Barking up the wrong tree?
In response to the hundreds of professors issuing public statements to protest against Lee Myung-bak's extremely unpopular regime, a conservative Seoul National University professor and literary critic, Kim Seong-konop-ed in The Korea's Herald.
Claiming that Lee Myung-bak is "stubborn and unwise maybe," but "far from a dictator," Kim laments that professors are wasting their time protesting against "their own government" instead of doing the right thing -- which, in his opinion, means one thing and one thing only: doing something about North Korea. Anything else is frivolous, really, since Korea's a thriving democracy (see evidence below).

January 20, 2009. Police fire water canons at protesters gathered, in sub-zero temperature no less, to mourn the death of 6 killed by overzealous and incompetent police acting on behalf of developers in Yongsan. Photo from here.
Wise Professor Kim also advises, "The times have changed. Today, one can freely join an anti-government protest without worrying about losing one's job or being arrested. This means that the professors who recently joined the protest are luckier than those of my generation. It also means that in such a democratized society as today's South Korea, you do not need to issue such a statement." And then he blames the Roh administration of creating the current ideological polarity.
Right. Because in a democratized society, one needs not protest.
Sure, LMB continues to crack down on the poor ("Korea highest in elderly poverty, OECD") and the displaced ("Yongsan tragedy") while exonerating crooked capitalists ("Samsung CEO found not guilty, surprise, surprise"), and lining the pockets of his construction buddies ("Four River Project folly").
Human rights film festivals are canceled without explanation, and even the basic right to public assembly is being threatened, but no. There's no need for pleas or protests.
All is swell, didn't you know?
- To give some context, I know Kim as a literary critic who bemoaned the low profile of Korean literature on world stage. You know, why Korea has never won a Nobel Prize in Literature. The way Kim saw it, Korean literature is not regarded highly because it's too hung up on "internal, psychological struggles" or "family conflicts" (perpetuated by none other than the women writers in the 1990s) or caught up in nationalism or political ideologies that simply do not appeal to a world audience. In short, Kim suggested that what Korea needs a Da Vinci Code, something apolitical, "universal" with "global appeal." ↩
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Tags: conservative, democracy, Korea/Diaspora, literature, politics, protestConcerned about Korean Democracy
Things are heating up in Korea. Again.
Over 1200 professors at six universities have urged Lee Myung-bak to wake up and smell the coffee -- including Korea University (LMB's alma mater!), Hanshin University (whose faculty promised to work towards a national referendum), Incheon University, SungKongHoe University, Sungkyunkwan University, and Woosuk University.
Seoul National University and Chung-ang University have already done one last week, and more are expected to follow.
In Seoul: Yonsei University, Kyung Hee University, Konkuk University, Dongguk University, Soongsil University, and the Korea National Open University (방송대).
Outside Seoul: Pusan National University, Changwon University, Chonbuk National University, Inha University, Kangwon National University, Kyungnam University.

Chung-ang University professors read a statement concerned about the "death of democracy" in Korea. June 3, 2009 in The Hankyoreh

