South
Korean President Moon Jae-in comforted mourners in the small scenic
city of Jecheon yesterday amid growing public anger at how fire ripped
through an eight-storey building, killing at least 29 people, most of
them taking a sauna.
All but one of the victims had been identified
by yesterday morning, including 20 women who were overcome by toxic
fumes in the second-floor sauna, Jecheon fire chief Lee Sang-min said.
“Our crew on the scene said the lockers inside the facility were
installed like a labyrinth and it’s a glass building with few windows,
which apparently made way for the smoke from the first floor to quickly
fill up the second floor,” Lee told reporters.
Anger mounted at
reports of shoddy building construction, broken doors and other problems
that may have contributed to the deaths.
One man shouted at
officials visiting survivors in hospital, complaining that firefighters
failed to break through to the trapped women in time.
Media reported
that a glass door leading to the sauna had not been working properly for
more than a month, and that emergency stairs were often used for
storage.
“Nothing has changed even after the Sewol tragedy,”
parliament member Ahn Cheol-soo said, referring to the 2014 ferry
sinking that killed more than 300 people, mostly South Korean
schoolchildren. “I just cannot understand why the same type of accidents
happen over and over again,” he said, according to the Yonhap news
agency.
Jecheon’s mayor told reporters the city was considering a
mass funeral and planned to cover most of the costs. Investigators were
still trying to find out the cause of the conflagration, but were
focusing on a first-floor parking lot, Lee said. “There were cars parked
on the first floor, and as they were burning, a large amount of toxic
gases were released.”
Tragic stories began to emerge as victims
were identified. One man told Yonhap that he lost his mother, wife, and
daughter. Another said he received a phone call from his trapped wife as
she coughed in the gathering smoke, but was later unable to reach her
again.
Heavy smoke charred glass facade of the building as
firefighters struggled to extinguish the blaze, climbing up and down a
ladder in a desperate search for survivors. Organisers called off a leg
of the 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Games torch relay in Jecheon on what
should have been a day of
celebration ahead of the games.
“We
thought that having a torch relay at a place where so many people died
in a fire accident is just not right, and therefore cancelled today’s
event in Jecheon,” Ryu Hoyon, the torch relay manager for the
Pyeongchang organising committee, told Reuters. “We are planning to
adjust further schedules with those who want to continue the relay.”
Jecheon is southeast of the capital Seoul and is popular with visitors to its mountains and lakes.
Moon Jae-in