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‘It was almost post-apocalyptic’: A reckoning awaits Seoul’s crowd tragedy

Updated October 31, 2022 at 6:42 a.m. EDT|Published October 30, 2022 at 6:28 p.m. EDT
People gather in Seoul after a Halloween celebration crowd crush that killed more than 150 people in the district of Itaewon. (Albert Retief/AFP/Getty Images)
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SEOUL — At first, the young woman felt herself being squeezed by the packed crowd as it slowly pushed down a narrow alleyway in the South Korean capital, where she had been enjoying Halloween festivities Saturday night.

Then the squeezing became more like crushing, and soon bodies were pressing against her so tightly that her feet were no longer touching the ground. What the 23-year old remembers next is being in a pile of people, her lungs flattened, her legs going numb as she took shallow breaths. She remembers people screaming for help, then falling silent as bodies around her grew limp.

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At least 158 people were killed in a crowd crush during Halloween celebrations in the streets and narrow alleys of the Itaewon area of Seoul on the night of Oct. 29. The tragedy has prompted debate over the role of national and local agencies and who should be accountable. South Korea’s police chief said the crowd control was “inadequate.”
Crowd crush
A crowd crush or surge happens when people are packed together in a confined space and there’s movement such as pushing that causes the crowd to fall over. (It’s different from a stampede). See photos and videos showing how the crush happened in Itaewon, and read accounts from those who were there.
The victims
Officials said they have identified all of the victims and mourners have left white flowers and handwritten notes. The victims include 56 men and 102 women, and most were in their 20s and 30s. At least 26 foreign nationals were among the dead.
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“I thought, ‘Okay, I’m going to be next,’” said Juliana Velandia Santaella, a medical student from Mexico who was pulled from the crowd by a man standing nearby. “I really thought I was going to die.”

By Sunday, those frantic moments had given way to a procession of mourners bringing white flowers and candles to the scene, along with questions about how a celebration could have turned into a crowd crush that killed at least 154 people in one of the worst disasters of its kind in recent history.

As condolences rolled in from around the world, South Korean officials said Sunday that they had identified nearly all of the victims, among them 20 foreign nationals from 10 different countries, including two from the United States, one of whom was a 20-year old college student from Marietta, Ga., spending a semester abroad. Others were from Iran, Norway, Uzbekistan and China. The rest were mostly young South Koreans in their 20s and 30s who’d packed into the narrow alleyways of a historic nightlife district known as Itaewon, according to South Korea’s Interior and Safety Ministry.

Among the questions South Koreans are raising in the aftermath of the disaster is why public safety officials did not anticipate the need to manage a crowd of tens of thousands of partygoers expected for the wildly popular Halloween celebrations.

‘So many bodies’: Seoul witnesses recall Halloween night of true horror

Only two days before, the surrounding Yongsan district unveiled safety measures that included coronavirus prevention, street cleanliness, restaurant safety inspections and crackdowns on potential use of drugs. Crowd control issues were not on the list.

The alley, on a hill, filled up with people Saturday night. It was so packed that when people at the top of the hill fell, it created a cascade. Many people toward the bottom of the hill chanted “stop pushing, stop pushing,” according to witnesses interviewed in South Korean media.

The oversight highlighted limitations in the nation’s policies governing mass gatherings in public places, experts say. Although detailed safety protocols are required for official events, such as festivals, the same disaster prevention methods do not apply to public spaces where large crowds are expected to gather informally, making safety protocols ambiguous with no clear agency in charge, they said.

The exact cause of the crowd surge is under investigation.

The Halloween crush in Seoul's Itaewon district killed more than 150 people and injured dozens. South Korea declared a period of national mourning on Oct. 30. (Video: Julie Yoon/The Washington Post, Photo: Anthony Wallace/AFP/Getty Images/The Washington Post)

Seoul crowd crush shows gaps in Korean safety rules, experts say

Mehdi Moussaïd, a researcher in crowd behavior at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development, said the relatively spontaneous nature of the event — there are no tickets, and no controlled entries and exits — exacerbated the disaster.

He watched publicly available videos of the crush and “saw what I typically see in these kinds of accidents — there were many people, too many people in relation to the available space. [This is] measured by density, so the number of people per square meter.”

In this case, as in others he’s studied, he thinks there were about eight to 10 people per square meter.

“At that level of density, it’s no surprise that the first few people begin to faint, because they’re too tight and they can no longer breathe,” he said. “And if this continues, and that’s what happened, then all the people in that zone will no longer have enough oxygen, even after they faint, and will die one after the other.”

The crush in Seoul was different from those at music festivals or religious pilgrimages, he added, because people are “in a city, and it’s not a planned event with entry tickets that allow for funneling of the crowd. We don’t know which street people will go to.”

The Itaewon alley at the center of Saturday’s crowd crush also appeared dangerous the night before, with crowds swaying side to side in a cramped corridor as their weight shifted onto one another, one partygoer said.

Hayley Johnson, 29, who said she had gone out Friday night to enjoy the atmosphere, recalled crowds being “manageable” until she reached two famous clubs, Fountain and Atelier, which are steps away from the alley where the crush occurred.

When she reached the narrow street, “it was just body to body,” she said. “You would see behind you people were tipping side to side. It really scared my friend and I.”

The event can be described as a crowd crush or surge, but not a stampede, said G. Keith Still, a visiting professor of crowd science at the University of Suffolk in England. A crush or a surge happens when people are packed together in a confined space and there’s movement such as pushing that causes the crowd to fall over. A stampede implies that people had space to run, which was not the case in Itaewon, he said.

The more people who are in the crowd, the greater the force of the crowd crush is. “The whole crowd falls over as one, and if you’re in a confined space, people then can’t get up again,” Still said.

In the immediate aftermath of the disaster, bodies were laid out in the streets as onlookers frantically attempted CPR, pulling shirts over faces to signal when their efforts had failed. Video footage reviewed by The Washington Post shows police officers running toward the scene, a man being treated with a defibrillator, and a woman’s body covered with clothes as blood pooled by her side. Others lay still with mouths open.

“It was almost post-apocalyptic. It was almost all civilians, no medical personnel, trying to save these people,” said tech worker Yoon-sung Park, who helped carry injured people to safer ground for CPR. “People were laid across here all the way down, about a half mile,” he added, gesturing toward Itaewon’s main market street, where emergency responders had wheeled covered corpses into ambulances. “There were so many bodies.”

Looking out from a window in their ninth-floor hotel room Saturday night, Joshua and Angela Smith, siblings from Florida, watched the disaster unfold in the alley below. Joshua saw emergency workers using hand pumps to provide oxygen to three victims being wheeled toward ambulances, and he saw a fourth gurney transporting a body in a bag. Angela Smith heard screams coming from the alley.

“It was horrible, horrible to see,” Joshua said.

Police ushered a 31-year-old doctor from Florida, Sophia Akhiyat, to the alley to help, she said, describing “a pile of humans” at the top of a narrow street that was preventing ambulances from entering the area.

“These people, I think most of them were near death or dead by the time we were helping them,” she said.

South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol toured the scene Sunday, the alleyways now blocked off with police tape, and strewn with Halloween masks and plastic candy buckets. The nation declared a period of national mourning until Nov. 5, with flags flying half-staff on federal buildings.

Michelle Ye Hee Lee and Kelly Kasulis Cho reported from Seoul; Stephanie McCrummen and Praveena Somasundaram from Washington; and Annabelle Timsit from London.