Many dead in S Korea as flash floods trap 15 vehicles in tunnel | What’s your money worth? News

Rescue workers in South Korea have recovered seven bodies from a bus trapped in a flooded underground tunnel, according to media reports, as days of torrential rains caused widespread flooding, landslides and the overflow of a major dam.

Officials in the central town of Osong told the Yonhap news agency on Sunday that rescue workers recovered an additional six bodies from the 685-meter-long (2,247 feet) as they scrambled to reach several people who remained trapped there.

The four-lane underpass became inundated on Saturday when the banks of the nearby Miho River collapsed following three days of heavy rain.

The deluge swept through the tunnel too quickly for people to escape, according to media reports.

Officials said rescue workers recovered one body from the tunnel on Saturday and saved nine people who survived by clinging to the sides of the guard rails around the tunnel, according to the Korea Herald newspaper.

There were 15 vehicles, including the bus and 12 cars, trapped in the tunnel and a total of 11 people had been reported missing on Saturday.

“There were many cars inside the tunnel when the water began coming in and it rose very rapidly,” one of the nine survivors told Yonhap on Saturday.

“I don’t understand why the tunnel wasn’t closed earlier.”

Rescue workers take part in a search and rescue operation at an underpass that has been submerged by an flooded river caused by torrential rain in Cheongju, South Korea, July 16, 2023.
Officials said there were 15 vehicles, including the bus and 12 cars, trapped in the tunnel and a total of 11 people had been reported missing [Kim Hong-ji/ Reuters]

South Korea, which is at the peak of its summer monsoon season, has been pounded by heavy rains since July 9.

The Ministry of Interior and Safety said late on Saturday that landslides and flooding triggered by the downpours killed some 26 people on Saturday and Friday. The fatalities were all reported in the country’s central and southeastern regions.

The majority of the casualties – including 17 dead and nine missing – were from North Gyeongsang province, largely due to huge landslides in the mountainous area that engulfed houses with people inside.

In the most severely affected areas, “entire houses were swept away whole”, one emergency responder told Yonhap.

The ministry said the rainfall had forced about 5,570 people to evacuate. The figure included thousands ordered to flee their homes after the Goesan Dam in North Chungcheong province began overflowing on Saturday morning, submerging low-lying villages nearby.

More than 4,200 people remained in temporary shelters as of Saturday night, it said.

The downpours have disrupted travel across the country, forcing the cancellation of some 20 flights and the suspension of its regular train service and some bullet trains, the ministry said.

Nearly 200 roads remained closed, it added.

President Yoon Suk-yeol, who was visiting Ukraine on Saturday, asked Prime Minister Han Duck-soo to mobilise all available resources to respond to the disaster, according to his office.

The prime minister urged officials to preempt river overflows as well as landslides and requested support for rescue operations from the defence ministry.

The Korea Meteorological Administration, meanwhile, issued heavy rain warnings, saying more rain was forecast through to Wednesday next week and that the weather conditions posed a “grave” danger.

South Korea is regularly hit by flooding during the summer monsoon period but the country is typically well-prepared and the death toll is usually relatively low.

It endured record-breaking rains and flooding last year, which left more than 11 people dead. They included three people who died trapped in a Seoul semi-basement apartment of the kind that became internationally known because of the Oscar-winning Korean film Parasite.

The South Korean government said at the time that the 2022 flooding was the heaviest rainfall since Seoul weather records began 115 years ago and blamed climate change for the extreme weather.

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