Arab Times

Ferry survivors sit college exam

Country on ‘pause’

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SEOUL, Nov 12, (Agencies): Survivors from one of South Korea’s worst maritime disasters were among hundreds of thousands of high school students across the country who sat the high-pressure annual college entrance exam on Thursday.

Preparatio­n for the crucial exam starts from primary school, and the relentless pressure to score well has been blamed for everything from early burnout to teenage depression and suicide.

In an ultra-competitiv­e society, the test plays a large part in defining the students’ adult lives, holding the key to a place at a top university and the elevated social status, as well as job and even marriage prospects that go with it.

More than 630,000 students turned out for the exam on Thursday and, as happens every year, the entire country went into hush-mode for the duration.

The extraordin­ary measures taken to ensure nothing affects the student’s concentrat­ion include a 35minute suspension of all aircraft takeoffs and landings at South Korean airports to coincide with the main language listening test.

Park

Readjusted

The Transport Ministry said 69 scheduled flights had to be readjusted because of the suspension with four domestic flights cancelled for the day.

All arriving flights that are in the air must maintain an altitude exceeding 3 kms until given permission to land.

The exam is a stressful rite of passage for any student — but for none more so this year than several dozen students from Danwon High School in Ansan, south of Seoul.

In April last year, 325 of the school’s students were on an organised trip to the southern resort island of Jeju when the passenger ferry they were travelling in sank. Only 75 of them survived. The Sewol ferry disaster stunned the entire nation and a shrine to the dead erected near the Danwon school became an unofficial memorial to the tragedy.

Most of the surviving students were in the same grade and took part in Thursday’s exam — seen off at the test centres by their anxious parents.

“After what happened she became quite withdrawn and shunned people as well as her studies,” Jang DongWon, 46, said of his daughter.

Hitting

“But she somehow pulled herself out of it, and ended up hitting the books hard, staying late at school to study with her classmates,” Jang said.

The survivors were offered a dispensati­on to apply to colleges without taking the exam, but most declined, despite the difficulti­es they had getting back into the gruelling study routine the test demands.

“They didn’t want any special favours,” said Park Yoon-Soo, 44, whose daughter was so haunted by feelings of guilt after so many of her classmates died that she attempted suicide at home last year.

“She was stopped by my son, and I am still worried about her health. But in the end she will apply for whatever college her test results realistica­lly allow her to apply for,” Park said. South Korea’s President is Park Geun-hye.

Public offices and major businesses, as well as the stock markets, opened an hour later than usual Thursday to help keep the roads relatively clear and ensure the students arrived on time for the exam which began at 8:40 am (2340 GMT).

Anyone who did get stuck could dial the emergency number 112, and request help from police cars and motorbikes on standby to rush them to the centres.

Outside test centres in Seoul, junior students held good-luck banners and shouted encouragem­ent as their seniors entered the exam room, after being relieved at the door of any electronic items, including mobile phones, digital cameras, MP3 players, electronic calculator­s and smart watches.

For the often equally stressed parents, there was little left to do after a final hug at the school gates.

Also: SEOUL, South Korea:

South Korea’s top court on Thursday upheld a life sentence for the captain of a ferry that sank last year, killing more than 300 people, most of them teenagers on a school trip.

The Supreme Court upheld a lower court that sentenced Lee Joonseok, 70, to life imprisonme­nt for charges that included homicide, the court said in a statement. The court ruled that Lee committed homicide by “willful negligence,” concluding he fled his ship without giving an evacuation order, although, as captain, he is required by law to take measures to save his passengers.

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