A South Korean worker who witnessed a massive immigration operation at a car factory in Georgia has told the BBC of panic and confusion as federal agents descended on the site and arrested hundreds. The man, who asked to remain anonymous, was at the factory which is jointly owned by Hyundai and LG Energy when agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrested 475 people, including 300 South Korean nationals, with some being led away in chains.

He said he first became aware of the Thursday morning raid when he and his colleagues received a deluge of phone calls from company bosses. Multiple phone lines were ringing and the message was to shut down operations, he said.

As news spread of the raid, the largest of its kind since President Donald Trump returned to the White House, the man said panicked family members tried to contact the workers. They were detained and they left all their cell phones in the office. They were getting calls, but we couldn't answer because [the office] was locked, he said.

According to US officials, some workers tried to flee including several who jumped into a nearby sewage pond. They were separated into groups based on nationality and visa status, before being processed and loaded onto multiple coaches.

Some 400 state and federal agents had gathered outside the sprawling $7.6bn factory complex, which is about half an hour from the city of Savannah, before entering the site at around 10:30 on Thursday. The 3,000-acre complex opened last year and workers there assemble electric vehicles. Immigration officials had been investigating alleged illegal employment practices at an electric vehicle battery plant that is being built in the compound.

The operation ultimately became the largest single-site immigration enforcement operation in the history of Homeland Security investigations, with hundreds of people who were not legally allowed to work in the US detained.

A video circulating on social media shows men lined up in a room as a masked man, wearing a vest with the initials HSI - Homeland Security Investigations - holds a walkie-talkie, stating: We're Homeland Security, we have a search warrant for the whole site. We need construction to cease immediately, we need all work to end on the site right now.

The worker, who is legally entitled to work in the United States, expressed his shock but not surprise at the immigration operation. He claimed the majority of those detained were mechanics employed by a contractor, with a minority sent from the head office in Seoul for training.

Hyundai and LG Energy issued a statement after the raid, stating they were "co-operating fully with the appropriate authorities" and pausing construction activities to assist with investigations. They emphasized that no detainees were directly employed by Hyundai.

The raid dubbed Operation Low Voltage focused on the electric battery plant being constructed alongside the Hyundai factory, with images showing agents arriving in armored vehicles. This unsettling event has raised alarms amongst the local Korean American community about its potential impact on US-South Korean relations and the future of business investments in the state.