North Korea apologises after apartment collapse

North Korea has issued a rare apology for the collapse of an apartment building amid fears scores of people have been killed.

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Construction divistion officer (top) apologysing to residents following May 13 serious accident in the construction site of an apartment house in Phyongchon District, Pyongyang. (AAP)

Senior North Korean officials have publicly apologised for an "unimaginable" accident at an apartment construction site in a rare admission of culpability.

South Korean officials said on Sunday the incident involved the collapse of a 23-storey building in Pyongyang's Pyongchon district, which already had close to 100 families in residence.

It is extremely unusual for the North to report negative news of this type, and its official KCNA news agency also reported equally rare apologies from top officials.

Leader Kim Jong-Un "sat up all night, feeling painful" after being told about the accident, the agency said.

The accident happened last Tuesday and was the result of "irresponsible" supervision by officials in charge of construction, KCNA reported.

An intensive operation had been mounted to rescue survivors and treat the wounded, it said.

It did not give a figure for the number of dead or injured but said the accident left Pyongyang citizens "greatly shocked".

The agency carried lengthy public apologies by senior officials including the Minister of People's Security, Choe Pu-Il.

"(Choe) repented of himself, saying that he failed to find out factors that can put at risk the lives and properties of the people and to take thoroughgoing measures, thereby causing an unimaginable accident," it said.

A South Korean official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the incident involved the collapse of a 23-storey apartment complex.

"It is common in North Korea that people move into a new apartment building before construction officially ends," the official told AFP.

The official said 92 families were believed to be living in the collapsed building, and the final death toll was likely to be "considerable".

Among those making a public apology were Kim Su-Gil, chief secretary of the city committee of the ruling Workers' Party.

He said Kim Jong-Un had "instructed leading officials of the party, state and the army to rush to the scene, putting aside all other affairs and command the rescue operation".

The state-run Rodong Sinmun newspaper also published on Sunday a rare photo of an unidentified official bowing deeply in apology towards hundreds of people who gathered at what appeared to be a construction site.

The North in 2009 announced plans to build 100,000 new high-rise apartments in three districts of its showpiece capital to mark the 2012 anniversary of the birth of its founder Kim Il-Sung, the late grandfather of the current leader.

The project went ahead despite chronic food shortages elsewhere in the impoverished nation.

In July 2011, a South Korean news outlet reported that students and soldiers had been drafted in to help complete the projects on time, after delays caused by shortages of funds and of building materials.


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Source: AAP


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