South Korea's police chief has offered to resign
amid an outcry over the case of a woman who was raped and murdered despite
calling police for help. Cho Hyun-oh said he was stepping down to take full
responsibility for what he called the "unpardonable carelessness" of
his officers. The woman told officers where she was being held in a
seven-minute call to the police emergency number. Police only found her
dismembered body 13 hours after she called for help. The incident took place on
2 April in Suwon, south of Seoul. Local media reports said that the woman
described in detail landmarks such as a primary school and a playground around
the apartment into which she had been dragged, but officers failed to find her
in time. "I express my deepest regret at the police's negligence which had
such a horrendous result and attempts to cover it up with lies," said Mr
Cho, who is the commissioner of the National Police Agency. Communication
mistakes between emergency operators and officers meant that police were
searching the wrong area, police have said. When public concern was raised,
they also inflated the number of officers who had been sent to search the area,
local reports said. A man has been arrested in connection with the case.
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