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This Article is From Apr 21, 2014

Tipping point: Chaos ruled sinking ferry

Tipping point: Chaos ruled sinking ferry
In this April 16, 2014 file photo, released by South Korea Coast Guard via Yonhap News Agency, South Korean rescue team boats and fishing boats try to rescue passengers of the sinking Sewol ferry, off South Korea's southern coast,near Jindo, south of Seou
Jindo, South Korea: Of all the images from the loss of a ferry in the cold waters off the southwest coast of South Korea last week, perhaps none have angered South Koreans more than that of the captain, an orange life vest strapped to his torso, awkwardly stepping off his half-submerged vessel to the safety of a rescue boat, even as hundreds of his passengers remained trapped inside. (In sad twist on proud tradition, captains let others go down with ship)

The captain, Lee Jun-seok, 69, has yet to explain publicly why he abandoned the ship with people aboard - an apparent violation of maritime protocol, if not the law - as it sunk beneath the waves. (Prosecutors extend Korea ferry captain's detention as death toll mounts)

But a portrait of the ship's last voyage is emerging from crew members, survivors and a transcript of the vessel's final 40 minutes of communications with emergency dispatchers on shore. It is a scene of rapidly building chaos in which the captain and his crew faced a series of tough choices, questionable decisions and mechanical failures - including the apparent loss of the onboard communications system. (More bodies from ship; transcript reveals confusion)

Those factors may have all contributed to the ship's sinking and the death of at least scores, and more likely hundreds, of people.

"The Coast Guard will arrive in 15 minutes; please tell your passengers to wear life jackets," emergency dispatchers told the ferry about half an hour after it radioed for help.

"Now we have lost our ability to broadcast our messages," the ship responded. Crew members, using the ferry's intercom, had previously instructed passengers to stay where they were, thinking it would be safer.

"Even if you can't use your speaker, do your best to go out and ensure that your passengers wear life jackets or thick clothes," emergency dispatchers said.

"If our passengers evacuate, will they be immediately rescued?" the ship responded.

"Let them float even with life rings. Hurry!" the dispatchers responded. A minute later, they added: "We don't know the situation there. So the captain should make a final decision, and he should hurry to decide whether to evacuate them."

A communications officer, in a separate part of the ferry, said he never received instructions from the bridge to tell passengers to abandon ship. One crew member on the bridge said he heard the captain give the order to evacuate, but that he did not hear the message broadcast to the passengers. Survivors have not reported hearing it. (Korean gym is a hothouse of grief for relatives of ferry missing)

When the Sewol began its overnight journey at 9 p.m. last Tuesday, embarking from a pier in Incheon, west of Seoul, and heading toward the southern resort island of Jeju, its voyage seemed like so many others the ship had taken. The 460-foot-long, five-story ferry plied this 264-mile route twice a week, along a busy shipping lane down the west coast of South Korea.

It had 476 passengers on board - 60 percent of its capacity. Most of them were second-year high school students on what was supposed to be the last school trip before they entered a pressure-cooker year of cramming for college entrance exams. The ship also carried a full load of cargo, including 124 cars, 56 trucks and 105 shipping containers.

Some of the students gathered on the deck watching fireworks bursting in the night sky. Below deck, others strolled in small groups or gathered in entertainment rooms to sing karaoke or play video games.

Up in the pilothouse, on the ship's top deck, the crew worked in four shifts. This ship left late because of fog, and Oh Yong-seok, 58, a helmsman, was on a second shift, taking the wheel under the guidance of a shipmate at 11 p.m. The water was calm, the night quiet, Oh recalled in a series of interviews this week. The captain stopped by the bridge from time to time to check on matters.

As Oh handed over the controls to the third shift, Oh suggested that crew members double-check the straps tying down the vehicles and cargo in the hold, he recalled. On his round, he told them that he had noticed that several had come loose and he tightened them. Otherwise, he said, there were no issues. With that, he retired to his berth and fell into a deep sleep.

The last shift began at 7:30 a.m., under the watch of Park Han-gyeol, 26, the youngest of the ship's mates. She had been with the company only six months. On this trip, her shift coincided with the passage of the ship through the most challenging section of the voyage: a waterway known for its rapid and unpredictable currents and frequent ship accidents.

"When the current hits the ship's side, it can throw the ship off course," Oh said. "It's not easy to steer there."

Park was navigating this notorious waterway for the first time, giving instructions to a helmsman at the wheel, according to prosecutors who have raised the question of how qualified she was for the difficult passage.

