<Oh!

Click > Time.



After the massacre in Itaewon, there are stories of experience that the public transportation landscape, which was always crowded during commuting hours, has changed somewhat.



<Oh!

Click> The first search term is a changed 'hell season' landscape.



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Netizen A, who took the subway on the way home from work, said, "I was horrified. The stairs in the transfer section at Konkuk University Station are hell because people getting off and getting on are tangled up during work hours. .



Then he added, "I thought the staff had arranged the traffic, but that wasn't the case," he added, "just keeping order as everyone promised."



Netizen B, who sympathized with Mr. A's experience, said, "I was riding the subway, and someone kept pushing me from behind and said, 'Don't push!' At the same time, everyone around me stopped."



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Passengers on Line 9, which are known to be highly congested, also reported a similar situation.



The Seoul Metropolitan Government announced that it would start an on-site analysis of heavily congested stations together with the Seoul Transportation Corporation as concerns about safety in high-congested subways grew following the Itaewon disaster.



Netizens responded, "Why does this change feel so sad. It hurts my heart to think of the victims."