W1 - Sinking of MV
W1 - Sinking of MV
The ferry MV Sewol sank on the morning of April 16, 2014, en route from Incheon towards Jeju in
South Korea.[16] The 6,825-ton vessel sent a distress signal from about 2.7 kilometres (1.7 mi;
1.5 nmi) north of Byeongpungdo at 08:58 KST (23:58 UTC, April 15, 2014).[17] Out of 476 passengers
and crew, 304 died in the disaster, including around 250 students from Danwon High
School in Ansan City.[18][19][20] Of the 172 survivors, more than half were rescued by fishing boats and
other commercial vessels that arrived at the scene approximately 40 minutes before the Korea
Coast Guard (KCG).[21]
The sinking of Sewol resulted in widespread social and political reaction within South Korea. Many
people criticized the actions of the ferry's captain and most of the crew. [22] Also criticized were the
ferry's operator, Chonghaejin Marine, and the regulators who oversaw its operations,[23] along with
the administration of President Park Geun-hye for her response to the disaster and attempts to
downplay government culpability,[24] and the Korean Coast Guard for its poor handling of the disaster,
and the perceived passivity of the rescue-boat crew on scene.[25] Outrage has also been expressed
against the initial false reporting of the disaster by the government and South Korean media, who
claimed everyone aboard had been rescued,[26][27] and against the government for prioritizing public
image over the lives of its citizens in refusing help from other countries, and publicly downplaying the
severity of the disaster.[28][29]
On May 15, 2014, the captain and three crew members were charged with murder, while the other
eleven members of the crew were indicted for abandoning the ship.[30] As part of a government
campaign to manage public sentiment over the official response to the sinking, an arrest warrant
was issued for Yoo Byung-eun (described as the owner of Chonghaejin Marine), but he could not be
found despite a nationwide manhunt. On July 22, 2014, police revealed that they had established
that a dead man found in a field in Suncheon, roughly 290 kilometres (180 mi) south of Seoul, was
Yoo.[18]
Background
Sewol began operations on 15 March 2013.[41] She made three round trips per week
from Incheon to Jeju, each one-way voyage of 425 kilometres (264 mi) taking 13.5 hours to
complete.[42] On 19 February 2014, she received an interim inspection and a periodic inspection from
the Register.[33]: 17 It had made the round trip a total of 241 times until the day of the incident. [41]
On 15 April 2014, Sewol was scheduled to leave the port at Incheon at 6:30 p.m. KST.[44] A fog,
which restricted visibility to less than 1 kilometre (0.62 mi), led the Incheon vessel traffic
service (VTS) to issue a low visibility warning around 5:30 p.m., leading the Shipping Association to
hold Sewol's departure. The VTS retracted the warning around 8:35 p.m., and the Shipping
Association removed the restriction on Sewol's departure after checking the weather conditions with
the operator of the Palmido lighthouse and consulting with the KCG. [33]: 30 She departed around
9 p.m., and was the only ship to leave port that evening.[44]
When Sewol departed, she was carrying 443 passengers, 33 crew members, and a total of 2,142.7
tons of cargo, including 185 cars.[33]: 31 Among the 443 passengers were 325 students on a field trip
from Danwon High School.[45] Five passengers were of non-Korean nationality.[46] The ship was
commanded by 69-year-old Captain Lee Joon-seok,[47] who had been brought in as a replacement for
the regular captain.[48] Lee had over forty years of experience at sea and had traveled the route
before.[49] He was hired on a one-year contract, with a monthly salary of ₩2.7 million (roughly
US$2,500).[50] Lee worked with 33 crew members on the journey,[51] of which nineteen were
irregular, part-time workers.[52]
Later investigations discovered problems concerning the state of Sewol at the time of departure.
Despite her maximum allowance for 987 tons of cargo, Sewol was carrying 2,142.7 tons of cargo,
which had been improperly secured.[33]: 34 [53] Only 761.2 tons of ballast were taken on board, the ballast
tanks had not been properly maintained, and the previous voyage had been made without making
further adjustments to the ballast during the journey.[33]: 36–37 The regular captain of Sewol, Captain
Shin, had warned Chonghaejin about the decrease in stability and attributed it to the removal of the
side ramp, later claiming that the company threatened to fire him if he continued his objections.
