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View Full Version : Thousands Dead or Injured in N.Korea Rail Blast-YTN


Ogge
2004-04-22, 12:54 PM
http://upl.silentwhisper.net/uplfolders/upload3/nordkorea.jpg


http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=578&e=2&u=/nm/20040422/ts_nm/korea_north_explosion_dc

Everay
2004-04-22, 08:15 PM
whoa, i cant imagine how much gas it would take to make a explosion that big.

Sputty
2004-04-22, 08:23 PM
A train filled with liquid petroleum and another with gas

Mag
2004-04-22, 08:25 PM
Yeah, count I heard was 2967 killed/injured.

Dharkbayne
2004-04-22, 08:25 PM
GG Korea. ^_^

JakeLogan
2004-04-22, 08:35 PM
GG Korea. ^_^
While an asshole thing to say I have to agree.I feel sorry for the people who died but someone must have really F'ed something up if these 2 trains crashed into eachother head on.

Dharkbayne
2004-04-22, 08:37 PM
I'm sorry, I had to say it, I _ DO _ feel bad for those people though. :(

Onizuka-GTO
2004-04-22, 08:51 PM
yes. my condolences to their family and friends.

And to you people who think this isn't something to sad about because they were Communist North Koreans, remember they all have relatives in the Democratic South Korea or other deomocratic countries.

DeadTeddy
2004-04-22, 08:51 PM
holy shit. while quite terrible, viewing such an explosion is every pyromaniac's dream.
oh, and because I found a cool site and I have to spam the pics in it, enjoy:

http://forumspam.articblue.nl/thread_related/thread_misc/images/0038.jpg

arctik
2004-04-22, 09:05 PM
That sucks...

Hamma
2004-04-22, 09:43 PM
Must have been a hell of a explosion

AztecWarrior
2004-04-22, 09:47 PM
Never right for people to die in freak accidents. 3,000 is a LOT, it's around what we lost on 9/11 (though this is a bad comparison).

However, I'll be damned if we are going to give them aid for this. They are a communist country with people starvring. That aid won't be going anywhere.

JakeLogan
2004-04-22, 10:09 PM
Never right for people to die in freak accidents. 3,000 is a LOT, it's around what we lost on 9/11 (though this is a bad comparison).

However, I'll be damned if we are going to give them aid for this. They are a communist country with people starvring. That aid won't be going anywhere.
/agreed

Neon Apocalypse
2004-04-22, 10:17 PM
koreans are weird

Smaug
2004-04-22, 11:23 PM
I'm sure The U.S., and many other countries, would give aid, if given the chance. However N. Korea would never want, or allow aid into their country. The only possible place I could see aid coming from would be China.

Hezzy
2004-04-23, 06:09 AM
Apparently some workers didn't even know it had happened.

*BOOM*
"What was that?"
"Don't know. Probabley a pigeon."

Splinter cell anyone? :p

JetRaiden
2004-04-23, 07:09 AM
:lol: :lol:

Mango
2004-04-23, 08:57 AM
What a fucked up world we live in

Ogge
2004-04-23, 09:17 AM
its about 50 dead and 1000> injured

UncleDynamite
2004-04-23, 09:20 AM
There are mixed reports. No one is really sure (including the North Koreans themselves :rolleyes: ).

Ogge
2004-04-23, 09:23 AM
well the post above you is numbers from n.korea red cross.

Jennyboo
2004-04-23, 09:24 AM
Poor People :(

Navaron
2004-04-23, 09:55 AM
150 Said Dead in N. Korea Train Explosion


Email this Story

Apr 23, 9:00 AM (ET)

By CHRISTOPHER BODEEN

(AP) North Korean authorities declared a state of emergency Thursday in the region where two fuel trains...
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DANDONG, China (AP) - The fearsome picture of devastation from the North Korean train explosions near the Chinese border took shape Friday with initial reports saying 150 were killed, 1,249 injured and 1,850 apartments or houses destroyed.

North Korea's government said the explosion occurred when train cars carrying dynamite touched power lines, according to Anne O'Mahony, regional director of the Irish aid agency Concern.

"It says 150 people died, including some school children," O'Mahony told Irish radio station RTE by telephone from Pyongyang, the North's capital.

Red Cross spokesman John Sparrow in Beijing said the blast had killed at least 54 people and injured 1,249, but that he expected the toll to rise, citing the massive damage.

The explosion damaged an additional 6,350 apartments or houses, Sparrow said, citing information from Red Cross officials in the North.

"When you look at the number of buildings destroyed, you have to be afraid of what you're going to find," Sparrow said. "We are anticipating that the casualty figures will increase," Sparrow said, citing figures from Red Cross officials in the North.

Concern official Chris Wardle in Pyonygang confirmed the government had told aid workers the death toll was 150.

"We're basically working from information provided earlier today from the government. Various NGOs (non-governmental organizations) will be traveling up there and making assessment tomorrow (Saturday). ... Until that happens, we won't know what really happened there."

