Showing posts with label south korea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label south korea. Show all posts
Friday, July 25, 2014
Change the mind
I am thinking and wrote after watching the news.
Almost everyday we can watch too many problems about war by the news.
People live their personal lives And a lot of people gathered than form a world.
Everyone can live just happy.
War is terrible, For all that, but why it exist?
Do you think one day peace is coming?
A famous singer and producer in South Korea 'JYP'
He said "Human are absolutely can't be the subject of his own body"_ and I think so.
There is nothing that we can do without self-beating heart and lungs and others.
mystical body, it is not an absolute man-made. Everyone will sympathize.
I think we need to change the mind, Let's think more simply.
Let yourself back than If you thanks to allowed huge natural
That's the paradise and will be happy everyday.
It will be the beninning of peace. Let's look around,
I will be the reality of peace.
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Friday, April 18, 2014
Rescuers ramp up search for hundreds missing in ferry disaster
JINDO/SEOUL, South Korea, April 18 (Yonhap) -- Rescue workers stepped up their search Friday for hundreds still missing in the deadly sinking of a ferry off the southwestern coast of South Korea amid growing fears no survivors remain.
Hundreds of coast guard and military officers, along with civilian divers, struggled to gain access to the submerged ship to search for 268 passengers who are still unaccounted for, but their efforts were hampered by strong currents and murky waters.
A total of 475 passengers, including 325 high schoolers on a field trip, were aboard the 6,825-ton ferry when it capsized in waters off the southwestern island of Jindo on a foggy Wednesday morning. It was en route to the southern resort island of Jeju from the western port of Incheon.
As of 5 p.m., 28 passengers had been confirmed dead. While 179 have been rescued, no one has been found alive since around Wednesday noon when the ship capsized.
Battling strong underwater currents and low visibility, a group of veteran divers attempted to enter the submerged hull after they secured a path inside, according to the Coast Guard.
The 21 divers attempted to enter the cabin on the second deck of the five-level vessel where most of the passengers are believed to be trapped, the Coast Guard officials said.
Earlier in the day, the divers approached the cargo compartment on the second deck and pumped oxygen inside in an effort to get the ship to float and help potential survivors breathe.
But the guide line helping rescue workers move inside snapped, while cargo prevented them from going into the compartment.
Experts say that people could possibly survive for up to 72 hours if there are air pockets in the compartments.
At around noon, the capsized ship disappeared completely from sight, stoking fears that the ship went under which would make it difficult for rescue workers to have access to the hull.
To keep it afloat, military divers attached an air-filled bag to the ship and is planning to attach 25 more 35-ton ones, according to the authorities.
Four salvage cranes, including a 3,200-ton machine, also arrived at the scene earlier in the day, either to move the hull, currently at a depth of about 35 meters, to a place where the currents are weaker or to salvage the vessel.
"But we are reviewing the options very carefully, as the salvage operations could hurt survivors trapped inside," a Coast Guard officer said. "We are also considering using a floating dock to set the ship afloat."
With questioning of the surviving crew under way to find the exact cause of the tragedy, a joint police and prosecution team said that it has sought an arrest warrant for Sewol's captain Lee Jun-seok on charges of abandoning ship in violation of seafarers' law.
The investigation team alleged that the 69-year-old captain had failed to carry out his duty of taking care of passengers by leaving the vessel first.
A public uproar has erupted against Lee for his alleged poor management of the emergency situation before the boat's sinking. He is suspected of instructing passengers to remain seated even as the boat was listing leftward, denying them a chance to escape.
Arrest warrants were also sought against two crew members, including a 26-year-old third mate with one year of experience, for the same charge, officers said.
The crew member, only identified by her surname Park, was allegedly in charge of steering the vessel at the time of the accident, they said.
A district court is scheduled to hold a hearing within 48 hours to decide whether to issue the warrants for the three.
As to the cause of the tragedy, a sudden shift in cargo may have contributed to the deadly outcome, according to the investigators.
"We've seen no problems where the ship changed course. But we are now investigating if it was a normal turn or an emergency one," said Park Jae-uk, chief investigator of the joint team, announcing their interim probe results earlier in the day.
Experts and investigators have raised the possibility of a sudden shift in 180 vehicles and 1,157 tons of freight on board disrupting the balance of the ship.
Police also vowed stern punishment of those who spread false information on the developments in the rescue efforts and whoever masterminded phone-based financial frauds that deceived people into thinking they were receiving the latest information on the rescue.
