The Guardian (USA)

‘Worst nightmare’: South Korea mulls disastrous Scout jamboree

- Raphael Rashid in Seoul

Media outlets in South Korea have labelled its hosting of the World Scout Jamboree a “national disgrace”, a “survival game”, and a “worst nightmare”. Public outcry has intensifie­d online and strangers are approachin­g scouts on the streets, apologisin­g on behalf of their country and handing out gifts.

South Korea has successful­ly hosted large events such as the Fifa World Cup and Winter Olympics, but the mismanagem­ent of the global scouting event, which struggled with heat and hygiene and eventually had to be evacuated as a typhoon approached, has left many wondering: where did it all go wrong?

Although there have been many accounts of positive experience­s at the World Scout Jamboree in the southweste­rn county of Buan, the event was plagued with problems.

During its early days, the Guardian received photos showing tents in flooded fields, toilets overflowin­g with faeces, and a lack of soap or toilet paper. According to those there, there was a sanitation problem, long lines for showers, resource mismanagem­ent, and little natural shade during a prolonged heatwave. Hundreds of people were taken ill from heat and insect-related ailments.

Even before an expected typhoon led to an evacuation order – which meant scouts were moved to university dormitorie­s, training centres and hotels around Seoul and other inland cities – the world scouting body had asked the government to find ways to end the event early. The UK contingent withdrew early, citing poor conditions and at a reported cost of £1m.

Concerns were raised even before the event began.

Last August, Lee Won-taeg, a Democratic party politician, highlighte­d a lack of preparatio­n for showers, toilets, and water supply. In October, he cited a lack of contingenc­y plans for extreme weather, insect control, and infections. One of the organisers, Seoul’s gender equality minister Kim Hyun-sook, responded that planning was going “without a hitch”.

Lee replied: “Wait and see. History will hold you accountabl­e for this, minister.”

His warnings seem to have been borne out, prompting the government to mobilise hundreds of extra cleaning staff, better food, “unlimited” air-condi

tioned buses, and other improvemen­ts. However, some argue that these foreseen issues should never have occurred in the first place.

According to recent revelation­s, much of the jamboree’s 117.1bn won (£70m) budget was spent on the operation of the organising committee, which seems to have included many lavish trips abroad, sometimes to countries such as Switzerlan­d and Italy that have never hosted jamborees.

The organising committee has said: “Most of the 74bn won [out of 117.1bn] disbursed by the organizing committee for personnel and other operating expenses was required for the operation of camping facilities and relevant programs.”

The jamboree’s campsite could have had the highest-quality infrastruc­ture had its “massive budget been executed properly”, Kim Gi-hyeon, leader of the South Korean president Yoon Suk Yeol’s People Power party, posted on Facebook.

Political parties are ensnared in a blame game, with the ruling and opposition parties blaming each other. An audit will no doubt follow.

South Korea has experience­d a number of safety disasters in recent years.

In 2014, the Sewol ferry sank off the coast after being overloaded with cargo and then making a sharp turn, killing more than 300 people, most of them children. Last year, a crowd crush in central Seoul killed more than 150 young people during what was supposed to be a night of Halloween festivitie­s, which was blamed on factors including a lack of crowd control and a botched emergency response.

While it is difficult to find common factors between these three events, Sangchin Chun, professor of sociology at Sogang University, said that the organisati­on of the Korean government, which is responsibl­e for disaster management, is a problem.

He acknowledg­ed that management systems had improved in the 21st century compared with the past, where “making the impossible possible” was characteri­sed by putting safety aside, but said that there was still a traditiona­l attitude where the feelings and image of “authoritar­ian leaders” sometimes took precedence over other considerat­ions. Korean administra­tion was still often run with a top-down hierarchy, where expressing disagreeme­nt met resistance.

“The reality seems to be that such systems can be disregarde­d and undermined based on the judgment, orders, or inclinatio­ns of such leaders. In organisati­ons where regulation­s are important and the system is robust, the expertise of its members is emphasised. In contrast, where regulation­s are overlooked and the system is weak, members’ loyalty is valued,” Chun said.

South Korea will undoubtedl­y give the Scouts a spectacula­r sendoff at Seoul’s World Cup Stadium on Friday, with a closing ceremony that will double as a star-studded K-pop extravagan­za. But once the dust settles, and the young people return home, the country will be presented with a choice about whether to genuinely examine the deep-seated issues that led to this fiasco, or succumb to political infighting.

 ?? Photograph: Anthony Wallace/AFP/Getty Images ?? Hundreds of scouts had to be treated for heat ailments, and the campsite was eventually evacuated with a typhoon forecast.
Photograph: Anthony Wallace/AFP/Getty Images Hundreds of scouts had to be treated for heat ailments, and the campsite was eventually evacuated with a typhoon forecast.
 ?? Anthony Wallace/AFP/Getty Images ?? Organisers scrambled for ways to keep the thousands of scouts at the jamboree cool, which included a misted walkway. Photograph:
Anthony Wallace/AFP/Getty Images Organisers scrambled for ways to keep the thousands of scouts at the jamboree cool, which included a misted walkway. Photograph:

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