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Police in South Korea areseeking criminal charges against 23 officials for involuntary manslaughter and negligencein the crowd surge that killed nearly 160 people in October, multiple news outlets report.
Suffocation and brain damagedue to a lack of oxygen,according toThe New York Times, were determined to be the cause of death in most of the fatalities.
Among the officials recommended for charges,AP Newsreports that nearly half are law enforcement officers who are being blamed for an alleged lack of safety measures that Halloween day.
According to Reuters, opposition lawmakers and the bereaved families have criticized the investigation thus far, saying that they want justice.
“We have so many questions unanswered,” Lee Jong-chul, a rep for the group representing the families told reporters in Seoul at the prosecutors' office. “We came here to give a victim’s statement, expecting a better, expanded investigation.”
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Several hours before the crowd surge that day,panicked warning calls were made to police,The Washington Postreported,citing transcripts released the following day.
Seoul’s mass-casualty incident — which also injured nearly 200, according to the AP — prompted South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol to order his government to provide disaster medical emergency assistance, the BBC,TheNew York Timesand CNN reported.
“The top priority is to evacuate and save the victims. We should take them tourgent medical treatment as quickly as possible,” the president said to his cabinet, perThe New York Times. However, they were tragically much too late for scores of Halloween revelers.
At approximately 6:34 p.m., the string of desperate pleas started rolling in.
“There are a lot of people going up and down this alley. I’m very nervous about it,” one caller said, expressing fear over the worsening situation in the capital city’s Itaewon district. “I think people might be crushed. I barely escaped, but there are too many people. I think you need to intervene.”
At 8:09 p.m., another caller reported that party-goers were injured. “There are so many people here. … It’s crazy. People are getting hurt.”
As more time passed, the cries for help kept getting more intense and panicked, according to the transcripts. “Here, we’re about to be crushed,” another caller reportedly said. “It is chaos … [audible screams]. In Itaewon, in the back road.”
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Emergency personnel reportedly didn’t arrive to the scene to start controlling the crowd until around 11 p.m., a little over four hours after the concerned callers began asking for help.
South Korean media outlets reported that the area was too congested for police to get anywhere near the scene, but many event attendees criticized the lack of personnel they had assigned to the event in the first place,which attracted over 100,000people to celebrate Halloween in Seoul’s popular nightlife district, according to thePost.
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Steven Blesi, 20, of Marietta, Ga., was studying abroad in the country when he was killed in the incident over the weekend, his dad Steve Blesi confirmed to PEOPLE at the time.
The grieving father told PEOPLE that his son had “an adventurous spirit” and “could have done anything he wanted in this world.”
South Korea’s chief of police, Yoon Hee-geun, acknowledged on Nov. 1 that the crowd control was “inadequate,“while speaking of the Halloween tragedy.
source: people.com