South Korea court rejects removing minister over deadly crush
25 July 2023 - 11:13
by Ju-min Park
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A family member of a victim who died in a deadly Halloween crush last year, attends before the ruling on the National Assembly's impeachment of Interior Minister Lee Sang-min, at the constitutional court in Seoul, South Korea on July 25, 2023. Picture: Yonhap via REUTERS
Seoul — South Korea’s top court on Tuesday ruled against a parliamentary vote to impeach the interior minister over what critics said was a botched response to a deadly Halloween crush in Seoul last year, provoking anger and dismay among victims’ relatives.
Some relatives at the hearing broke down in tears after the court ruling, with two mothers collapsing and taken away by an ambulance. There was a heavy police presence at the court.
Legislators in February voted to impeach minister Lee Sang-min, urging him to take responsibility for the failure of the response to a crowd surge that killed 159 people, most of them young people celebrating Halloween, in Seoul’s Itaewon nightlife district.
“This disastrous incident was not caused and exacerbated by a single cause or person,” Lee Jong-seok, a justice at the court said, adding that different government agencies were not able to respond in a co-ordinated way to big disasters.
While the court found the minister had made inappropriate remarks about how the disaster unfolded, it said in a statement the comments did not amount to grounds for impeachment and ruled he had not neglected his duties. The decision was unanimous, the court said.
Lee, who did not attend the hearing, said later in a statement issued by his ministry that it was time to unite and stop “wasteful political strife” over the disaster.
Dozens of relatives and their supporters gathered in front of the court chanting “condemn the constitutional court that gave immunity to Lee Sang-min”.
Choi Sun-mi, the mother of victim Park Ga-young, said the ruling was devastating. “Our children, young people, are living in a place that isn’t safe to even walk in,” she said.
President Yoon Suk Yeol had rejected an opposition demand that he sack Lee. The president’s office and the ruling party denounced their rival Democrats and accused the party of abusing its majority in parliament to push the impeachment.
Before the ruling, dozens of members of right-wing groups rallied outside the court, calling on it to dismiss the impeachment and branding it an opposition ploy.
In June, the opposition-led National Assembly decided to fast-track a bill aimed at an independent investigation of the crowd crush.
The Itaewon district is known as a place of fun and freedom but its narrow, steep streets and limited access points proved a lethal mixture for the partygoers who became trapped and crushed.
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
South Korea court rejects removing minister over deadly crush
Seoul — South Korea’s top court on Tuesday ruled against a parliamentary vote to impeach the interior minister over what critics said was a botched response to a deadly Halloween crush in Seoul last year, provoking anger and dismay among victims’ relatives.
Some relatives at the hearing broke down in tears after the court ruling, with two mothers collapsing and taken away by an ambulance. There was a heavy police presence at the court.
Legislators in February voted to impeach minister Lee Sang-min, urging him to take responsibility for the failure of the response to a crowd surge that killed 159 people, most of them young people celebrating Halloween, in Seoul’s Itaewon nightlife district.
“This disastrous incident was not caused and exacerbated by a single cause or person,” Lee Jong-seok, a justice at the court said, adding that different government agencies were not able to respond in a co-ordinated way to big disasters.
While the court found the minister had made inappropriate remarks about how the disaster unfolded, it said in a statement the comments did not amount to grounds for impeachment and ruled he had not neglected his duties. The decision was unanimous, the court said.
Lee, who did not attend the hearing, said later in a statement issued by his ministry that it was time to unite and stop “wasteful political strife” over the disaster.
Dozens of relatives and their supporters gathered in front of the court chanting “condemn the constitutional court that gave immunity to Lee Sang-min”.
Choi Sun-mi, the mother of victim Park Ga-young, said the ruling was devastating. “Our children, young people, are living in a place that isn’t safe to even walk in,” she said.
President Yoon Suk Yeol had rejected an opposition demand that he sack Lee. The president’s office and the ruling party denounced their rival Democrats and accused the party of abusing its majority in parliament to push the impeachment.
Before the ruling, dozens of members of right-wing groups rallied outside the court, calling on it to dismiss the impeachment and branding it an opposition ploy.
In June, the opposition-led National Assembly decided to fast-track a bill aimed at an independent investigation of the crowd crush.
The Itaewon district is known as a place of fun and freedom but its narrow, steep streets and limited access points proved a lethal mixture for the partygoers who became trapped and crushed.
Reuters
Halloween crush in South Korea could have been prevented
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