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The captain of a ferry that capsized off South Korea's southern coast is being investigated for abandoning a vessel, as it was reported he might have left the sinking ship with hundreds of passengers still on board.
Lee Joon Seok, 60, was questioned by coast guard officials investigating the incident, which left at least nine people dead with hundreds still missing.
"I am really sorry and deeply ashamed," he told a mob of reporters while hiding his face beneath a grey hoodie. "I don't know what to say."
Local media reports claimed that Lee was among the first to evacuate the Sewol, a 146-meter (480-foot) vessel, having previously told passengers to put on life jackets and stay put.
Oh Yong-seok, a 58-year-old crew member, said that the captain initially instructed passengers, the majority of whom were students on a school trip, to put on life jackets and remain inside because officers on the bridge were attempting to stabilize the vessel.
Only about half-an-hour later, as the manoeuvres did not work, the evacuation was ordered.
By then it was, however, impossible for crew members to move into passengers' rooms and help them out because the ship was tilted at an impossibly acute angle, Oh said.
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"We couldn't even move one step. The slope was too big," said Oh, who escaped with the captain and other crew members.
The delay in giving the order to evacuate, which many passengers said they did not even hear, is believed to have caused some 290 people to remain trapped inside as the ship went down.
"The rescue wasn't done well. We were wearing life jackets. We had time," 36-year-old survivor Koo Bon-hee said.
"If people had jumped into the water ... they could have been rescued. But we were told not to go out."
A total of 475 people, including 325 students, were aboard the Sewol as it sank near the southern city of Mokpo.
The ferry was on a 14-hour journey from Incheon, in the northwest of the country, to the tourist island of Jeju.
The South Korean coast guard said 179 people have been rescued alive so far.
The cause of the sinking is not yet known.
Survivors blamed the high number of missing passengers on the ship's crew issuing repeated announcements that passengers should stay put even when the ship began tilting dramatically, said Yonhap.
Video clips taken by survivors revealed that the on-board announcements continued to instruct passengers to stay inside, despite the ferry tilting so far that people could not stand properly, said the Korea Herald.
"Go inside and wait, as the cabin is safer," a ferry staffer said in an announcement recorded on video by a passenger.

The captain Lee and 29 out of 30 cabin crew were one of the first to escape, and 1 cabin crew remained in the ship to hand out lifesavers to the students, her body was the first to be found. (Lee was filling in for the regular captain, who was on leave, but had been at sea for 40 years and had traveled on the route before.)
The first thing that I thought is this is the type of tragedy should not have happened in this modern age anymore, like the malaysian flight disaster. this accident happened in broad daylight at 9am too.. those 200+ students' obedience killed themselves..