South Korea's deadly Halloween crush was avoidable, experts say
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[October 31, 2022]
By Joyce Lee
SEOUL (Reuters) - Proper crowd and traffic
control by South Korean authorities could have prevented or at least
reduced the surge of Halloween party-goers in alleys that led to a crush
and the deaths of 154 people, safety experts said on Monday.
The annual festivities in the popular nightlife area of Itaewon in Seoul
also did not have a central organising entity, which meant government
authorities were not required to establish or enforce safety protocols.
District authorities for Yongsan, where Itaewon is located, discussed
measures to prevent illegal drug use and the spread of COVID-19 during
the Halloween weekend, according to a district press release. There was,
however, no mention of crowd control.
On Saturday when the tragedy occurred, roughly 100,000 people were
estimated to be in Itaewon, an area known for its hills and narrow
alleys. According to Seoul Metro, some 81,573 people disembarked at
Itaewon subway station on the day, up from around 23,800 a week earlier
and about 35,950 on Friday.
But there were only 137 police officers in Itaewon at the time, the city
of Seoul said.
In contrast, at rallies by labour unions and by supporters of President
Yoon Suk-yeol that drew tens of thousands in Gwanghwamun, central Seoul,
on the same Saturday, up to 4,000 police were deployed, a police
official said.
"Police are now working on a thorough analysis of the incident's cause,"
Minister of the Interior and Safety Lee Sang-min said on Monday.
"It's not appropriate to make hasty conclusions before the exact cause
is determined - whether it was caused by a lack of police or whether
there is something that we should fundamentally change for rallies and
gatherings."
President Yoon has called for a thorough investigation into the cause of
the crush as well as improvements in safety measures that can be used
for large gatherings where there is no set organiser.
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Rescue teams and firefighters work at
the scene where people were killed and injured in a crush during
Halloween festivities in Seoul, South Korea, October 30, 2022.
REUTERS/Kim Hong-ji/File Photo
While South Korea has a safety manual for festivals expected to
attract more than 1,000 people, the manual presupposes an organising
body in charge of safety planning and requesting government
resources.
Just two weeks earlier, the Itaewon Global Village Festival
organised by a tourism association and sponsored by the city of
Seoul and Yongsan district, had people wearing yellow vests
directing the flow of movement and the main road was closed to car
traffic.
But on Saturday, there were just thousands of shops open for
business, normal car traffic rules and tens of thousands of young
people eager to celebrate Halloween without major COVID restrictions
for the first time since the pandemic.
"Just because it's not named a 'festival' doesn't mean there should
be any difference in terms of disaster management," said Paek
Seung-joo, a professor of fire & disaster protection at Open Cyber
University of Korea.
"As there was no central authority, each government arm just did
what they usually do - the fire department prepared for fires and
the police prepared for crime. There needs to be a system where a
local government takes the reins and cooperates with other
authorities to prepare for the worst," he said.
Moon Hyeon-cheol, a professor at the Graduate School of Disaster
Safety Management at Soongsil University, said this type of crush
had the potential to happen in any populous city.
"We need to take this tragedy and learn to prepare for the risk of
disaster," he said.
(Reporting by Joyce Lee; Additional reporting by Hyonhee Shin and
Soo-hyang Choi; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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