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S. Korea Subway Arson Attack Kills 120

Discussion in 'Other Sports' started by VesceySux, Feb 18, 2003.

  1. VesceySux

    VesceySux World Champion Lurker
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    I am now officially scared to take the N/R line to work everyday...


    Arson Attack on South Korean Subway Kills at Least 120

    DAEGU, South Korea — A man on a South Korean subway ignited a carton filled with flammable material Tuesday, causing a fire that killed about 120 people and injured 135, officials said.

    A suspect was under interrogation in Daegu, South Korea's third-largest city, but police still did not know what motivated the attack. Rescue workers had given up the search for survivors by the afternoon. It was unknown what substance the attacker used to start the blaze.

    The fire started in one six-car train at a station, igniting seats and spreading to another train also stopped at the station, officials said.

    Lim Dae-yoon, the chief of Daegu city's east district municipal government, said the number of victims was about 120. "We believe the death toll will not rise drastically from that," Lim said.

    Many bodies were burned beyond recognition. Officials said they would have to wait for DNA tests to determine an exact number, which could take weeks.

    Other people died of asphyxiation on the train platform. One man said his missing daughter called by mobile phone to say there was a fire and the subway door wasn't opening.

    Firefighters gave horrifying accounts of the scene underground: bodies of victims asphyxiated as they tried to escape up the stairs; on the platform were the ashen bones of those trapped in the flames.

    Chung Sook-jae, 54, rushed to the scene after her daughter, 26-year-old Min Shim-eun, called her husband to say she was suffocating. Then the line went dead.

    "She never caused any problems. She was a good kid. Why does this have to happen her?" Chung said, crying on the pavement near the scene. "If she's not out by now, she's probably dead. What am I going to do if her body is all burned out of recognition?"

    Police were interrogating Kim Dae-han, 56, who witnesses said carried the milk carton into the subway car, according to Kim Byong-hak, a police lieutenant in Daegu.

    "When the man tried to use a cigarette lighter to light the box, some passengers tried to stop him. Apparently a scuffle erupted and the box exploded into flames," the officer said.

    Authorities said that the fire was put out by 1 p.m., about three hours after it started, but toxic gas in the tunnel delayed rescue efforts, the Yonhap news agency said. The acrid odor of burned plastic still wafted over the fire scene hours after the flames had been put out.

    The television station YTN aired footage of the chaotic scene inside a nearby hospital reportedly showing the suspect being attended to by nurses. The man sat frowning on a bed wearing a hospital smock, his face and hands smudged from soot from the fire.

    Yu Heung-soo, a police sergeant in Daegu, said Kim had been burned in both legs and the right wrist. But a doctor told YTN that the man's only injury was toxic gas inhalation.

    YTN, without citing sources, also reported that the suspect worked as truck driver and had once threatened to burn down the hospital where he had received unsatisfactory treatment.

    In the minutes after the fire began, thick black smoke billowed out of ventilator shafts of the subway. Downtown traffic came to a standstill as ambulances rushed to the scene. Orange suit-clad firefighters wearing oxygen tanks rushed into the subway.

    Kim Bok-sun, 45, said her missing daughter, 21-year-old Kang Yeon-ju, was on the burning train and called in panic.

    "She only said that there was a fire and the train door wasn't opening, so I told her to just break open a window and get out," she said, her voice trembling with emotion. Kim called her daughter back a few minutes later, "but she never answered the phone.

    Rescuers brought victims, their faces and clothes black with soot, up to the street in stretchers and slid them into ambulances. One witness detailed the terrifying scene inside the subway as the fire ignited.

    "The man kept flickering a lighter and an old man told him to stop. The man dropped the lighter and the train caught fire," an unidentified male survivor told YTN. "Several young men seized him, but the fire spread and black smoke rose. Then everyone rushed out."

    The injured were rushed to nearby hospitals, but details on their conditions were not known, said Kim, the police officer. YTN reported that some of the injured were in serious condition.

    One man told YTN that his friend called on his cell phone and said he was trapped inside one of the cars. The unidentified man told YTN that he had called subway officials and they were unaware of the fire at the time.

    President Kim Dae-jung ordered the government to consider designating the accident site as a special disaster zone, which would give it priority in receiving government aid and other assistance.

    Daegu, one of the 10 World Cup soccer venues last year, is the third largest city in South Korea with a population of 2.5 million.
     
  2. ROCKSS

    ROCKSS Member
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    How tragic.
     
  3. kidrock8

    kidrock8 Member

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    I actually rode that subway when I went to a World Cup match there this summer.

    The idiot who caused it has hell to pay.
     
  4. drapg

    drapg Member

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    It was just reported that this was not believed to be a terrorist activity.

    The man is mentally unstable. Spent time in an institution. He once threatened to burn down a hospital at which he was treated because he felt he was "mistreated."

    Nuts are everywhere.
     

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