Shin's warnings were also relayed through an official working for the Incheon Port Authority on 9
April 2014, which an official from Chonghaejin responded to by stating that he would deal with
anyone making the claims.[54] Shin had also requested a repair for the malfunctioning steering gear
on 1 April 2014, but this was not done.[55] The KR had noted in a stability test report dated 24 January
2014 that Sewol had become "too heavy and less stable after modifications were made". [56]
Chonghaejin's had spent just ₩2.6 thousand (US$2) on safety training for the crew the previous
year, which was used to buy a paper certificate.[57]
As Sewol began sinking, the ferry's intercom system started ordering the passengers to stay put,
alleging that moving was dangerous.[93] The announcements were made by a communication officer,
Kang Hae-seong, who had not consulted the manual before the broadcast.[83] The announcements
began broadcasting by at least 8:52 a.m.[94] and continued even when water began flooding
passenger compartments.[95] Other crew members corroborated this order, instructing passengers to
stay put.[13] Captain Lee also instructed passengers to stay put and did not change the order even as
he himself was leaving the ship.[35]
The first emergency call was made by Choi Duk-ha, a Danwon High School student aboard the ferry.
[96]
At 8:52 a.m., he called the national emergency service number and reported to the Jeollanam-
do fire station that Sewol had begun to capsize.[97] Choi was connected to the Mokpo Coast Guard at
8:54 a.m. and was asked to give the latitude and longitude of the ship's location.[98] Three minutes
later, the Mokpo Coast Guard station situation room ordered Patrol Vessel No. 123 to be dispatched
to the scene; the vessel was launched at 8:58 a.m.[99][100] Following the Coast Guard search and
rescue manual, the boat was to be in charge of surveying the area and "swiftly" rescuing
passengers.[99] Choi did not survive the capsizing and was later found dead.[32][101]
At 8:55 a.m., Sewol's crew made their first distress call to the Jeju VTS and asked them to notify the
KCG, as the ferry was rolling and in danger.[102][103] At 8:56 a.m., the Jeju VTS called the Jeju Coast
Guard. Three minutes later, the Jeju Coast Guard called the Mokpo Coast Guard and discovered
that a patrol boat had already been dispatched.[100] At 9:01 a.m., a crew member on Sewol called the
Incheon branch of Chonghaejin to report the situation, and Chonghaejin's head office located in Jeju
then called Captain Lee at 9:03 a.m. for a report of the situation. The Incheon branch then talked
with the first mate in five telephone calls over the next thirty-five minutes.[104]
At 9:06 a.m., the Jindo VTS were informed of the capsizing incident by the Mokpo Coast Guard.
[100]
Around this time, Sewol's crew began communicating with the Jindo VTS, which was closer to
their location.[103] For the next two minutes, Jindo VTS alerted two other ships that Sewol was sinking,
with one confirming that it had visual contact with the ship.[105] At 9:07 a.m., the ferry's crew confirmed
that she was capsizing and requested the help of the KCG. At 9:14 a.m., the crew stated that the
ship's angle of heel made evacuation impossible. Around this time, the captain of Patrol Vessel No.
