Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - What caused the sinking of South Korea?

What caused the sinking of South Korea?

According to the latest in-depth reports from the Korean media, the main reason for the sinking of the South Korean Shiyue was a series of "man-made disasters". . . .

Altering the hull without authorization and overloading, the captain was sleeping at the time of the incident and handed it over to the rookie to sail into the dangerous sea area. After hitting the rocks, the captain did not deal with it urgently, and the speed of gold rescue was slow. . .

The predecessor of Vietnam when it sank: 1994 began to serve in Japan 18 years, specializing in the route from Kagoshima to Okinawa. The original design tonnage is 6586 tons.

In 20 12, it was purchased by Qinghai Town, South Korea and transformed into a luxury passenger and cargo ship. . . From 6586 tons to 6825 tons. . . The weight increased by 239 tons, and the number of passengers 1 17 (in addition, the Korean media dug up the actual cargo weight 1 157 tons, but only 657 tons were reported. Actual number of vehicles 180, reported 150. . . )

The captain did not stick to his post trembling, but handed it over to the third officer at the helm. The inexperienced third mate actually sailed into a dangerous waterway with many reefs and undercurrents, and the captain was sleeping. Surviving passengers broke the news that there was an unexplained sharp turn before the accident, which caused the center of gravity of the hull to be unstable and capsized.

At the time of the accident, although the tower asked the captain to broadcast urgently and asked all passengers to put on life jackets to evacuate the passengers immediately, after the communication content was exposed, the captain and the crew themselves panicked and failed to evacuate effectively. When the captain and crew saw the rescue helicopter, they actually ran for their lives first.

At that time, students used their mobile phones to call the fire station for consultation. When the fire station started a three-way call to ask the Mokpo Marine Police of South Korea for advice, Mokpo Marine Police also asked the students what the latitude and longitude of the sinking was, which wasted the gold rescue time. . . This has also triggered public criticism in South Korea.