2022-11-21

The Itaewon crush was "completely preventable." | THE SHORROCK FILES: New, Rare & Unreleased on Patreon

The Itaewon crush was "completely preventable." | THE SHORROCK FILES: New, Rare & Unreleased on Patreon

THE SHORROCK FILES: New, Rare & Unreleased

Crucial missteps led to tragically delayed rescue in a Seoul alley
For nearly four hours before people started dying during a Halloween celebration in Seoul's Itaewon district, partygoers pleaded with police to divert the crowds that were packing World Food Street and pushing into a 16-foot-wide alley - a tight, sloping space where most of 158 lives would be lost in a gruesome crush.
Washington Post

4 DAYS AGO AT 2:34 PM


The Itaewon crush was "completely preventable."


I'm posting this extraordinary report from the Washington Post in Seoul of the tragic crowd crush in the modern "camp town" of Itaewon on October 29th (the link is free and gets you behind the paywall). The story of government malfeasance corresponds with the initial reports I received from a friend in Seoul, John Eperjesi, who has lived in Itaewon for years. He told me that the police presence in the neighborhood was almost non-existent that night, especially in comparison to the large numbers deployed in 2021 (when covid emergencies were still in place). Here is what he wrote in an excellent story for the progressive Hankyoreh daily:

At 6:34 pm on Friday, Oct. 4, the sidewalk outside Exit 4 of Itaewon Station, Seoul, was lined with young people. They were dressed in black. They were silent. They did not make eye contact. Their gazes were fixed in the middle distance, as if in a trance. Masks covered their faces and hid their emotions. I imagine the expressions behind the masks were a mix of grief and anger, sorrow and rage, an emotional borderland that many of us are traversing right now.

The young people were holding hand-written signs. The signs said things like:

“There was nothing wrong with attending the Halloween party. The government must be held accountable and properly apologize for the Itaewon tragedy! — 2030 political community, Youth Movement”

“It‘s not your fault. The government must recognize its responsibility and must apologize and make this society safer.”

“It’s not your fault. This ‘tragedy’ was perfectly avoidable. The government must accept the fact that it’s to blame and apologize.”

“This was preventable. The government wasn’t there for us. Deepest condolences to the Itaewon crush victims. — Progressive university students network”



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Crucial lapses led to tragically delayed rescue in a Seoul alley

How a crowd crush unfolded in Itaewon
0:10
Videos posted online show the streets of Itaewon in Seoul throughout the night of Oct. 29 when a fatal crowd crush occurred during Halloween festivities. (Video: @limesarah1 via TikTok; @iwanderlista via TikTok; @reggiebabie via TikTok)

[한국어로 읽기]

For nearly four hours before people started dying during a Halloween celebration in Seoul’s Itaewon district, partygoers pleaded with police to divert the crowds that were packing World Food Street and pushing into a 16-foot-wide alley — a tight, sloping space where most of 158 lives would be lost in a gruesome crush.

And once that crush began, it took at least 26 minutes for emergency personnel to start effectively evacuating people. Some victims were trapped for more than an hour before rescuers reached them. The delays proved catastrophic.

A Washington Post analysis of more than 350 videos and photos, some obtained exclusively and many reviewed by experts at The Post’s request, found that multiple critical factors contributed to the tragedy and death toll in Itaewon on the night of Oct. 29.

Seoul

SOUTH

KOREA

Bukhansan National Park

Seoul

Itaewon

Namhansanseong Provincial Park

4 MILES

Satellite © 2022 CNES / Airbus / Maxar Technologies /Airbus

The Post, which also scrutinized emergency call logs and interviewed dozens of witnesses, determined that the alley became dangerously crowded as early as 6:28 p.m. The first of at least 13 emergency calls came in minutes later to warn of escalating chaos, with people wedged in so tightly that there were already injuries.

Video filmed at 6:28 p.m. on Oct. 29 shows the narrow alley in Itaewon was already dangerously crowded, according to expert review. (Video: @hyerinpark5 via TikTok)

At 10:08 p.m., those dynamics triggered the crush.

A few police officers and other individuals at the edge of the mayhem had been trying futilely to redirect the crowd, according to videos. At least 16 more emergency calls came in between 10:08 p.m. and 10:22 p.m., when video shows five officers struggling to pull out unconscious victims.

South Korea admits police crowd control was ‘inadequate’ before crush

Yet it wasn’t until 10:39 p.m. that emergency personnel closed both ends of the alley — a lag of roughly half an hour that allowed foot traffic to continue into the area, hampered rescue efforts and undoubtedly increased the fatalities, according to the experts’ review of the materials. Another 11 minutes elapsed before police mounted a broad response, according to department records.

