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Deadly stampede in Seoul: police response deemed insufficient, interior minister apologizes

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Eva Deschamps / November 1, 2022

South Korea’s police chief said Tuesday that law enforcement received multiple reports of imminent danger before Sunday’s deadly Halloween stampede in Seoul, but that their response was “insufficient. »
South Korea’s interior minister apologized Tuesday after the stampede that killed 156 people on Halloween night in Seoul, the first official apology after the tragedy.
“I would like to take this opportunity to sincerely apologize to the public for this accident as the minister in charge of people’s safety,” Lee Sang-min said in front of parliament before bowing his head to elected officials and cameras.
Earlier in the day, South Korea’s police chief called the police response “insufficient” even though law enforcement received multiple warnings before the deadly stampede in Seoul.
The police knew “that a large crowd had gathered even before the accident occurred, signaling danger in an urgent manner,” admitted national police chief Yoon Hee-keun.
At least 156 people, mostly young people, were killed and dozens injured in a crowd movement Saturday night at Seoul’s first Halloween party since the pandemic in the cosmopolitan district of Itaewon.
About 100,000 people were expected, but due to the unofficial nature of the event, neither the police nor local authorities actively managed the crowd.
Police acknowledged on Monday that they only deployed 137 officers in Itaewon on Saturday night, but stressed that this number was higher than in previous years’ Halloween parties.
 
Meanwhile, 6,500 police officers were mobilized for another demonstration in the South Korean capital, which was attended by only 25,000 people, according to local media.
South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol said Tuesday that his country urgently needed to improve its crowd management system in the wake of the disaster.
“People’s safety is important,” he said, “whether or not there is an organizer at an event,” he told a government meeting.
Yoon called for the country to acquire “advanced digital skills” to improve its crowd management.
But observers said those tools already exist and were not employed in Itaewon.

 

Chris TDL Organizations is a Multinational parent managing company or multiple marketing and brand management entities.

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Trump promises Zelensky to “end the war” in Ukraine in phone call

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Trump promises Zelensky to “end the war” in Ukraine in phone call, Magnate Daily
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Sylvie Claire / July 21, 2024

Donald Trump and Volodymyr Zelensky spoke on the phone on Friday, with the former US president claiming to have promised the Ukrainian president to “end the war” between Ukraine and Russia should he return to the White House. “As your next president of the United States, I will bring peace to the world and end the war that has cost so many lives,” said the Republican presidential candidate.
 
Donald Trump frequently claims that he would be able to put an end to the conflict in Ukraine very quickly on his return to power, but never provides details of how he would achieve this. Volodymyr Zelensky confirmed the phone call, during which he congratulated the billionaire on his official nomination the previous day as the Republican Party’s presidential candidate.
 
Donald Trump’s frequent praise of Russian President Vladimir Putin, as well as his criticism of other Nato countries, is causing concern among Ukraine’s Western allies. In February, he threatened that, if he returned to the White House, he would no longer guarantee the protection of Atlantic Alliance countries against Russia if they did not pay their share, even claiming that he would “encourage” Moscow to attack them. The former American president also used his power over the Republicans to block a $61 billion military aid package for Kiev for months in Congress, which was finally adopted at the end of April.
 
In his posting on X on Friday, Volodymyr Zelensky said he had “agreed with President Trump to discuss, in a face-to-face meeting, the steps to be taken towards a just and lasting peace” in Ukraine.
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Former Ukrainian far-right MP murdered in Lviv: “All leads are being investigated, including Russia”

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Former Ukrainian far-right MP murdered in Lviv: “All leads are being investigated, including Russia”, Magnate Daily
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Steph Deschamps / July 21, 2024

In a message on Telegram, the Ukrainian National Police said she had succumbed to her injuries in hospital after being the target of an assassination attempt. 
 
“I always say that no place is safe in Ukraine,” lamented Lviv mayor Andriï Sadovy, denouncing a ‘heinous murder’ and offering his condolences to the victim’s relatives. 
 
According to the Ukrainian Prosecutor’s Office, the attack took place on Friday evening, at around 7.30pm, when an unidentified individual fired at Irina Farion, seriously wounding her in the head. “All surveillance cameras are being checked, witnesses are being interviewed and several districts (of Lviv) are being examined. All leads are being investigated, including the one leading to Russia”, reacted Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on X on Saturday. 
 
Interior Minister Igor Klimenko told a briefing in Lviv on Friday evening that the suspected killer could have been lurking around Irina Farion’s home for several days. 
 
According to him, investigators are currently focusing on the possibility of a murder motivated by a “personal grudge” linked to the victim’s activities, but are not ruling out a “commissioned assassination” either. 
 
The 60-year-old language teacher and linguist was a member of parliament for the nationalist Svoboda party between 2012 and 2014.
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China: at least six dead in Zigong shopping mall fire

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China: at least six dead in Zigong shopping mall fire, Magnate Daily
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Sylvie Claire / July 18, 2024

 

At least six people died in a shopping mall fire on Wednesday in Zigong, southwest China, and thirty others were rescued, China’s state broadcaster CCTV said. “Rescue teams are continuing their search,” the media outlet added.
 
Images broadcast by the channel and others shared on social networks show thick black smoke rising from a building overlooking a shopping street in this city 1,600 kilometers from the capital Beijing, in the southwestern province of Sichuan.
 
The fire broke out in the early evening in a shopping mall at the foot of a 14-storey building, CCTV reported.
 
At 8:20 pm, the fire was extinguished and 17 people were rescued. Others are still trapped, and rescue operations are continuing”, said the station in an initial report on the situation.
 
Fires and other fatal accidents are frequent in China, due to the sometimes lax application of safety standards. In January, at least 39 people perished in a store fire in central China. According to the authorities, the fire started in the basement of a store when workers “broke the rules” during construction work. At the time, Chinese President Xi Jinping called for lessons to be learned from the disaster to prevent further tragedies. The same month, a fire in a residential building claimed at least 15 lives.
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