Bangkok Post

Salvage team tests raising of sunken ferry

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DONGGEOCHA­DO: Salvage operators began a test-lift of South Korea’s sunken Sewol ferry yesterday, officials said, nearly three years after the disaster killed 304 people and dealt a crippling blow to nowousted president Park Geun-hye.

Emotional parents of victims — the vast majority of the dead in the country’s worst-ever maritime tragedy were schoolchil­dren — urged people to pray for a successful recovery.

The vessel lies more than 40m below the waves off southweste­rn South Korea. The operation, originally scheduled for last year, has been pushed back several times because of adverse weather.

It is thought that nine bodies still unaccounte­d for may be trapped inside the sunken ship and raising the ferry intact has been a key demand of the victims’ families.

“I am a mother who just really misses her daughter. Please pray for us so we can go home with Eun-hwa,” said Lee Keum-hui, one of a handful of relatives who have been living in makeshift homes at Paengmok, the closest port to the wreck, since the accident.

“We will be grateful if you pray with us so that the last remaining victims can return to their families,” she said, breaking down.

Other bereaved family members have been maintainin­g a vigil at a camp on a hilltop on Donggeocha­do, the nearest island to the site, just 1.5km away.

Yellow ribbons — a symbol for the victims of the deadly disaster — hang on nearby trees, their colour faded by the course of time.

In a tense atmosphere, one victim’s father nervously watched through binoculars, trying to get a glimpse of the operation.

“We will not clear the camp even when the Sewol is raised,” he said, declining to be named. “You never know what you will find beneath the sunken ferry.”

Some 50 bereaved family members were watching the proceeding­s out at sea, he added.

Two enormous barges were positioned on either side of the 6,825-tonne ship and air bags inserted for the salvage effort, which is being led by a Chinese consortium.

Beams have been installed by digging through the seabed underneath the wreck, which is lying on its side, and cables attached to bring it painstakin­gly towards the surface. Once two-thirds of it is exposed, a semi-submersibl­e will be positioned underneath to raise it out of the water and transport it to the port of Mokpo to carry out investigat­ions and search for the missing.

A senior official of the maritime ministry said it took three hours to raise the wreck 1m off the seabed. Divers were inspecting the ship’s stability, Lee Chul-jo told reporters, and if there were no problems the full lift — expected to take three days — would go ahead. He did not indicate when the decision would be taken.

The disaster and its aftermath gripped South Korea and overshadow­ed the presidency of Ms Park, who stayed at her residence for seven hours in the crucial initial phase of the sinking. She has never specified what she was doing, sparking wild rumours including a tryst and cosmetic surgery.

A permanent Sewol protest site targeting her was subsequent­ly set up in the centre of Seoul, with effigies of the head of state on display alongside pictures of dead schoolchil­dren.

Negligence over the sinking was one of the grounds for which parliament impeached Ms Park in December, although the constituti­onal court ruled that it was not an impeachabl­e offence when it upheld her dismissal on other charges earlier this month.

Investigat­ions into the disaster concluded it was largely man-made — the cumulative result of an illegal redesign, an overloaded cargo bay, inexperien­ced crew and a questionab­le relationsh­ip between the ship operators and state regulators.

Even though the vessel took around three hours to sink, those on board were never ordered to evacuate. Captain Lee Jun-seok was sentenced to life in prison for “murder through wilful negligence” and 14 other crew members given terms ranging from two to 12 years.

 ?? AFP ?? Relatives of ‘Sewol’ ferry disaster victims watch the Chinese salvage vessels prepare to lift the wreck off the southweste­rn island of Jindo yesterday.
AFP Relatives of ‘Sewol’ ferry disaster victims watch the Chinese salvage vessels prepare to lift the wreck off the southweste­rn island of Jindo yesterday.

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