Meanwhile, the vice principal of the school, who was in charge of the hundreds of high school students and survived the disaster, was found dead in an apparent suicide.
The senior teacher from Danwon High School in Ansan, south of Seoul, identified by his surname Kang, 52, was found hanging from a tree on a hill near an indoor gymnasium on the island of Jindo, where parents of the students missing from the sunken ferry are staying.
Of those rescued, 100, including 69 high schoolers, have been receiving treatment at hospitals. Six of them sustained serious injuries, and many of the survivors suffer from severe post-traumatic stress disorder, according to the Central Disaster and Safety Countermeasures Headquarters.
Earlier on Friday, families of those missing made a public statement denouncing the government's response and calling for additional help.
The office of Prime Minister Chung Hong-won said he will stay at the Coast Guard office in the southern coastal city of Mokpo near the accident scene to coordinate rescue operations and necessary support measures for victims and their families.
The sinking is feared to be the nation's biggest ferry disaster since 1993, when a vessel capsized off its west coast, killing 292 people.
The ship, which travels between Incheon and Jeju twice a week, was built in Japan in 1994. The 20-year-old vessel is 146 meters long and 22 meters wide, and has a maximum capacity of 921 people, 180 vehicles and 152 shipping containers at the same time.
Hundreds of coast guard and military officers, along with civilian divers, struggled to gain access to the submerged ship to search for 268 passengers who are still unaccounted for, but their efforts were hampered by strong currents and murky waters.
A total of 475 passengers, including 325 high schoolers on a field trip, were aboard the 6,825-ton ferry when it capsized in waters off the southwestern island of Jindo on a foggy Wednesday morning. It was en route to the southern resort island of Jeju from the western port of Incheon.
As of 5 p.m., 28 passengers had been confirmed dead. While 179 have been rescued, no one has been found alive since around Wednesday noon when the ship capsized.
Battling strong underwater currents and low visibility, a group of veteran divers attempted to enter the submerged hull after they secured a path inside, according to the Coast Guard.
The 21 divers attempted to enter the cabin on the second deck of the five-level vessel where most of the passengers are believed to be trapped, the Coast Guard officials said.
Earlier in the day, the divers approached the cargo compartment on the second deck and pumped oxygen inside in an effort to get the ship to float and help potential survivors breathe.
But the guide line helping rescue workers move inside snapped, while cargo prevented them from going into the compartment.
Experts say that people could possibly survive for up to 72 hours if there are air pockets in the compartments.
At around noon, the capsized ship disappeared completely from sight, stoking fears that the ship went under which would make it difficult for rescue workers to have access to the hull.
To keep it afloat, military divers attached an air-filled bag to the ship and is planning to attach 25 more 35-ton ones, according to the authorities.
Four salvage cranes, including a 3,200-ton machine, also arrived at the scene earlier in the day, either to move the hull, currently at a depth of about 35 meters, to a place where the currents are weaker or to salvage the vessel.
"But we are reviewing the options very carefully, as the salvage operations could hurt survivors trapped inside," a Coast Guard officer said. "We are also considering using a floating dock to set the ship afloat."
With questioning of the surviving crew under way to find the exact cause of the tragedy, a joint police and prosecution team said that it has sought an arrest warrant for Sewol's captain Lee Jun-seok on charges of abandoning ship in violation of seafarers' law.
The investigation team alleged that the 69-year-old captain had failed to carry out his duty of taking care of passengers by leaving the vessel first.
A public uproar has erupted against Lee for his alleged poor management of the emergency situation before the boat's sinking. He is suspected of instructing passengers to remain seated even as the boat was listing leftward, denying them a chance to escape.
Arrest warrants were also sought against two crew members, including a 26-year-old third mate with one year of experience, for the same charge, officers said.
The crew member, only identified by her surname Park, was allegedly in charge of steering the vessel at the time of the accident, they said.
A district court is scheduled to hold a hearing within 48 hours to decide whether to issue the warrants for the three.
As to the cause of the tragedy, a sudden shift in cargo may have contributed to the deadly outcome, according to the investigators.
"We've seen no problems where the ship changed course. But we are now investigating if it was a normal turn or an emergency one," said Park Jae-uk, chief investigator of the joint team, announcing their interim probe results earlier in the day.
Experts and investigators have raised the possibility of a sudden shift in 180 vehicles and 1,157 tons of freight on board disrupting the balance of the ship.
Police also vowed stern punishment of those who spread false information on the developments in the rescue efforts and whoever masterminded phone-based financial frauds that deceived people into thinking they were receiving the latest information on the rescue.