123 was appointed the commander of the scene.[99] Four minutes afterwards, the crew
of Sewol reported to the VTS that the ferry had heeled more than fifty degrees to port. [106]
At 9:23 a.m., the VTS ordered the crew to inform the passengers to wear life jackets. When the crew
replied that the broadcasting equipment was out of order, the VTS told them to personally order the
passengers to wear life jackets and more clothing.[106] At 9:25 a.m., the VTS asked Captain Lee to
decide quickly whether to evacuate the ship, stating that they did not have enough information to
make the decision. When Lee inquired about the rescue, the VTS replied that patrol boats were due
to arrive in ten minutes and a helicopter in one minute. Lee then replied that there were too many
passengers for the helicopter.[106] During this time, Lee told passengers to stay in their cabins.[107] The
communications officer, using the ship's intercom, repeatedly ordered passengers not to move. [80][108]
At 9:33 a.m., after confirming that nearby ships had volunteered to help in the rescue operations, the
VTS told all ships to drop lifeboats for the passengers. At 9:38 a.m., all communications were cut off
between the VTS and Sewol. About three minutes after all communications were cut, about 150 to
160 passengers and crew jumped overboard.[106]
Captain and crew
During Sewol's capsizing, members of the crew drank beer[109] and communicated by telephone with
staff from Chonghaejin at seven different times.[110] As passengers stayed in their cabins as
instructed, Captain Lee and his crew abandoned the ship.[111] Lee, Cho, and the first and second
mates were the first people to be rescued.[112] with Captain Lee rescued around 9:46 a.m.[113][114]
Passengers
As Sewol capsized, some passengers followed the announcements to stay put, even as the water
came in.[115] Most of the student passengers obeyed the announcements.[116] Some passengers, who
disobeyed the announcements, climbed to the top of the ship or jumped into the water and were
rescued.[117]
Videos recording passengers during the capsizing have been recovered.[118][119] Some recorded the
announcements telling passengers to stay in place and put on life jackets,[120] while some showed
passengers joking around,[118] putting on life jackets,[120] and sending farewells.[119]
Passengers made calls,[116] sent text messages,[121] or sent KakaoTalk mobile messages[122] during the
capsizing. The last message was sent at 10:17 a.m.[114] Text messages and social media posts
allegedly made by survivors still trapped after the capsizing circulated in the media, but an
investigation by the Cyber Terror Response Center found that none of the trapped passengers used
their phones between 12:00 p.m. on 16 April and 10:00 a.m. of 17 April[123] and that all the reported
survivors' messages made within that time were falsified.[124]
Sewol took two and a half hours to sink.[108] By around 11:18 a.m., the stern was submerged, with a
section of the hull about 2 metres (6 ft 7 in) high and 20 to 30 metres (66 to 98 ft) long showing
above the water. At 12:00 noon on 16 April, only 50 centimetres (20 in) of the bulbous bow was
above water; at 1:03 p.m., the ship was completely submerged.[125][126]
Rescue operations
An investigation conducted by Social Disaster Special Investigation Committee clearly confirmed
that the Coast Guard Command was responsible for the lives of 304 people. In a position with clear
duties and authority according to their laws and operation procedures, the Coast Guard Command
should have mobilized all available resources to grasp the situation and identify the emergencies
with the Sewol ferry, providing direction to the mobilized forces to evacuate the Sewol ferry
passengers. However, they failed to carry out these actions. The Coast Guard Command neither
tried to figure out the specific status of the Sewol nor shared the information already secured
(through passenger reports, etc.) with dispatchers. Even though they should have been aware of the
urgency of the Sewol Ferry incident based on the information provided by the mobilized forces and
the passenger reports, the Coast Guard Command still did not issue the proper commands to the
mobilized forces.[127]
During the disaster and the immediate aftermath, the South Korean government's announcements,
as well as those from the South Korean media, were inconsistent and inaccurate. [128] An editorial
in The Huffington Post stated that government reports were like a rubber band, "increasing at one
moment and decreasing at another."[129] South Korean outlets such as JoongAng Ilbo, Maeil
Broadcasting Network, and JTBC later made corrections and apologies concerning their earlier
reports.[27] Conspiracy theories were also present in the aftermath of the sinking.[130]
First day
At 8:58 a.m. (KST) on 16 April 2014, the Mokpo Coast Guard dispatched Patrol Vessel No. 123 in
response to the first report of the incident.[100] After receiving the news of the capsizing from the
Jeollanam Provincial Government, the Republic of Korea Navy 3rd Fleet sent a Gumdoksuri-
class patrol vessel (PKG) to the accident site at 9:03 a.m.; the Navy dispatched another PKG at
9:09 a.m.[131] At 9:04 a.m., the government created the Central Disaster Countermeasure
Headquarters (중앙재난안전대책본부), an organization which would directly report to the
government. The KCG set up a rescue operations headquarters at 9:10 a.m.[132]
Patrol Vessel No. 123 arrived at the scene near 9:30 a.m.[100] as the first ship to reach the site after
the incident.[133] During the time between the dispatch and the operations, No. 123 failed to
raise Sewol and chose to call for other ships on the radio.[134] Consequently, crewmembers on No.
