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On 17 April 2015, a day after the first anniversary of the sinking, 4,475 participants holding electronic candles formed the shape of the Sewol ferry at the commemoration event titled 'The Saddest Challenge in the World' in front of Seoul City Hall. [286] [287] The event continues to be memorialized by Korean students in school ceremonies. [288 ...
The ferry Sewol capsized and sank on 16 April 2014. It was carrying 476 people, mostly secondary school students from Danwon High School who were travelling from Incheon towards Jeju . [ 181 ] The sinking resulted in 304 deaths, and is the worst ferry disaster in South Korea since 14 December 1970, when the sinking of the ferry Namyoung cost ...
MV Sewol (Hangul: 세월호, Hanja: 世越號, Beyond the World) [1] [note 1] was a South Korean vehicle-passenger ferry, built and previously operated in Japan. She operated between Incheon and Jeju. On 16 April 2014, Sewol capsized and sank with the loss of 304 passengers and crew.
The Truth Shall Not Sink with Sewol (Korean: 다이빙벨; RR: Daibingbel; lit. Diving Bell ) is a South Korean documentary film about the sinking of the MV Sewol , directed by Lee Sang-ho and Ahn Hae-ryong .
For Lee Mi-kyung, whose son was one of the 250 children who died in South Korea's Sewol ferry disaster 10 years ago, coping with the grief and anger has been incredibly hard. Some of the mothers ...
South Korea remembered the 304 people, most of them school children, who died on the Sewol ferry on the 10th anniversary of its sinking on Tuesday, with families calling for a proper apology for ...
In 2014, the release of their debut single album, Rocket, which was originally scheduled for April 18, was postponed due to the Sewol ferry disaster, expressing condolences to the victims. [19] The song was officially released on April 28. [20]
The ferry Sewol capsized and sank on 16 April 2014, resulting in 304 people dead or missing, [37] [38] the second worst ferry disaster in South Korean history. [39] [40] Sewol was operated by the company Chonghaejin Marine, of which Yoo Byung-eun was the former chairman. [41]