Saturday, April 19, 2014

S Korea ferry - 3: ‘Sorry’ South Korea ferry captain details evacuation delay

Sewol Capt Lee Joon-seok: "I am sorry to the people of South Korea"



The captain of a South Korean ferry that sank this week said he delayed giving evacuation orders because he feared passengers would "drift away".
Lee Joon-seok, 69, was arrested with two crew members on Friday.
He has been criticized for not giving orders to evacuate soon enough.
Divers reported seeing three bodies in the ship on Saturday but were not able to retrieve them. The number of missing stands at 273 with 29 confirmed dead. Some 174 passengers were rescued.
Rescue operations are continuing for a fourth day but officials say visibility is poor and strong currents are making the work difficult.
The captain faces charges including negligence of duty and violation of maritime law.
Investigations are focusing on a sharp turn the vessel took before it started listing and whether an evacuation order could have saved lives.
Graphic showing location of sunken ferry and timeline of events
Footage from the ship appeared to show instructions from crew members for passengers to remain on board even as it tilted dramatically to one side.
The ferry Sewol was sailing from Incheon, in the north-west, to the southern resort island of Jeju. It capsized and sank within two hours.
'Drift away'
Mr Lee, who had already been questioned by police, was shown on television on Saturday after his arrest.
"I am sorry to the people of South Korea for causing a disturbance and I bow my head in apology to the families of the victims," he said.
Journalists ask Lee Joon-seok (C), captain of South Korean ferry "Sewol" which sank at sea off Jindo, questions as Lee walked out of court after an investigation in Mokpo April 18
The ship's captain has come under intense media scrutiny in South Korea
"I gave instructions regarding the route, then I briefly went to the bedroom and then [the sinking] happened" he said.
"The current was very strong, the temperature of the ocean water was cold, and I thought that if people left the ferry without proper judgement, if they were not wearing a life jacket, and even if they were, they would drift away and face many other difficulties." he said.
He added that rescue boats had not arrived at the time of capsizing.
The helmsman at the time, Cho Joon-ki, was also among those arrested. He said that the ship reacted differently to what he had expected.
"There was a mistake on my behalf as well but the steering [gear of the ship] turned further than it was supposed to," he told reporters.
According to documents seen by the Associated Press news agency, maritime safety officials recommended a full evacuation of the ship five minutes after a distress call was raised.
But a crew member told the agency that it took the captain 30 minutes to issue the order.
Search and rescue workers operate near the area where passenger ship "Sewol" capsized off Jindo as lighting flares are released in the sky during a night search on April 18
Rescue workers continued to search for survivors through Friday night
Members from the South Korean Navy"s UDT operate near floats where the capsized passenger ship "Sewol" sank, during the rescue operation in the sea off Jindo April 19
Search teams installed buoys to mark the position of the ship after it disappeared under the surface on Friday
Song and his wife, whose granddaughter was on South Korean ferry Sewol which sank in the sea off Jindo and has been missing, look at the sea with a pair of binoculars in Jindo 19 April
The grandparents of one of the missing students search the sea with binoculars
Some experts believe the ship's tight turn could have dislodged heavy cargo and destabilised the vessel, while others suggest the sinking could have been caused by a collision with a rock.
Messages and phone calls from those inside painted a picture of people trapped in crowded corridors, unable to escape the sharply-listing ferry.
Officials say air has been pumped into the ship to aid any people trapped inside and to help re-float the vessel.
Bodies spotted
The South Korean coastguard said on Saturday that a civilian diver had seen three bodies through a window in the fourth floor of the ship.
The diver was not able to retrieve the bodies because of floating objects and time restrictions on diving, the coastguard said.
Choi Sang-hwan, deputy director of the national coastguard, said nets would be placed around the sunken ferry to prevent any bodies drifting away.
Some 350 of those on board were students from Danwon High School in Ansan, a suburb of Seoul, who were on a school outing when the ferry sank.
Hundreds of relatives of those on board have been camping at a gymnasium on Jindo island near the scene of the disaster.
bbc graphic

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