Investigators say the Sewol appeared to make a sharp turn to the left around the time it began to tilt, and were looking into whether unsecured ... cargo may have shifted, contributing to the accident.

The helmsman on duty, Jo Jun-gi, later told reporters that "I made a mistake of my own, but the ship turned much more than usual." A prosecutor said investigators were also looking into "discrepancies" between Park's and Jo's versions of what happened.

At 8:48 a.m., Oh said he was jolted awake as his body was thrown against the port side wall of his quarters. The vessel had begun to list.

He lurched from his room barefoot and scrambled along the corridor of the ship toward the bridge. The first person he saw was Lee, the ship's captain.

Lee, who had been in his room, had just clambered out of his cabin and, with the ship slowly turning on its side, was now holding onto the doorway of the pilothouse, trying to pull himself inside and get control of the ship. Oh pushed the captain up and into the room and followed as well.

Soon, all of the ship's mates and helmsmen had gathered there. Lee, clutching onto a pillar near the map table at the center of the bridge, began barking orders.

"The ship was already listing so heavily everyone was hanging onto whatever they could grab," Oh recalled. "It was clear we were in a really bad situation."

That situation would in short order get even worse.

Investigators trying to reconstruct events have been weighing a range of possible causes, including pilot error; an unexpected current; failure in the ship's ballast; loose or unbalanced cargo; a recent addition of more cabins on the upper deck of the 20-year-old ferry that may have impaired its ability to recover balance; and loosely abided safety regulations.

At 8:55 a.m., with the ship tilting and unable to move, someone on the bridge asked the local maritime authorities to "please come quickly," according to the transcript of the ship-to-shore radio communications.

Lee ordered the crew to right the ship. But Park said the ballast motor was not working, Oh recalled.

At 9:05 a.m., the radio on shore crackled with another urgent message from the Sewol: "What's going on with the Coast Guard?" A government emergency dispatcher began asking ships in the area to go to the Sewol's aid.

Two levels below, Kang Hae-seong, one of the ship's communications officers, was in the broadcasting room and trying to figure out what to do. With the ship listing about 30 degrees and cutlery falling off the shelves, he made an announcement on the public address system urging the passengers to stay where they were and not to move hastily.

"I didn't have time to look at the manual but I thought I should calm people down first," he recalled in an interview.

Lee said on Friday that he did not order an immediate evacuation because he feared the passengers would be endangered by the strong currents and the cold water.

Oh said Lee first tried to get the ship's life rafts deployed. His crew tried but could not make it to the lifeboats.

By 9:18 a.m., the Sewol reported that it was listing at an angle of more than 50 degrees. "Impossible to evacuate," someone on the Sewol's bridge told emergency dispatchers by radio.

Down below, Kang contacted the Coast Guard using his cellphone and then continued to tell people on the public address system to remain where they were "a little while longer" because the rescue boats were coming.

At 9:23 a.m., the bridge sent another distress call: "We are about to sink."

As the ship continued to list and filled with water, Kang and his colleagues in the communications office resorted to desperate measures, stacking chairs to enable some passengers to climb up to the fourth floor. Another set of crew members unrolled a fire hose that passengers used to climb to a higher deck, he recalled.

"It was chaotic because everyone was just busy saving themselves and many people weren't pulling up the people below them," Kang recalled.

Oh said he heard Lee, before leaving the bridge, give the order to evacuate, but Oh did not hear it broadcast. Kang, the communications officer, said he never received the order. A senior prosecutor said investigators were still trying to figure out whether it ever reached the passengers.

At 9:38 a.m., in the ship's last communication with emergency dispatchers, the bridge reported that the vessel was listing at 60 degrees. "Those who can evacuate through the port side are trying it," a voice said over the radio.

All the crew members began to flee the bridge. More than two-thirds of the 29-member crew, including the entire navigation team, survived. Only about a third of the passengers - 174 - got out alive. By Monday, 61 people had been confirmed dead and 241 were still missing.

Oh saw Lee slide down the floor of the wheelhouse and crash through a door in the port-side wall. The helmsman said it was not clear whether the captain was evacuating or had just lost his grip of the pole and fell.

He did not see Lee again until an image of him was broadcast on television: The captain was in handcuffs, charged with accidental homicide. He was also charged with abandoning his passengers in a time of crisis, a crime punishable by up to life in prison.
 
© 2014, The New York Times News Service

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