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South Korea begins to raise Sewol ferry, three years after disaster

Part of the Sewol ferry is visible for the first time since it sank three years ago as authorities finally begin to lift vessel out of the water. 

Kim Da-sol (Korea Herald/ANN)
Seoul
Thu, March 23, 2017

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South Korea begins to raise Sewol ferry, three years after disaster Two barges prepare a test for the salvage of the sunken Sewol ferry in waters off Jindo, South Jeolla Province, Wednesday. (Korea Herald/Yonhap)

S

outh Korea on Wednesday took a long-awaited step to salvage the sunken Sewol ferry, as the wreckage began to be lifted from the seabed.

Three hundred and four people, mostly high school students, died when it went aground and capsised in waters off Jindo, South Jeolla Province, nearly three years ago. Nine are still unaccounted for. 

Salvage operators said they began to raise the sunken ship and part of its structure was revealed above the water around 3:45 a.m. nearly three years after the disaster took place.

If the entire ferry will be raised, two salvage barges will move the hull on a semisubmersible ship, which will carry it to the port of Mokpo, according to a news report.

The Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries, which controls the salvage operation, expects that it will take about 12 to13 days to lift the ship and move it into Mokpo.

With some of the bereaved families watching from boats, engineers began the salvage operation at 8:50 p.m., which involves lifting the 145-metre-long, 6,850-ton passenger vessel without cutting it into pieces.

Many Koreans hoped for the ship’s safe but swift recovery Wednesday. 

“We thank all those who have supported us. We need you once again to pray for the safe salvage of the ship and return of the nine [passengers] who are still in there,” said family members of the passengers whose bodies are still unaccounted for at a press conference at a port in Jindo, Wednesday. 

A conspicuously larger number of people paid a visit to a memorial in Ansan, Gyeonggi Province, for Sewol victims, praying for the ferry’s recovery and the return of those missing. 

“Three years have passed, I cannot imagine what the families have gone through. I wish the causes of the ferry sinking will come out to the surface as well,” said 59-year-old Song Cheol-sub.

A center for bereaved families and a memorial classroom of Danwon High School in Ansan – where most of the student victims attended – also received a larger number of visitors and volunteers Wednesday. 

The ill-fated passenger ship was carrying 476 people to a southern resort island of Jeju when it sank on April 16, 2014. Just 172 passengers were rescued.

The government had earlier this week said that the salvage effort will likely take place during the next neap tide on April 5. 

The ministry has been carefully reviewing the weather conditions around the site as it requires calm seas. 

Bad weather and high tides have several times delayed the resumption of operations to raise the wreckage of the ship. 

The ship, lying on the sea floor on its left side, would normal weigh 8,300 metric tons according to the ministry, but water, stones and sand inside has increased that to about 20,000 metric tons.

The government announced the salvage operation plan in 2015, but the timeline for raising Sewol has been repeatedly postponed due to adverse weather and technical problems.


This article appeared on The Korea Herald newspaper website, which is a member of Asia News Network and a media partner of The Jakarta Post
 

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