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May 5, 2014

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Park promises to punish ferry disaster culprits

SOUTH Korean President Park Geun-Hye yesterday met relatives of passengers still missing after the sinking of a ferry last month, vowing that any culprits would be “sternly punished” as the confirmed death toll rose to 244.

Eight more bodies were recovered yesterday, 18 days after the 6,825-tonne Sewol capsized and sank with 476 people on board — most of them schoolchildren — with 58 remaining unaccounted for.

“Anyone responsible for the accident and criminally at fault will be sternly punished,” Park said at a meeting with relatives camped on Jindo, the nearest island to the wreck where search operations are centered.

“I feel a sense of unlimited responsibility ... It is heart-rending to imagine how you are feeling,” she said, according to a pool report.

Television footage showed Park, who was visiting Jindo for the second time since the ferry sank on April 16, inspecting a tented village set up in the harbor to manage the process of identifying recovered bodies.

The meeting comes days after she apologized for her government’s failure to combat systemic and regulatory “evils” that may have contributed to the accident and her comments reiterated an earlier promise to hold those responsible accountable.

The ferry sinking is one of South Korea’s worst peacetime disasters, made all the more shocking by the loss of so many young lives.

Of those on board, 325 were pupils from the same high school in Ansan, just south of Seoul.

Public anger has focused on the captain and 14 of his crew who abandoned the ship while hundreds were trapped inside.

But criticism has also been directed at the government, as more evidence emerges of lax safety standards and possible corruption among state regulators. Some victims’ families have rejected Park’s apology.

Dive teams have been struggling to gain access to blocked cabins of the submerged ferry, with the search hampered by fast currents and high waves.

Divers have had to grope their way down guiding ropes to the sunken ship, struggling through narrow passageways and rooms littered with floating debris in silty water.

 




 

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