Yahoo – AFP,
June 25, 2014
Seoul (AFP) - More than 70 student survivors of South Korea's ferry disaster made an emotional return on Wednesday to their high school, watched by the relatives of the hundreds who died.
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| Student survivors of Korea ferry disaster go back to class (AFP) |
Seoul (AFP) - More than 70 student survivors of South Korea's ferry disaster made an emotional return on Wednesday to their high school, watched by the relatives of the hundreds who died.
More than
two months after the Sewol passenger ferry capsized and sank with the loss of
around 300 lives, the 74 pupils who escaped walked hand in hand as they made
their way back to class for the first time.
Of the 476
people on board the Sewol, 325 were pupils from Danwon High School on an organised
trip to the southern resort of island.
The death
of some 250 classmates -- and around a dozen teachers -- devastated the school
in Ansan city, just south of Seoul, and Danwon has become a symbol of the human
cost of the tragedy.
"Our
children's returning to school was a choice to get back to their normal daily
lives as students," the parents of the surviving pupils said in a joint
statement.
"Even
though they don't have friends and teachers with whom they studied together, we
believe they will do well," the statement said.
Many of the
parents accompanied their children on Wednesday and relatives of the students
who died lined the entrance to the school to show their solidarity.
Many of the
survivors have undergone weeks of intense therapy to help them deal with the
trauma of the disaster and the sense of guilt some felt at escaping when so
many others died.
An
unspecified number will testify next month in the ongoing trial of the captain
of the Sewol and 14 crew members.
Captain Lee
Joon-Seok and three senior crew members are accused of "homicide through
wilful negligence" -- a charge that can carry the death penalty.
The 11
other defendants are being tried on lesser violations of maritime law.
Although
the trial is being held in the southern city of Gwangju, the student witnesses
will be allowed to testify by closed circuit television from a courtroom in
Ansan.
Speaking to
the press Wednesday, one student representative pleaded for the survivors be
left alone as they try to resume normal lives.
"We
really hope to go back to the lives we led before the accident. Please treat us
as ordinary 18-year-old boys and girls," Yonhap news agency quoted the
student as saying.
Following a
brief ceremony, the children bowed to their parents and the victims' families
and then entered the school.

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