Meanwhile, the vice principal of the school, who was in charge of the hundreds of high school students and survived the disaster, was found dead in an apparent suicide.
The senior teacher from Danwon High School in Ansan, south of Seoul, identified by his surname Kang, 52, was found hanging from a tree on a hill near an indoor gymnasium on the island of Jindo, where parents of the students missing from the sunken ferry are staying.
Of those rescued, 100, including 69 high schoolers, have been receiving treatment at hospitals. Six of them sustained serious injuries, and many of the survivors suffer from severe post-traumatic stress disorder, according to the Central Disaster and Safety Countermeasures Headquarters.
Earlier on Friday, families of those missing made a public statement denouncing the government's response and calling for additional help.
The office of Prime Minister Chung Hong-won said he will stay at the Coast Guard office in the southern coastal city of Mokpo near the accident scene to coordinate rescue operations and necessary support measures for victims and their families.
The sinking is feared to be the nation's biggest ferry disaster since 1993, when a vessel capsized off its west coast, killing 292 people.
The ship, which travels between Incheon and Jeju twice a week, was built in Japan in 1994. The 20-year-old vessel is 146 meters long and 22 meters wide, and has a maximum capacity of 921 people, 180 vehicles and 152 shipping containers at the same time.
source: http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/national/2014/04/18/10/0301000000AEN20140418007051315F.html
please....please..... I pray of them.
Thursday, March 6, 2014
Gold for Russia, silver for South Korea's Yuna Kim, and controversy ensues
(CNN) -- In the final chapter of her storied Olympic figure skating career, South Korea's Yuna Kim won silver -- not able to defend her shot at gold against a Russian teenager who seemingly came out of nowhere to get the top prize.
Instantly, there was controversy.
Russia's Adelina Sotnikova finished with a total score of 224.59, beating Kim's score of 219.11 by 5.48 points after the free skate program. Sotnikova, 17, became the first female Russian skater to win in the category.
Some pointed out that she had stepped out after landing a triple combination, and others raised questions about the anonymous judging system.
Dick Button, a men's figure skating two-time Olympic gold medalist, said he didn't think Sotnikova was the whole package.
It didn't help that one of the judges had been suspended for a year for trying to fix an event at the Winter Olympics 16 years ago. Or that another is married to the head of the Russian figure skating federation.
American figure skater Ashley Wagner also slammed the judging Thursday night. She skated without falling but finished seventh behind several skaters that had stumbled on the ice.
She even finished behind Russian skater Julia Lipnitskaia, who fell more than once.
"I feel gypped," Wagner said, according to Yahoo! Sports. "People don't want to watch a sport where you see people fall down and somehow score above someone who goes clean."
5 moments from Thursday at the Winter Olympics
Critics have created a petition at change.org urging that the judging be investigated. Early Friday morning, the petition had more than 1.6 million supporters.
Opinions varied on whether the right skater got the gold medal.
Sotnikova's program had seven triple jumps, which was one more than Kim's. The final judgment split sports journalists and figure skating experts.
"It's debatable, but not a robbery," wrote Chris Chase of USA Today. "Sotnikova skated well enough to win gold. She had a carefully constructed program with seven triples, five of which were in a combo. Kim had six and three, respectively. Thus, Sotnikova was going in with a higher total and made more margin for error, which she took advantage of with a minor hop after one exchange."
Sotnikova's technical score of 75.54 dwarfed Kim's technical score of 69.69.
Results: Women's figure skating results
But others weren't convinced.
Kurt Browning, a four-time world champion, told The New York Times: "I just couldn't see how Yu-na and Sotnikova were so close in the components. I was shocked. What, suddenly, she just became a better skater overnight? I don't know what happened. I'm still trying to figure it out."
Italy's Carolina Kostner took the bronze.
Kim was looking to be only the third woman to defend her Olympic figure skating title, joining Katarina Witt, who took to the ice in Calgary 26 years ago, and Sonja Henie, who competed in the 1920s and '30s.
In 2010, she took gold in the Vancouver Olympics by a landslide, where she scored a record 228.56 points to win in women's figure skating. She eclipsed her closest rival by a massive 23.06 points.
Known as "Queen Yuna" to her legions of fans, Kim's victory in Vancouver made her the first Korean figure skater to win a gold medal.
source: http://edition.cnn.com/2014/02/21/sport/kim-sotnikova-skating-controversy/index.html?iref=obnetwork
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