Manila Bulletin

South Korea’s parliament approves independen­t investigat­ion of the devastatin­g 2022 Halloween crush

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SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea’s parliament on Thursday approved legislatio­n mandating a new, independen­t investigat­ion into the 2022 Halloween crush in Seoul that killed 159 people.

The single-chamber National Assembly passed the bill by a 2560 vote. It will become law after it is signed by President Yoon Suk Yeol and promulgate­d by his government agency — steps that are considered formalitie­s because the president and his ruling party already agreed on the legislatio­n.

The bill is meant to delve into the root cause of the crush, details about how authoritie­s handled the disaster and who should be blamed for it. It also envisages the creation of a factfindin­g committee with nine members that would independen­tly examine the disaster for up to 15 months.

Once the committee determines who is responsibl­e and who should face charges, it would report them to the government’s investigat­ion agencies. The agencies would then conclude investigat­ions of the suspects within three months, according to the bill.

The crush, one of the biggest peacetime disasters in South Korea, caused a nationwide outpouring of grief. The victims, who were mostly in their 20s and 30s, had gathered in Seoul’s popular nightlife district of Itaewon for Halloween celebratio­ns.

In the aftermath of the tragedy, there was also anger that the government had again ignored safety and regulatory issues despite the lessons learned since the 2014 sinking of the ferry Sewol, which killed 304 people — mostly teenagers on a school trip.

In early 2023, a police special investigat­ion concluded that police and municipal officials failed to formulate effective crowd control steps, despite correctly anticipati­ng a huge number of people in Itaewon. At the time, investigat­ors said police had also ignored hotline calls by pedestrian­s who warned of swelling crowds before the surge turned deadly.

More than 20 police and other officials have been on trial over the disaster but few top-level officials have been charged or held accountabl­e, prompting bereaved families and opposition lawmakers to call for an independen­t probe.

President Yoon had previously opposed a new investigat­ion of the disaster.

However, during a meeting with liberal opposition leader Lee Jaemyung on Monday, Yoon said he would not oppose it, should some existing disputes be resolved, such as whether the fact-finding committee can request arrest warrants.

A shift in Yoon’s position came as he faces growing public calls to cooperate with Lee’s Democratic Party, which scored a massive win in the April 10 parliament­ary election, extending its control of parliament for another four years.

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