123 had not directly communicated with the stricken vessel and were not aware of the content of the
communication between Sewol and the Jindo VTS on arrival.[135] At the time of arrival, Sewol had
listed about fifty to sixty degrees to port.[136] Rescuers made announcements for five minutes, calling
people to abandon ship and jump into the water.[134] No. 123 began rescue operations at 9:38 a.m.
with the dispatching of a rubber boat.[136] Passengers who had reached the deck or jumped into the
water were rescued, including Captain Lee, but rescuers could not get inside the ship due to the list.
[134]
People trapped inside Sewol's pilothouse were rescued by breaking through the windows.[134]
At 9:35 a.m., the Korean Ministry of National Defense started operating Counter-disaster
Headquarters (재난대책본부). At 9:40 a.m., the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries declared the
accident to be the highest state of emergency in terms of naval accidents; consequently, the Central
Accident Response Headquarters (중앙사고수습본부) was established.[137] At the same time,
the Ministry of Health and Welfare sent emergency vehicles and the first squad of the Disaster
Medical Support Team (재난의료지원팀) to Jindo.[138] At 11:28 a.m., the Korea Navy's Ship Salvage
Unit (SSU) was reported to have been deployed for the operations.[139]
At 2:42 p.m., 150 special forces personnel from the Republic of Korea Army Special Warfare
Command, including forty scuba divers, were sent for the operation. At this point, 196 personnel,
including 82 in the SSU and 114 in the Republic of Korea Naval Special Warfare Flotilla, were
involved in the operations.[140] At 3:07, the regional government of the Gyeonggi Province was
reported to have started operating the Prevention and Countermeasures Headquarters (재난안전대
책본부).[141] After 5 p.m., units from the SSU began undersea operations.[142] At 5:13 p.m., the
Gyeonggi-do Office of Education was reported to have started operating the Ansan Danwon High
School Accident Countermeasures Report Compiling Headquarters (안산 단원고 사고대책 종합상황
본부).[143] At 8:00 p.m., operations investigating the ship's hull were ceased.[144]
As of 10:03 p.m., the following units were involved in rescue operations: Naval forces include sailors
from the 3rd Fleet (제 3 함대; 第三艦隊), a Dokdo-class amphibious assault ship, a Chungmugong Yi
Sun-sin-class destroyer, and an Ulsan-class frigate. The Republic of Korea Air Force sent support
units such as the Lockheed C-130 Hercules, Sikorsky HH-60 Pave Hawk, and HH-47 variant of the
Boeing CH-47 Chinook. The Republic of Korea Army sent units including 150 Special Warfare
Command soldiers and eleven ambulances.[145]\\\
Second day
A U.S. Navy MH-60S Seahawk helicopter conducted search
and rescue operations at the request of the South Korean navy near where Sewol sank, on 17
April 2014.
Starting on 17 April, Undine Marine Industries, a privately held company, [146] began to lead the search
for missing passengers.[147] At 12:30 a.m., hull investigations were started by the KCG with the help
of flares.[148] As of 6:00 a.m., 171 ships, twenty-nine aircraft and thirty divers were involved in the
rescue effort. The KCG had assigned twenty divers in teams of two. The ROK Navy also assigned
eight divers,[149] but the KCG prevented them from participating[147] and waited for divers from Undine
Industries.[150] At 7:24 a.m., civilian groups of expert divers were reported to be helping out in the
rescue operations.[151] During the morning, the number of divers involved in the operations reached
555.[152] The navy also established a military control tower on the Dokdo-class assault ship.[153] Starting
around 2:00 p.m., rescue operations were practically stopped due to bad weather conditions. [154] A
marine crane arrived on the scene at night.[155]
Subsequent operations
At 10:50 a.m. on 18 April,[156] the KCG began pumping in air to support possible air pockets.[108] At the
same time, divers entered the capsized ship's hull[157] but only gained access to the cargo deck.
[158]
The divers' entrance was later labeled a 'failure' by the Central Disaster Countermeasure
Headquarters.[159] On 19 April, a navy petty officer who was injured during rescue operations died.
