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Thursday, April 17, 2014

Don't Captains Save Passengers First?



South Korea Ferry Captain: I Am 'Deeply Ashamed'

The captain of the ferry that sank off South Korea said that he was “deeply ashamed” Thursday as a criminal investigation began into the disaster.
Lee Joon-seok, 69, is being questioned by the coast guard, according to an official quoted by Reuters.
Lee appeared in front of Korean media with his face hidden in a gray hoodie. "I am really sorry and deeply ashamed," he said. "I don't know what to say."
Image: The captain of the South Korean ferry Sewol, which sank at sea off Jindo, is investigated at Mokpo police stationYONHAP VIA REUTERS
Lee Joon-Seok, center, captain of the South Korean ferry Sewol which sank at sea off Jindo.
Coast guard spokesman Kim Jae-in declined to speculate on the cause of sinking, but denied earlier reports by Yonhap news agency that the ferry had turned too swiftly. He also declined to say whether the ferry had drifted from its usual route.
Lee was filling in for the regular captain, who was on leave, but had been at sea for 40 years and had travelled on the route before, ferry operator Chonghaejin said.

Students on sinking ferry send heartbreaking texts

TODAY
         
Chonghaejin issued a brief statement via local media apologizing for the accident but has made no further comment.
Almost 300 passengers remained still missing after the vessel capsized and sank off South Korea on Wednesday.
- Alastair Jamieson

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