Yahoo – AFP,
17 May 2014
President
Park Geun-Hye made a direct apology Friday to relatives of the victims of South
Korea's ferry disaster and vowed to reform the country's safety standards from
scratch.
"I
apologise again for the government's insufficient response," Park said at
a meeting with 17 relatives who were invited to her presidential office.
It was the
first time she has made an expression of regret directly to the victims'
families, who had criticised a previous apology she issued during a cabinet
meeting as impersonal.
"I
will push for fundamental reform of the safety system of our society to prevent
the recurrence of a similar disaster," Park told them.
Before the
meeting, the families issued a statement urging Park to set up an independent
investigation into the sinking and punish those responsible for the disaster.
The
president said she is preparing measures including a cabinet reshuffle, Yonhap
news agency reported late Friday.
"An
investigation headquarters formed by police and prosecutors is thoroughly
investigating (the cause of the ferry disaster) and I'm drawing up detailed
measures including a cabinet shake-up," Park said as cited by Yonhap.
The
relatives have been extremely critical of nearly every aspect of the
government's handling of the disaster.
Many of
them believe some children may have survived for hours or even days inside air
pockets in the capsized ferry, but died because rescuers took too long to
access the submerged vessel.
The
6,825-tonne Sewol was carrying 476 people when it capsized and sank on April
16. So far, 284 people have been confirmed dead, with 20 still unaccounted for.
Of those on
board, 325 were children from a high school on an organised trip to the
southern resort island of Jeju.
The Sewol's
captain and three crew members were charged Thursday with manslaughter through
gross negligence.
Five
Chonghaejin officials have already been arrested for possible criminal
negligence, and the investigation has widened to the family that controls the
ferry operator, Chonghaejin Marine Co.
On Friday
prosecutors sought an arrest warrant for Yoo Byung-Eun, the reclusive patriarch
of the family after he failed to submit to an official summons.
A religious
leader, photographer and billionaire businessmen once convicted of fraud, Yoo
has a colourful and chequered past.
Although he
has no direct stake in the ferry operator, his sons control it through a
complex web of holding companies.
The
73-year-old's whereabouts are unclear, and there are concerns that efforts to
enforce a warrant could trigger a volatile showdown with a splinter church
group, of which Yoo is a founder-member.
Hundreds of
followers of the Evangelical Baptist Church of Korea are currently holed up in
a compound in Anseong south of Seoul, and hundreds more are expected to join
them over the weekend.
There are
suspicions that Yoo may be in the compound, and the church followers have
blockaded themselves in and warned against any police effort to force entry.
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