The number of lives ultimately lost exceeded those in recent crowd-surge disasters at an outdoor concert in Houston and a soccer stadium in Indonesia. Almost 200 people were hurt; as of Thursday in Seoul, seven were still hospitalized.

How police action in Indonesia led to a deadly crush in the soccer stadium

“This was the easiest scenario in terms of effectively overseeing crowd control and preventing accidents,” said Young Ook Kim, an expert on crowd movement and spatial layout and behavior at Sejong University in Seoul. “If you just go assess the site and discuss potential countermeasures, anyone who has the instincts and experience would have been able to foresee the situation.”

The genesis of the deadly crush

Halloween weekend in Itaewon, a popular nightlife district in Seoul, typically draws tens of thousands of young people. Most of the raucous celebrations take place along World Food Street — a block of restaurants and bars — and the side alleys that connect it to one of Itaewon’s main thoroughfares.

With coronavirus restrictions lifted, local businesses were anticipating bigger crowds this year. “We plan to throw an epic Halloween party since it’s the first Halloween after coronavirus. Let’s party until the sun comes up,” one bar advertised.

A haven for many in Seoul, Itaewon ponders future after crowd crush

The festivities were in full swing by 10 p.m. that Saturday, videos show, with throngs of costumed men and women making their way up and down World Food Street and into the narrow passageway just west of the Hamilton Hotel. A DJ party was scheduled to gear up at the 108 Hip Hop Lounge, which is in the alley.

Around 10:08 p.m., something shifted in the packed crowd by the club, video reviewed by The Post shows. People began screaming.

Flow of crowd

WORLD FOOD STREET

WORLD FOOD STREET

108 Hip Hop Club

HAMILTON

HOTEL

Metro exit

ITAEWON ROAD

100 FEET

Satellite © 2022 NAVER / SPOT / National Geographic Information Institute

“This situation is extremely serious already,” noted Mark Breen, director of Safe Events, a company that specializes in safety planning for large-scale gatherings, who looked at videos provided by The Post. During the next 10 minutes, he saw evidence of crowd crush, a phenomenon that occurs when a crowd’s density crosses a critical threshold and its movement becomes almost fluid.

Kim, who also reviewed the alley videos, saw initial markers of the crush by 10:08 p.m., with some people squeezed so severely that they would have had trouble breathing.

Survivors Zara Lily, an English teacher, and Jinhyeong Yun, an ocean engineer, described what the scene felt like. “People were pushed onto each other, and there were many times where there was a wave of pushing which made people fall forwards and then back, just like ocean waves,” Lily wrote in a message from the couple’s joint Instagram account.

By 10:17 p.m., the experts agreed, the crush had taken over. Additional pressures at both ends of the alley only made it worse.

From World Food Street on the northern end, people continued turning in, unaware of what was happening. Video shows that the street itself was so congested at one point that a man tried to climb a sign on the back side of the Hamilton Hotel to escape. Meanwhile, on the alley’s southern end, partygoers on the main thoroughfare, as well as those just arriving from the Itaewon subway station, were pushing in, too.

Flow of crowd

Dangerously dense

Location of crush

WORLD FOOD STREET

WORLD FOOD STREET

108 Hip Hop Club

Metro exit

ITAEWON ROAD

100 FEET

Satellite © 2022 NAVER / SPOT / National Geographic Information Institute

Videos filmed between 10:17 and 10:21 p.m. show crowds converging from both ends of a narrow alley in Seoul's Itaewon district, leading to a crowd crush. (Video: @limesarah1 via TikTok and @iwanderlista via TikTok)

Just steps from the Hip Hop club entrance, videos show people pressed in hard and wincing in pain. Many were visibly gasping for air. G. Keith Still, a visiting professor of crowd science at the University of Suffolk in England, told The Post that in those panicked moments, people “could be dying on their feet.”

Two other witnesses said they watched as some in the crowd fell out of sight amid all the pushing, with others then falling on top of them — a human domino effect that experts label crowd collapse.

According to the Korean newspaper Dong-A Ilbo, area businesses had asked the city days earlier to require subway trains to bypass Itaewon station over the weekend because of concerns about the volume of people who often exit there. The Seoul Transportation Corp. told The Post that it did not receive an official request. Experts said shutting down the closest exit to the alley would have alleviated some of the congestion on Oct. 29.

