Difference between revisions of "Sinking of MV Sewol"

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==Official narrative==
 
==Official narrative==
 
A combination of factors combined to create this a tragic accident in broad daylight in calm waters.
 
A combination of factors combined to create this a tragic accident in broad daylight in calm waters.
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==Concerns==
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[[Michael Shrimpton]] suggested a few days after the event that it may not be as simple as presented.<ref>http://www.veteranstoday.com/2014/04/21/the-sewol-disaster/</ref> Announcements were made over the public address system telling students to stay below decks.{{cn}}
  
 
==Documentary==
 
==Documentary==
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The passenger ship repeated sharp turns when it sailed near small islands in the West Sea scattered with a number of islets. When it passed very close to the last islet before its sinking, the vessel made a left turn that is not physically possible in the real world, and the film shows how the AIS data was falsified and how data disappeared.
 
The passenger ship repeated sharp turns when it sailed near small islands in the West Sea scattered with a number of islets. When it passed very close to the last islet before its sinking, the vessel made a left turn that is not physically possible in the real world, and the film shows how the AIS data was falsified and how data disappeared.
 
  
 
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==References==
 
==References==
 
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Revision as of 17:37, 10 March 2021

Event.png Sinking of MV Sewol (Shipwrecking) Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Sinking of MV Sewol.jpg
Date09:00, 16 April 2014 - 11:30, 16 April 2014
Location1.5 kilometres (0.93 mi) off,  Donggeochado,  Jindo County,  South Jeolla Province,  South Korea
Deaths295
Survivors172
DescriptionA ferry sinking which killed hundreds of schoolchildren. Officially, an accident, but information hidden and falsified in investigation.

The MV Sewol was a South Korean vehicle-passenger ferry, which operated between Incheon and Jeju. On 16 April 2014, Sewol capsized and sank. Out of 476 passengers and crew, 304 died in the disaster, including around 250 students from Danwon High School.

Official narrative

A combination of factors combined to create this a tragic accident in broad daylight in calm waters.

Concerns

Michael Shrimpton suggested a few days after the event that it may not be as simple as presented.[1] Announcements were made over the public address system telling students to stay below decks.[citation needed]

Documentary

The documentary film Intention (2018) by Kim Ji-young carefully analyzes the sinking, focusing on the “why” but not the “who”. The film traces back the Sewol's voyage from April 15, when it left port, to the day it sank. After a long search, the documentary found a bizarre track data of the vessel before its sinking.

It took the director about three and a half years to complete the movie as he had to collect and analyze a massive amount of the AIS raw data from the South Korean Coast Guard and radar logs from the Navy, before cross-checking the objective data with testimonies from survivors.[2][3]

The AIS is like a car black box offering a real-time information on the car's speed and location, but the AIS is shared by other ships and the maritime authorities to avoid collision and control traffic at sea.

The passenger ship repeated sharp turns when it sailed near small islands in the West Sea scattered with a number of islets. When it passed very close to the last islet before its sinking, the vessel made a left turn that is not physically possible in the real world, and the film shows how the AIS data was falsified and how data disappeared.


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References