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World scouts abandon South Korea jamboree camp

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BUAN/SEOUL: South Korea on Tuesday evacuated the majority of teenage scouts from their campsite ahead of an approaching typhoon, the latest disruption to the World Scout Jamboree which has been marred by illness and criticism of its organisation and facilities.


More than 1,000 buses were being deployed to move the scouts out of the south west, a region that Typhoon Khanun is expected to hit on Thursday.


There were about 36,000 participants at the campsite, near Buan city, and more than two-thirds have already left, Interior Minister Lee Sang-min said.


Seoul and its surrounding province of Gyeonggi would host almost half the scouts, with the rest fanning out to six other areas, Lee said. Police cars and helicopters will escort the convoys to safety, he added.


South Korean organisers are keen to minimise any further problems at the jamboree, the first global gathering of scouts since the pandemic. Since the event began last week, hundreds of participants have fallen ill due to a heatwave, triggering criticism from the public and parents about a lack of preparation.


The British scout contingent, the event’s biggest, also left early, citing poor sanitation and food quality, among other concerns. The US scout group followed.


“This is the first time in more than 100 years of World Scout Jamborees that we have had to face such compounded challenges,” Ahmad al Hendawi, Secretary-General of the World Organization of the Scout Movement, said.


At the sprawling campsite, scouts dismantled tents and folded up ground sheets, before carrying their backpacks to board nearby buses. Typhoon Khanun, which has already wreaked havoc in southern Japan, is moving towards South Korea bringing heavy rain and winds of up to 125 kph (78 mph) as of Tuesday morning, according to the weather agency.


Khanun is expected to hit southern regions of South Korea on Thursday before tracking up the peninsula, and the government raised its typhoon alert to the highest level, closing some roads, mountain trails and beaches.


President Yoon Suk Yeol will hold a meeting on Tuesday to review measures to minimise typhoon damage. — Agencies


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