Failings in the emergency response

The most efficient way to alleviate a crowd crush or crowd collapse is to relieve the intense pressure by removing people from the periphery as fast as possible, experts say. In Itaewon, that meant immediately evacuating people out both ends of the alley.

But The Post analysis of available video determined that it took between 26 and 31 minutes after the crush began for emergency personnel to start doing so.

By 10:22 p.m., people were already massed on top of each other at the most jammed point of the alley. The five officers on the scene had trouble reaching individuals and pulling them out given the weight of the crowd, available videos show. Meanwhile, a photo from a bird’s-eye perspective shows that foot traffic continued in from World Food Street, exacerbating the bottleneck.

Flow of crowd

Dangerously dense

Location of crush

WORLD FOOD STREET

WORLD FOOD STREET

Emergency response

ITAEWON ROAD

100 FEET

Satellite © 2022 NAVER / SPOT / National Geographic Information Institute

A handful of police officers attempt to pull crushed revelers from the crowd around 10:23 p.m. on Oct. 29 in the Itaewon neighborhood of Seoul. (Video: @lorna.talion1122 via TikTok and Reddit)

Itaewon police Sgt. Kim Baek-gyeom realized something was wrong when he and two junior officers heard screams coming from the area as they responded to an unrelated call. He radioed for backup, then he and another officer ran to World Food Street to try to keep more people from entering the alley.

“There were so many people being pushed down from the [street], pressure continued to apply to the scene, making it even more difficult to evacuate people from the pile,” he told South Korea’s Hankyoreh newspaper.

Kim said he momentarily considered whether to race to his precinct for a megaphone, then decided the situation was too dire. His desperation as he begged everyone to turn around was captured in a video mash-up that has since gone viral.

“People are dying. Move back. Please cooperate,” he implored.

Seoul crowd crush victims: An actor. A student. The ‘life of the party.’

A small contingent of emergency workers was first able to clear the southern end of alley. Additional support and ambulances struggled to reach the site because of traffic along Itaewon-Ro, the main street, according to walkie-talkie transcripts.

“It’s too difficult to enter via vehicle. All responders travel via foot,” the response commander ordered at 10:29 p.m.

By 10:34 p.m., no emergency personnel had yet reached the northernmost section of the crush, videos show.

At 10:39 p.m., more than half an hour after the crush started, five firefighters and four police officers are finally visible in a video of the location. Subsequent video reveals how slowly the rescue progressed.

Location of crush

Emergency response

WORLD FOOD STREET

WORLD FOOD STREET

Emergency response

ITAEWON ROAD

100 FEET

Satellite © 2022 NAVER / SPOT / National Geographic Information Institute

Videos filmed between 11:02 p.m. and 11:23 p.m. on Oct. 29 show how rescue efforts by emergency personnel progressed following the crowd collapse in Itaewon. (Video: @reggiebabie via TikTok and Obtained by the Washington Post)

“Everyone needs to come to the back side,” a responder ordered via walkie-talkie at 10:56 p.m. “The number of cardiac arrests is sharply rising.”

A little more than five minutes later, videos show emergency crews evacuating the injured onto a still very crowded World Food Street.

Not until 11:22 p.m.more than an hour after the crush began, did rescuers manage to pull all the injured and unconscious from the alley and start to triage CPR on Itaewon-Ro and adjacent areas, the walkie-talkie logs show.

Though an investigation is ongoing, police have acknowledged that both their actions before the crush and their response as it unfolded were inadequate. Investigators have raided dozens of offices as part of their probe, including those of the national police chief, Seoul Metro headquarters and Yongsan Police Station.

A completely preventable disaster

Experts say the tragedy was preventable. On Halloween weekend 2021, revelers in Itaewon were assertively directed by uniformed police officers to make sure the crowds traveled in an orderly and distanced way as a part of coronavirus prevention efforts.

Two videos filmed at the same location on Halloween weekend show how police presence differed in Itaewon between 2021 and 2022. (Video: kuntaworld via YouTube; GoGo Korea via YouTube)

No such prevention plans were implemented this fall, the first Halloween celebration in three years without a coronavirus mask or distancing mandate. Law enforcement agencies instead dispatched 137 uniformed and plainclothes personnel on Oct. 29 for crime prevention, with an eye on drug use, sexual violence and petty crime. Thirty-two officers were available to handle on-site emergencies, according to National Police Agency data.

Police agencies in South Korea have robust training for crowd control and monitoring, given the frequency of demonstrations that draw tens of thousands of protesters and the nation’s history with military dictatorship, said Kim, the crowd expert at Sejong University.

