South Korea sets plan to raise ‘corroded’ Sewol ferry year after disaster

South Korea said on Wednesday it will raise the Sewol ferry that sank a year ago, killing more than 300 people, most of them children, yielding to pressure from mourning families who have called for a deeper investigation into the disaster. The Sewol, which was structurally unsound, overloaded and travelling too fast on a turn, capsized and sank during a routine voyage and lies 44 metres (144 feet) deep off the southwestern island of Jindo. Of those killed, 250 were teenagers on a school trip, many of whom obeyed crew instructions to remain in their cabins even as crew members were seen on TV escaping the sinking vessel.

The primary risk is that the Sewol is a vessel built more than 20 years ago so there is corrosion in its body.

President Park Geun-hye

Raising the Sewol has been a central demand of victims’ families, some of whom say the government let them down by failing to announce a salvage plan by the first anniversary of the disaster on April 16. Nine of the victims’ bodies remain missing.

And it is lying on its left, so as we try to raise it without righting it, there may be structural weakening.

President Park Geun-hye