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The things they lost: personal items catalogue Seoul crowd crush horror

Claire Lee
01 November 2022, MVT 18:50
Personal belongings, including a US (top) and South Korean passport retrieved by police from the scene of a fatal Halloween crowd surge that killed more than 150 people in the Itaewon district are displayed at a gymnasium for relatives of victims to collect, in Seoul on November 1, 2022. - At least 156 mostly young people were killed, and scores more injured, in a deadly crowd surge late October 29 at the first post-pandemic Halloween party in Seoul's popular Itaewon nightlife district. -- Photo: Anthony Wallace / AFP
Claire Lee
01 November 2022, MVT 18:50

Broken glasses. A grubby stuffed toy. Blood-stained running shoes.

The broken and twisted detritus of personal possessions collected from the scene of Seoul's deadly Halloween crowd surge are a poignant catalogue of young lives lost.

More than 150 people, mostly costumed partygoers in their 20s, were killed in a crush during what was supposed to be a night of post-pandemic celebration in the popular Itaewon nightlife district on Saturday.

Police collected 1.5 tons of items from the scene and have put them on display in a gym that was briefly used to store bodies from the disaster.

The cavernous space is now filled with row upon row of once-cherished possessions, neatly laid out, each marked with a Post-it note and an identifying number.

Families, who are holding funerals this week, can now go and collect their loved ones' possessions.

Sunglasses and spectacles retrieved by police from the scene of a fatal Halloween crowd surge that killed more than 150 people in the Itaewon district are displayed at a gymnasium for relatives of victims to collect, in Seoul on November 1, 2022. - At least 156 mostly young people were killed, and scores more injured, in a deadly crowd surge late October 29 at the first post-pandemic Halloween party in Seoul's popular Itaewon nightlife district. -- Photo: Anthony Wallace / AFP

Most victims died trapped in a narrow alleyway. Witnesses described how, with no police or crowd control in sight, confused partygoers pushed and shoved, not realising people were falling only to be trampled and crushed to death.

As emergency responders reached the scene and managed to drag victims out of the tangled crush of bodies, shoes were lost and clothes ripped off to allow CPR to be performed.

Police have laid out around 260 items of clothing at the gym -- including bits of Halloween costumes -- and 256 pairs of shoes. Many items are crumpled, covered in dirt or flecked with dried blood.

One man, visibly shaken, clutched an item of clothing to his chest as he walked around, looking through the detritus of the disaster: goofy photographs from lost wallets, passports, a Halloween wig.

"Some family members came and left in tears" with their loved one's items, an officer at the scene told AFP.

'Classes at 9'

Authorities also collected around 160 electronic devices from the scene.

An AFP reporter saw around 20 sets of Apple AirPods headphones and numerous smart watches, some with ripped straps.

Each item was carefully labelled, some with the names of their late owners.

"We collected as many items as possible in case they belonged to the victims," Jang Young-sik, an officer at the Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency, told AFP.

At least 26 of the victims were foreign nationals, from more than a dozen different countries including Iran, the United States and France.

A Russian-language copy of "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes" was among the items at the gym. Moscow's Seoul embassy has said three young Russian women died in the disaster.

Items retrieved by police from the scene of a fatal Halloween crowd surge that killed more than 150 people in the Itaewon district are displayed at a gymnasium for relatives of victims to collect, in Seoul on November 1, 2022. - At least 156 mostly young people were killed, and scores more injured, in a deadly crowd surge late October 29 at the first post-pandemic Halloween party in Seoul's popular Itaewon nightlife district. (Photo by Anthony WALLACE / AFP)

But most of the victims were young Koreans in their 20s -- members of a generation that had already endured two years of disruption to their studies during the pandemic.

The Itaewon Halloween event would have been the first chance for many students to party with friends in person for years. It ended instead with the tragedy of young lives cut short.

"From June to November, classes at 9," said a Post-it note stuck to a student's battered notebook, its pages crumpled and marked by a dirty footprint.

© Agence France-Presse

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