[160]
On 21 April, remotely operated underwater vehicles began to be used for operations.[161] On 24
April, the CR200 'Crabster' robot was sent to the rescue site. [162] An Undine Marine diver died on 6
May,[163][164] followed by another diver's death on 30 May.[165] On 17 July, a firefighting helicopter
returning from rescue operations crashed near an apartment complex, killing all five officers aboard
and injuring a high school student.[166][167]
The government announced on 22 April 2015 that it had approved plans to salvage the wreckage
of Sewol in hopes of finding more information about the sinking and recovering the bodies of nine
victims still missing. The plan was initially put forward by President Park Geun-hye and was
endorsed by the minister of public safety and security, Park In-yong. The operation was expected to
take as long as eighteen months and to cost between US$91–137 million.[168]
Survivors and casualties
At 11:01 a.m., Munhwa Broadcasting Corporation began reporting that all students had been
rescued; this news was re-reported by other news organizations and continued until 11:26 a.m.
[169]
Around 11 a.m. KST, officers working for the educational departments for the Gyeonggi Province
sent text messages to the students' parents stating that all students had been rescued. [170] The
officers' belief was apparently confirmed by a police officer in the Danwon Police Department.
[169]
Initial reports stated that rescuers retrieved 368 people from cold waters as the passengers,
mostly students, had jumped overboard when the vessel started sinking; the South Korean
government later corrected this statement, saying 295 passengers remained missing. [171] Twenty-two
of the twenty-nine crew survived, including fifteen responsible for the navigation. [172]
In its 17 April morning edition, the Chosun Ilbo reported that 174 people had been rescued, four had
died, and 284 were missing.[173] According to CNN and its affiliate YTN, six people died.[174] News1
Korea reported that, as of 8:00 a.m., 179 people had been rescued, six had died and 290 were
missing.[149] Three more people were found dead at 11:00 a.m. and the confirmed death toll rose to
nine.[175] At 10 p.m., Yonhap confirmed that the death toll had risen to fourteen.[176] Over the course of
the following months, the death toll rose into the hundreds.[177][178][179] The death toll stood at 294 as of
22 July 2014, with ten missing; the date marked the recovery of the last cabin crew member. [180]
The sinking of Sewol is the deadliest ferry disaster in South Korea since 14 December 1970, when
the sinking of the ferry Namyoung killed 326 out of the 338 people aboard.[181][182]
Foreign response
U.S. Marines assigned to the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit responding to the scene of
the Sewol sinking on 16 April 2014
The USS Bonhomme Richard was sent to assist in the air-sea rescue operation,[183][184] but did not get
the approval of the ROK Navy for its helicopters to participate in the rescue. [185]
The US Navy rescue and salvage USNS Safeguard was sent to South Korea to take part in the
rescue operation.[186][187]
The Japan Coast Guard offered support, as well as a message of sympathy and condolences from
the Japanese government. The KCG declined the offer, saying that, while the offer was welcome,
special assistance was not needed on this occasion.[188]
Investigation
Litigation
On 3 June, the Gwangju District Court issued arrest warrants for a senior vessel safety operator of
the Korea Shipping Association's Incheon unit and a vessel inspector of the KR's Mokpo unit.
[231]
Amongst fifteen crew accused of the sinking, prosecutors sought the death penalty for Captain
Lee under the charge of homicide for failing to carry out his duty. Lead prosecutor Park Jae-eok
said: "Lee supplied the cause of the sinking of the Sewol ... he has the heaviest responsibility for the
accident. We ask that the court sentence him to death." While no formal pleas were made, Lee
denied intent to kill. The others had lesser charges, including negligence.
On 11 November, the Gwangju District Court found Captain Lee guilty of negligence and sentenced
him to thirty-six years' imprisonment. The judges said that he was clearly not the only person
responsible for the tragedy and they accepted that his negligence did not amount to an intent to kill.
Chief Engineer Park Gi-ho was found guilty of murder and jailed for thirty years. Thirteen other crew
members were given jail sentences of up to twenty years imprisonment on charges including
abandonment and violating maritime law. Relatives of victims were distraught at the verdict, with
some weeping. Agence France-Presse reported that one woman screamed in the courtroom: "It's
not fair! What about the lives of our children? They (the defendants) deserve worse than death!" [232]
In the cases against officials over the overloading of cargo, Kim Han-sik, Chonghaejin's chief
executive, was found guilty of negligence and received a ten-year prison term. Six other
Chonghaejin employees and a Korean Shipping Association official also received prison sentences.
