A South Korean court yesterday sentenced a former coast guard officer to four years in prison for negligence while rescuing passengers during last year’s ferry sinking that killed more than 300 people.
Kim Kyung-il was the captain of the first coast guard ship sent to the scene of the sinking on April 16. Slow and unprofessional rescue work by the coast guard has been considered as one of the reasons for the scale of the disaster, together with ferry crewmembers’ negligence, overloaded cargo, improper storage and corruption by the ferry’s owners.
Most of the dead were students on a school trip.
The Gwangju District Court said in its verdict that the death toll would have been lower if Kim had broadcast an evacuation order for those trapped inside the sinking ship after he arrived at the scene.
The verdict said Kim fabricated official documents and falsely stated in them that he had issued an evacuation order. In the days after the sinking, Kim said in media interviews that his ship issued a broadcast urging people to stay out of the ferry and jump to the water.
The sinking, one of the deadliest disasters in South Korean history, triggered an outpouring of national grief and raised pointed questions about public safety.
In November, the same court handed down a 36-year prison term to the sunken ferry’s captain and sentenced 14 other navigation crewmembers to five to 30 years in prison.
The ship’s billionaire owner was found dead after fleeing arrest, and his son and two brothers were sentenced to up to three years in prison for corruption. South Korean also disbanded the coast guard and launched a new safety agency. Kim has been working at a local maritime police station under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Public Safety and Security, according to ministry officials. AP
Ex-coast guard officer in S. Korea guilty over ferry sinking
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