South Korea flood death toll rises to 40, Yoon blames botched responses
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[July 17, 2023]
By Hyonhee Shin
SEOUL (Reuters) -South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol on Monday blamed
authorities' failure to follow disaster response rules as the death toll
from days of torrential rain rose to 40, including a dozen people found
dead in a submerged underpass.
Deluges have pummeled central and southern regions since Thursday as the
rainy season that started in late June reaches its peak. The interior
ministry has also reported nine people missing and 34 injured across the
nation.
Twelve deaths, including three bodies found overnight, occurred in a
tunnel in Cheongju, 110km (68 miles) south of Seoul, where 16 vehicles,
including a bus, were swamped by a flash flood on Saturday after a river
levee collapsed.
The incident fuelled questions over South Korea's efforts to prevent and
respond to flood damage. Some drivers who use the road regularly blamed
the government for failing to ban access to the underpass even though
floods were widely forecast.
Yoon, just back from an overseas trip, on Monday convened a disaster
response meeting and conceded the situation was made worse because of
poor management of vulnerable areas.
"We've repeatedly emphasised access control over dangerous areas and
preemptive evacuation since last year, but if basic principles of
disaster response are not kept on the spot, it is difficult to ensure
public safety," Yoon told the meeting.
Nearly 900 fire, police and military officials took part in the
underpass rescue operation, using boats, underwater drones and other
equipment, according to the interior ministry.
Seo Jeong-il, fire chief in west Cheongju, told a briefing on Monday
that while search efforts continued there were no signs of more victims
in the remaining vehicles in the tunnel.
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REUTERS/Kim Hong-ji
Floods have claimed dozens of lives during recent rainy seasons as
weather patterns have become more extreme.
The government last year vowed to take steps to better cope with
climate change-induced disasters after the heaviest downpours in 115
years pounded Seoul, including the glitzy district of Gangnam,
leaving at least 14 dead and flooding subways, roads and homes.
Yoon on Monday flew in a helicopter over some devastated areas.
Earlier, he called for utmost efforts to rescue any remaining
victims and vowed support for those affected, including designating
flood-hit areas as special disaster zones.
"The government will restore everything, so don't worry too much,"
Yoon said after meeting residents in Yecheon in North Gyeongsang
province, an area hit by landslides where 19 people died and eight
remain missing.
The situation across the border in North Korea remains unclear, but
in recent weeks state media has reported on heavy rainfall and
referred to measures to protect crops in a country that has suffered
from serious food shortages.
At a briefing, the South's Unification Ministry said it had asked
Pyongyang to notify Seoul of any plans to release water from its
Hwanggang Dam. In 2009, the release of water from the dam resulted
in flooding downstream that killed six South Koreans.
(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin; Additional reporting by Hyunsu Yim;
Editing by Ed Davies, Tom Hogue and Lincoln Feast)
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