[233]
Following appeals by prosecutors and the accused, on 28 April 2015, Captain Lee was found guilty
of murder and his sentence increased to life imprisonment, while those for fourteen other crew
members were reduced to a maximum of twelve years, including ten years for Chief Engineer Park
Gi-ho, whose murder conviction was overturned.[234] Judge Jeon Il-ho explained: "We drew a
distinction between the Captain Lee Joon-seok, who has a grave responsibility, and crew members
who took orders from the captain."[235] Kim Han-sik's sentence was also reduced to seven years on
appeal.[236]
Aftermath
Government's report and concerns about public opinion
Based on the National Crisis Management Basic Guidelines' explicit provisions, the Blue House
should have played the role of a control tower in a national crisis situation. However, this control
tower, which was absent on April 16, 2014, became active only when the public opinion toward the
government worsened after the disaster. To prevent the spread of criticism of their administration,
the Blue House provided misleading information to the public and took actions with the purpose of
polarizing the public according to their political interests. The crisis was viewed by the Blue House as
a "crisis of the regime," and in specific instances when there was a divide in public sentiment, the
president and the government attacked the individuals and groups who were critical of them of being
"ideologically biased" and "pro-North Korea forces," and imposed restrictions. During this process,
the Blue House utilized right-wing organizations and strengthened their conservative base by
providing financial support to the organizations that cooperated with them or by appointing active
personnel to key positions. The Blue House did not protect the victims, but instead stigmatized them
as instigated by politically aligned groups. In this way, Park Geun-hye's Blue House distorted the
victims' demands, aggravated social conflict, and even hindered comprehensive fact-finding
investigation efforts aimed to improve future disaster response capabilities and enact special laws. [127]
The Social Disaster Special Investigation Committee confirmed that intelligence agencies such as
the National Intelligence Service and the Defense Security Command illegally and unfairly supported
the investigation and arrest operation of the Yoo Byung-eun family. At the time, the Blue House
defined the Sewol ferry disaster as "a national disaster that caused suffering to the entire nation,
caused by greedy expansion of wealth by the Yoo Byung-eun's family." The Blue House used the
Yoo Byung-eun investigation and arrest operation as a trump card to deflect the government's
responsibility for the Sewol Ferry disaster and to shift the blame onto the shipowner. The National
Intelligence Service and the Defense Security Command actively supported the Blue House
provisions in this matter.[127]
On 16 November 2016, a report about the disaster, compiled by the National Intelligence
Service and intended for President Park, was publicized. The report referred to the sinking as "just a
ferry accident (그저 하나의 여객선 사고)" and said "we must control the protest in the name of ferry
accident (여객선 사고를 빌미로 한 투쟁을 제어해야 한다)." The report makes no mention of
investigating the sinking, salvaging the hull, or supporting the victims' families, instead devoted to
determining ways to "control the protesting attempt by the opposition forces in the name of the ferry
accident and suggest a method about public opinion manipulation using the government-organized
demonstrations."[237]
The sinking contributed to the political downfall of President Park. As criticism of her handling of the
disaster grew stronger, Park's administration established a commission to monitor and prosecute her
critics.[238] Tatsuya Kato, a Japanese journalist, was indicted on charges of defamation for reporting
that Park had responded to the disaster by meeting with fringe religious leader Choi Soon-sil.[239][240] In
2016, the full extent of Choi's ties to Park emerged in South Korean media, which caused a
corruption scandal that ultimately resulted in Park's impeachment by the National Assembly on 9
December. A unanimous Constitutional Court ruling on 10 March 2017 upheld the impeachment
vote, ending her presidency.[241]
After Moon Jae-in was elected following Park's removal from office, documents revealed that Park
had made a secret blacklist of artists to be barred from receiving any sort of government
acknowledgement or sponsorship. It was further discovered that the initial purpose of this blacklist
was to censor those who commemorated the Sewol victims in their artwork.[242] In July 2017,
members of the Park administration were imprisoned for up to three years for their role in creating
the illegal blacklist.[243]
A subsequent investigation by the Moon administration launched in October 2017 revealed
President Park spent crucial early hours of the rescue operation in her bedroom, meeting with Choi
and getting her hair done before attending emergency meetings at 5pm, eight hours following the
sinking.[244] National security officials Kim Jang-soo and Kim Kwan-jin, and former presidential chief of
staff Kim Ki-choon, were prosecuted on charges of manipulating the Blue House records of Park's
whereabouts on the day of the sinking.