The lack of prevention in Itaewon in late October partly reflects the country’s top-down culture for law enforcement. According to some police training experts in South Korea, lower-level officials have no incentive to prepare for potentially volatile events when laws or regulations don’t require it, or to suggest prevention plans not mandated in security manuals.

“Once this crush was well underway, there was probably very little that could have been done to prevent significant loss of life,” said Martyn Amos, a crowd expert and professor of computer and information sciences at Northumbria University in England. “The overriding aim of the authorities should have been to prevent it [from] happening in the first place.”

Kelly Kasulis Cho, Samuel Oakford, Imogen Piper, Julie Yoon, Bryan Pietsch and Joyce Sohyun Lee contributed to this report.


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all > Editorial & Opinion

[Column] Birth of the 6:34 Generation
Posted on : Nov.8,2022 14:37 KST Modified on : Nov.8,2022 14:37 KST
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The first emergency call regarding the dangerously crowded Itaewon streets was made to the police at 6:34 pm, a number that has become a symbol of the state‘s negligence in the tragic crowd crush

This poster designed to resemble a funeral photo bearing the slogan “The government wasn’t there for us” was lying amidst bouquets commemorating the victims of the Itaewon crowd crush near Itaewon Station, Seoul, at 6:34 pm on Friday, Nov. 4. (Photo provided by John R. Eperjesi)



John R. Eperjesi



By John R. Eperjesi, professor in the Department of English Linguistics and Literature at Kyung Hee University in Seoul





At 6:34 pm on Friday, Oct. 4, the sidewalk outside Exit 4 of Itaewon Station, Seoul, was lined with young people. They were dressed in black. They were silent. They did not make eye contact. Their gazes were fixed in the middle distance, as if in a trance. Masks covered their faces and hid their emotions. I imagine the expressions behind the masks were a mix of grief and anger, sorrow and rage, an emotional borderland that many of us are traversing right now.



The young people were holding hand-written signs. The signs said things like:



“There was nothing wrong with attending the Halloween party. The government must be held accountable and properly apologize for the Itaewon tragedy! — 2030 political community, Youth Movement”



“It‘s not your fault. The government must recognize its responsibility and must apologize and make this society safer.”



“It’s not your fault. This ‘tragedy’ was perfectly avoidable. The government must accept the fact that it’s to blame and apologize.”



“This was preventable. The government wasn’t there for us. Deepest condolences to the Itaewon crush victims. — Progressive university students network”



“6:34. The government wasn’t there. It was avoidable.”





Young people in black hold placards as part of a demonstration near Itaewon Station, Seoul, on Friday, Nov. 4. The demonstration was held to commemorate the victims of the Itaewon crowd crush and demand that the South Korean government be held responsible for the disaster. (Photo provided by John R. Eperjesi)



Many of the signs held by young people displayed three numbers, 6:34, a reference to the time when the first emergency call was made to the police, four hours before 156 people were crushed to death in a narrow alley next to the Hamilton Hotel. The caller saw clearly what was happening and foresaw what could happen:



“It‘s a narrow alley. The people standing in line for the club, the people coming up from Itaewon Station, and the people exiting the streets [above] are all tangled up. They might be crushed to death. I think [the police] should control the people at the entrance [of the alley].”



There are many references to this fateful time, 6:34, in the growing library of post-it notes, letters and signs that are accumulating at the Halloween memorial in Itaewon. Koreans often use numbers to represent historical events — 6.25 for the Korean War, 4.3 for the Jeju April 3 Incident — as well as for collective age groups, such as 386 for the generation that was active in the democracy movement of the 1980s. Could we be witnessing the birth of the 6:34 Generation? A 6:34 Movement?



As I walked along the sidewalk between the silent protestors, I was heartened to see young men and women standing together given the need to support and care for each other during this difficult time. Hopefully this young generation will transform the ugly gender wars that permeate this country into something productive and beautiful. This is a coming-of-age moment for many young Koreans, a horrific crisis through which they are beginning to find their political voices and glimpse their collective strength as they advocate for the 156 people who joyously ventured out to celebrate Halloween in Itaewon and did not come home.





A young person in black clothing is holding a placard that says “6:34” near Itaewon Station, Seoul, on Friday, Nov. 4. The demonstration was held to commemorate the victims of the Itaewon crowd crush and to demand that the South Korean government be held responsible for the disaster. (Photo provided by John R. Eperjesi)



Please direct questions or comments to [english@hani.co.kr]








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