South Korean president revamps cabinet after ferry disaster

Mother of a victim onboard sunken ferry Sewol cries as she speaks to the media in front of a building in which crew members are detained, after attending a hearing at the local court in Gwangju. REUTERS Photo

South Korean President Park Geun-Hye revamped her cabinet June 13, replacing seven ministers in response to intense criticism over her administration's handling of April's ferry disaster.

It was Park's first major cabinet shake-up since taking office in February last year and came as the mother of one disaster victim filed a damages suit against the government, as well as the ferry operator.

The most high-profile change will see Choi Kyoung-Hwan, a ruling party lawmaker, replacing Hyun Oh-Seok as finance minister in charge of the economy, the presidential Blue House said.

Park named six other new ministers responsible for security, education, labour, culture, gender equality and science.

Chong Jong-Sup, a Seoul National University law professor, is to head the ministry of security and public administration, which will take the lead in implementing promised reforms following the Sewol disaster, which claimed nearly 300 lives, mostly schoolchildren. The tragedy stunned South Korea, knocking the entire country off its stride and unleashing a wave of public anger, as it emerged that incompetence, corruption and greed had all contributed to the scale of the disaster.

Park's administration was sharply criticised over its response, prompting her to dismantle the coastguard and order a major overhaul of national safety standards and procedures.

Earlier this week, Park nominated a new prime minister to replace Chung Hong-Won, who was forced to resign over the Sewol tragedy. The president also named a new director of the domestic spy agency, the National Intelligence Service.

First lawsuit filed by mother of victim

The reshuffle came as the mother of one student victim from the Sewol filed a lawsuit seeking...

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