Sewol Ferry Disaster and State Crime
The arrest of Yoo Byung-eun and the confiscation of his property were key to ending the Sewol
Ferry scandal according to the Defense Security Command (DSC), and a special task force was
organized to apprehend Yoo. The Defense Security Command argued that monitoring civilians in
Geumsuwon, as well as collecting vast amounts of personal information on members of the
Evangelical Baptist Church (Salvation Sect) were considered legitimate "administrative support."
However, the activities of the Defense Security Command were determined to be operations that
should only be carried out by investigative agencies, thus rendering these acts illegal as they could
not be categorized as administrative support under the Administrative Procedures Act. It was also
confirmed that these illegal actions taken by the Defense Security Command were regularly reported
to the Blue House.[245]
The obstruction of the investigation by the Sewol Special Assistance Committee is considered to be
a state crime committed deliberately and methodically. 'State crime' is a term used to describe
human rights violations committed by the state itself. A government agency that was to cooperate
with the Sewol Special Assistance Committee's investigation abused its authority to receive the
details of the investigation, and together with the committee, used those details to hinder the
investigation. Through this collusion, they were able to manipulate the situation. [246]
Media representation
The disaster is the subject of the 2014 documentary film The Truth Shall Not Sink with Sewol.[247] The
director's cut of the film was made available for public viewing on YouTube on 31 August 2015.
[248]
Two British filmmakers that were living in South Korea during the tragedy, Neil George and
Matthew Root, created the documentary After the Sewol, which was released in several forms
between 2016 and 2020. George later reorganized the footage into Crossroads, with Root credited
only as producer, with a 38-minute cut made viewable through Asian Boss. The film uses interviews
with survivors, emergency response workers, and family members of the victims along with news
coverage to create a study about the conflicting reports about disaster.[249] A separate short
documentary In the Absence was created to showcase the disaster in real time, with audio, visual
and multi-media messages and video from the victims. The documentary was nominated for Best
Documentary Short in the 92nd Academy Awards in 2020.[250]
The disaster was depicted in fiction in the film Birthday released in April 2019.[citation needed]
Reactions
A memorial wall near the Danwon High School, where most
Salvage
On 22 March 2017, the salvage operation began to raise the wreck of Sewol.[296] A Chinese
consortium, Shanghai Salvage Company, was contracted by the government to carry out the
operation.[297] The ship was lying on her port side, nearly forty metres below the surface. Diesel and
oil were drained from the ship. All the cabins were sealed and a huge fence was erected on the
seabed to prevent any wreckage from drifting away. A crane lifted the bow of the ship five degrees
so that thirty-three lifting beams could be placed underneath. The salvage crew pumped water out of
the ship's ballast tanks and attached air bags to increase the ship's buoyancy. Cables were attached
to the lifting beams and strand jacks gradually lifted the ship to thirteen metres below the surface,
where she was then attached to a barge.[298] Sewol was then towed and loaded onto a semi-
submersible vessel, Dockwise White Marlin.[299] She was loaded onto self-propelled modular
transporters (SPMTs) while on the vessel, which then transported her to shore. The vessel docked
at Mokpo, where ALE were contracted to unload the ship using the SPMTs.[300] The wreck is located
on a Mokpo dock at 34°45'30.69"N 126°21'3.30"E.
At the time of the ship's raising, nine passengers were still unaccounted for. In order of retrieval, the
remains of teacher Go Chang-Seok were found at the sinking site after the ship's removal, followed
by the remains of Danwon High School students Heo Da-Yun and Cho Eun-Hwa and passenger Lee
Young-Sook inside the ship. For most victims at this point, only partial remains were retrieved and
DNA testing was used to identify them.[301][302][303][304]
By the end of the search operations on 19 October 2018, five victims remained missing: Danwon
High School students Nam Hyeon-Cheol (16) and Park Yeong-In (16); teacher Yang Seung-Jin (57);
and father and son passengers Kwon Jae-Geun (48) and Kwon Hyeok-Gyu (6). [305]