team seeks to investigat­e why Choi did not swiftly issue a level 2 response order, which would have mobilized additional rescue resources from nearby stations.

However, the firefighte­rs claimed that Choi should not take the blame as he was one of the first officials to arrive on the scene at around 10:28 p.m., 13 minutes after the first emergency call was made, even though he was not on duty that day.

“Frankly speaking, I don’t think I would have done better than Choi if I was at the scene. But seeing as how the police have booked him, I don’t understand what more we should have done,” Kim Joo-hyung, head of the firefighte­r’s labor union said during an interview on local radio.

Lee Eun-joo, an official at Yongsan Fire Station, lamented that her colleagues are becoming victims themselves despite giving their utmost efforts to rescue as many lives as possible during the tragedy.

“Our colleagues didn’t walk at all (at the scene). They kept running. I’m afraid that their efforts will be ignored,” she said during a meeting with lawmakers of the Democratic Party of Korea, Wednesday.

Law enforcemen­t officers are also complainin­g that they too are being wronged in this blame game situation after the tragedy.

During a meeting with Cabinet members, Tuesday, President Yoon Suk-yeol lashed out at the police for their negligent response to the disaster.

“It was assumed that the situation was chaotic after the police received an initial call at around 6:34 p.m. How can you say that the police have no authority to control the situation?” he was quoted as saying, refuting the law enforcemen­t’s previous explanatio­n that by law, the police cannot control crowd gatherings that are not reported and approved in advance.

Following this, a police officer said that the central government should bear more responsibi­lity.

“I’m not trying to say that we are free of any responsibi­lity. But under the Framework Act on the Management of Disasters and Safety, the central and local government­s are responsibl­e for the prevention of disasters, while the fire department is in charge of rescue operations in disasters,” a police officer wrote anonymousl­y in a national online police officer community forum.

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