In the
hothouse atmosphere of anger and grief triggered by South Korea's ferry
tragedy, the slightest misstep or ill-timed remark by any official can carry
career-ending consequences.
| Relatives of victims of the 'Sewol' ferry confront deputy director of the Korea Coastguard Choi Sang-hwan (C) after they forcibly removed him from an office at Jindo harbour. (AFP/Nicolas Asfouri) |
SEOUL: In the hothouse atmosphere of anger and grief triggered by South Korea's ferry tragedy, the slightest misstep or ill-timed remark by any official can carry career-ending consequences.
The heavy
death toll, and the fact that so many of those who died were children, have
fuelled a desire for retribution that has taken on a distinctly
anti-establishment flavour.
Aside from
obvious targets like the captain and crew and the ferry owners, public anger
has been directed at pretty much anyone in a position of power or influence.
There is a
general consensus that the ferry sinking has pulled back the covers of the
country's great economic success story and revealed a corrupt, incompetent body
politic which allows such disasters to happen.
The first
clear indication of the volatile mood came when South Korean Prime Minister
Chung Hong-won visited anguished relatives of the missing the morning after the
6,825-tonne Sewol capsized and sank.
In the
gymnasium where the families were sheltering in Jindo island, Chung was
jostled, pushed and shouted at, while some people threw water bottles at him.
"Don't
run away, Mr Prime Minister!" said one irate mother, blocking Chung as he
tried to leave.
The anger
was not so much with Chung personally but with the idea that not enough was
being done and that he represented the responsible authority.
The
frustration of the families was mirrored in the wider public and fuelled by the
media, with a flood of agonised, introspective editorials questioning what the
disaster said about what the country had come to and where it was going.
With
emotions sky-high and the language of blame getting harsher by the day, it
quickly became clear there would be no quarter given to anyone perceived as
speaking or acting out of place -- even indirectly.
Chung
Mong-joon, a veteran lawmaker who is running for Seoul mayor this year, felt
forced to make a live TV apology after his son wrote a Facebook post
criticising the "uncivilised" behaviour of the bereaved relatives in
jostling the prime minister and, on a later occasion, heckling President Park
Geun-hye.
"I am
deeply sorry for my son's childish behaviour," Chung said, after the post
prompted an apoplectic public backlash.
Next came
Song Young-chul, a director-level official at the ministry tasked with disaster
response, who posed for a picture in front of a bulletin board listing the
names of the dead.
He was
spotted and confronted by angry relatives, and ended up offering his
resignation -- which, given the tinderbox atmosphere, was immediately accepted.
Education
Minister Seo Nam-soo, meanwhile, was twice accused of inappropriate behaviour;
once indirectly after an aide was deemed to have made too much of the
minister's imminent arrival at a funeral for one of the many students killed in
the ferry capsize.
On another
occasion he was slammed after a picture emerged of him eating cup noodles while
sitting on a chair in the gymnasium on Jindo island where the relatives have
been camping out for the past week.
Seo was
sharply criticised for using a chair while the relatives were sleeping on the
floor.
"It
became a problem because it was an armchair and it was photographed and because
of the prevailing public sentiment," presidential Blue House spokesman Min
Kyung-wook told reporters.
Meanwhile,
a senior coastguard official was sacked for suggesting the coastguard had done
well to rescue 80 people from the ferry before it sank.
"His
comment could hurt the families of the victims," the coastguard said in a
statement announcing his dismissal.
Of the 476
people on board the Sewol, only 174 managed to escape. As of Thursday, the
confirmed death toll on Thursday stood at 171, with 131 still missing.
And a
senior government official in Busan city lost his job after going ahead with a
"reward trip" to Turkey, despite a general order for all civil
servants to avoid any junkets at a time of national mourning.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.