"We have been told that the accident was caused by live electrical wire getting in contact with dynamite. The numbers we've been told are 150 dead, 1000-plus injured, and some dead are thought to be schoolchildren, there's a school nearby. And (there is) a figure of 800-plus dwellings destroyed by the blast," Wardle said.

Initial reports by South Korean media said 3,000 people were killed or hurt in the disaster at a railway station in Ryongchon, a bustling town about 90 miles north of the North Korean capital, Pyongyang.

The secretive North's communist government was silent Friday about the disaster, despite confirmation from the South Korean and Chinese governments.

Reports also varied over what exactly exploded.

"What they've said is that two carriages of a train carrying dynamite - they were trying to disconnect the carriages and link them up to another train," she said. "They got caught in the overhead electric wiring, the dynamite exploded, and that was the cause of the explosion."

Sparrow said the trains were carrying explosives similar to those used in mining. China's Xinhua News Agency reported the blast was blamed on ammonium nitrate - a chemical used in fertilizers - leaking from one train. South Korea's unification minister said the trains were carrying fuel.

The blast leveled the train station, a school and apartments within a 500-yard radius, South Korea's Yonhap news agency said, quoting Chinese witnesses. It said there were about 500 passengers and railway officials in the station at the time of the blast.

North Korean officials invited foreign officials to visit the site of the disaster Saturday, O'Mahony said.

Ryongchon is the site of chemical and metalworking plants, and has a reported population of 130,000.

Those injured "will be suffering greatly from ... burns and those types of injuries that leave you traumatized," Sparrow said. He said Red Cross workers in the North were distributing tents and blankets to 4,000 families, while the international group was putting together hospital kits containing antibiotics, bandages and anesthetics.

Hospitals in China near the border were put on "high alert," Sparrow said.

There was no sign in Dandong, the Chinese border city nearest to the crash site, of injured people being brought out of North Korea. But the city's three biggest hospitals were preparing for a possible surge of patients. The city is about 12 miles from Ryongchon.

"We're ready to offer our close neighbor our best medical help anytime," said an official at Dandong Chinese Hospital.

In Seoul, Unification Minister Jeong Se-hyun said China was urging North Korea to send the injured across the border to hospitals in China. But he said Pyongyang was instead asking China to dispatch relief workers to the scene.

China confirmed the first fatalities Friday afternoon, saying two Chinese were killed and 12 others injured in the disaster. The report by its state-run Xinhua News Agency cited the Chinese Embassy in Pyongyang.

Jeong cited only a "large number" of dead and injured.

The European Union said Friday its humanitarian aid representatives would travel to the scene over the weekend to assess how it could help victims of the accident.

European Commission spokesman Jean-Charles Ellerman-Kingombe said EU officials had been invited by the North Korean authorities to go on location on Saturday, two days after the explosion.

North Korea declared an emergency in the area while cutting off international telephone connections to prevent crash details from leaking out, Yonhap reported.

The chief of the South Korean Red Cross is in North Korea on an unrelated business trip and is to evaluate what kind of aid North Korea might need, Jeong said.

The North's official KCNA news agency said in a brief dispatch that the Red Cross official was greeted Friday by North Korea's No. 2 leader, Kim Yong Nam. But KCNA still had not mentioned the disaster by Friday.

The international Red Cross plans to launch an international appeal for aid, Sparrow said.

The blast reportedly occurred nine hours after North Korean leader Kim Jong Il passed through the station on his way home from a three-day visit to China. But Jeong said that given the circumstances and the timing of the blast, "I don't think sabotage was involved."

At the time of the blast, an international passenger train carrying many ethnic Chinese was parked in the station, South Korea's JoongAng Ilbo newspaper reported, without citing sources.

The British Broadcasting Corp. showed on its Web site what it said was a satellite photo taken 18 hours after the reported explosion. The black-and-white photo showed huge clouds of black smoke billowing from the site.

South Korea's acting president, Goh Kun, ordered his government to prepare assistance if necessary, and the country's Red Cross said it was ready to send food and clothes.

Referring to reports of widespread devastation, Goh said at a meeting of his senior staff, "If the report is true, this is a very tragic accident and we relay deep condolences."

Electrofreak
2004-04-23, 11:15 AM
However, I'll be damned if we are going to give them aid for this. They are a communist country with people starvring. That aid won't be going anywhere.
If people are suffering, you give them aid. It doesnt matter who the fuck they are. Jesus christ I don't understand some of you people...

:no:

Everay
2004-04-23, 11:17 AM
no no, not nessacarily, not when they have a nuke and are threatening parts of the world and your telling them to dismantle, mabey if they dismantled we would help. but then again, i dont think Kim cares about his people so that wouldnt pressure him into dismantling.

Electrofreak
2004-04-23, 11:57 AM
well I am aware of the political situation surrounding N. Korea. But the people who died in that train crash aren't responsibile for the actions of their government, especially a communist government (that doesn't really function based on the opinions of the people). Thats why they deserve aid IMHO. Sure their government is wacked but its not their fault and if they need to be helped, we should be helping them.

Just my opinion.

Everay
2004-04-23, 12:14 PM
one man can never rule a entire nation unless part of that nation works with him. its not like his kim jlon yill the mage or something.