Chung Hong-Won admitted he had
not been up to the task of overseeing rescue operations after the Sewol
capsized with 476 people — many of them schoolchildren — on board.
“I offer my apology for having
been unable to prevent this accident from happening and unable to
properly respond to it afterwards,” he said.
“I believed I, as the prime minister, certainly had to take responsibility and resign.”
Parents and relatives of the
missing and the dead have blasted the response to the sinking, saying
delays in launching the rescue had cost lives.
South Korean mourners attend a memorial service for the victims of the sunken “Sewol” ferr …
“I hope that such wrongdoings will be rooted out this time so that an accident like this will never happen again.”
The role of prime minister is largely ceremonial in South Korea, with the lion’s share of executive power vested in the presidency of Park Geun-Hye.
Park has decided to accept Chung’s resignation but only after the government finishes the entire rescue and salvage operation, her spokesman said.
In Jindo, the nearest island to the wreck, relatives of the dead and missing were unimpressed at Chung’s move.
A relative weeps near Jindo harbour where family members of the ‘Sewol’ ferry disaster victi …
“Anybody responsible for this disaster must be punished severely, but the most urgent thing to do now is to recover the bodies as soon as possible. I’m not interested in anything else.”
Prosecutors looking to mete out the justice sought by relatives such as Ji raided the offices of state sea traffic controllers in Jeju island on Sunday, the intended destination of the Sewol, and in Jindo.
They seized records of radio communication with the Sewol and surveillance video footage, Yonhap news agency said.
A transcript of conversations
released earlier revealed panic and indecision among crew and sea
traffic controllers in the crucial final moments, with neither able to
make the call to evacuate passengers.
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