Historian Chung Hyeon-baek represents Sungkyunkwan University professors. From Yonhap.
Over 300 law professors have already raised their concerns over the Supreme Court, and 281 historians are scheduled to issue a statement, as are 188 writers (many of them "young writers previously without political or activist affiliation"). Religious leaders are scheduled to speak up, too. 108 Buddhist leaders have raised criticisms of Lee Myung-bak administration's attacks against democracy, human rights and the environment, and has called for a public apology for how it handled the former President Roh Moo-hyun's investigation and death. Evangelical Christian leaders are scheduled to hold a meeting, but who knows what they'll say.
**
In the meantime, a group of scholars in North America have drafted the following statement to express concern about the present political situation in Korea. If you'd like to express your endorsement of the statement, please send your name and institutional affiliation to Korea.Democracy@gmail.com.
Statement from Scholars in North America Concerned about Korean Democracy
10 June 2009
The following represents the considered view of professors and researchers at colleges and universities throughout North America whose thoughts are always with Korea and Korea's democracy. In light of recent developments in South Korea, we, the undersigned, cannot but express grave concern. Nurtured by the toils and sacrifice of many, Korea's democracy is a proud asset of the Korean people. The world has watched as the Korean people have moved deliberately, with great determination and at great human cost, from dictatorship toward democracy, over the last six decades. Regrettably, since the inauguration of the President Lee Myung-bak administration, Korean democracy has lost its way.
A democracy must guarantee the freedoms of assembly and association, not only allowing the people to select their own representative through votes but also in order that they may express diverse political opinions. We have observed how the power of the state suppressed last year's "candlelight vigils," has issued subpoenas even to ordinary citizens who had participated in the protests, and is restricting the online exchange of ideas. The recent police blockade of Seoul Square is another egregious example of the government of President Lee Myung-bak denying the Korean people the most basic of democratic rights, the freedom to assemble.
A democracy acquires a capacity for self-regulation through the free press. We note with distress that the Public Prosecutor's Office has questioned journalists critical of the government, and the replacement of major broadcasting networks' executives with pro-government figures has infringed upon the professional autonomy of rank-and-file reporters. A foundation stone of a democracy, the free and independent press has suffered serious damage.
The Constitution of the Republic of Korea enshrines a system of checks-and-balances among the executive, the legislative, and the judicial branches of the government. We regretfully recognize and call attention to the fact that since its inauguration, the government has not upheld the principle of checks-and-balances. Moreover, the principle of justice through even and equal application of the law is under attack as can be evidenced through the arbitrary actions of such state organs as the Public Prosecutor's Office, the police, and the National Tax Service.
Speaking for North American scholars interested in the health and strength of democracy in Korea, we express deep concern over the regression of democracy in Korea. Heart-wrenching incidents such as the death of forced evictees during the police's suppression of their protest, the suicide of special contract workers, and the shocking decision by the former president to end his own life are all tragic consequences of a democracy that is taking backward steps in Korea; they highlight a democracy in crisis.
A democratically elected government cannot disparage its own people, because the mandate to govern derives from the people. We, the undersigned, urge the government of President Lee Myung-bak to recognize its responsibility for the democracy that has regressed and reorient itself as a government that respects the people's sovereignty and democratic rights. The nation's pride, the Korean democracy must again find its direction and return to the natural path of serving the people.
**
If you'd like to express your endorsement of the statement, please send your name and institutional affiliation to Korea.Democracy@gmail.com
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Tags: democracy, Korea/Diaspora, petition, protestPolice & thugs working hand in hand in Yongsan
Following up on the Yongsan redevelopment tragedy. The Hankyoreh reports that the police armed security guards (a.k.a. thugs employed by developers) with sledgehammers and directed them to bring down the protesters in Yongsan.
No, it's not just some crazy rumor -- I saw the same reported on KBS news which played the radio transmissions which went, "With sledgehammers and other devices, the security guards will follow our unit and are preparing to remove the blockades on the third and fourth floors." The police had denied that it mobilized private security personnel, but the evidence clearly contradicts that lie.
The English editorial of The Hankyoreh offers this:
...the protesters decided to hold their protest as a result of having been chased out into the street in the middle of winter without even receiving their legally due compensation. For those involved, it was a matter of survival. If the government, far from acting as mediator, instead takes the side of the developers and carries out a suppression, it is impossible for this to be recognized as legitimate exercise of the law.
And ends with this:
This tragedy must be viewed as a disaster long ago foreseen within this kind of oppressive administration. But even worse incidents could occur if Cheong Wa Dae continues to ignore the pained voices of the people with the brazen attitude demonstrated in statements like “I hope this incident will mark the beginning of an end to the vicious cycle of extreme protests.” The government must immediately abandon its antagonistic policy toward the people. To start with, the right thing to do would be to place responsibility firmly on the drastic suppression measures, rather than evading responsibility on this matter and talking about “rebellious outside forces.”
It's a whole new awful stage of politics of dispossession in Korea, with the neoliberal state very much escalating its role in committing violence on behalf of capital. It's no surprise with a president who prides himself in the nickname, "bulldozer."
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Tags: activism, development, Korea/Diaspora, LMB, protest, YongsanSix killed during redevelopment protest in Korea
Tragic, heartbreaking news from Seoul. You may have heard. One policeman and five activists occupying a building to protest redevelopment in the Yongsan area of Seoul were killed in a blaze caused by rash, overly aggressive, and downright stupid decision by the Seoul police agency to force the protest to end. Mind you, the 40 or so protesters had begun camping out just 25 hours ago, and they were obviously armed with Molotav cocktails.
Newly released documents reveal that the police chief was made aware of risks involved -- that police action may lead to injuries, suicides, and other potential damages to people and properties. The police were fully aware that there were gallons of paint thinners on the rooftop. The Seoul police chief Kim Seok-ki (hired just 2 days before the incident) nonetheless ordered a team of 100 police commandos to storm the building by landing on the roof in a shipping container lowered by a crane. Whose brilliant idea was this? Considering the visible resolve on the part of the protesters, the police's hasty and excessive tactics can only be interpreted as stupidity or arrogance at best, and murderous intent at worst.
And what's with the multi-purpose use of shipping containers these days? I mean, there are migrant workers and the urban poor living in converted shipping containers, a wall of shipping containers installed to block protesters, and now the police are using them as an idiot's version of a Trojan Horse?
TV news coverage showed protesters and their families on the ground looking up in horror as the building burst in fire engulfing their loved ones. One woman sobbed as she watched her husband and father die in the blaze. Another woman wailed as she clutched a lunch box she brought for her husband, now dead.
The LMB administration had recently vowed to crack down on violent and illegal protests, partly to unleash revenge against the anti-US beef candlelight protests that discredited and humiliated him last year and partly to use the recent scuffles at the National Assembly to penalize the opposition party (even though, like I posted earlier, the ruling party's own violent & undemocratic acts should not be forgotten in this discussion). It is likely that this case will also be used as part of the administration's crackdown against all dissent and protests, peaceful or otherwise. The National Evicted Tenants' Association will be hit especially hard for their involvement in the Yongsan case.
I'm not condoning the violent tactics used by the protesters. Given the militarized society that is South Korea, and given how certain militaristic tactics are regularly used by the left and the right alike, it is not entirely surprising to see confrontational protests like this. But protests of this intensity, involving Molotav cocktails rarely seen since the 80s, in Yongsan, and not by the "usual" suspects but by tenants and small business owners over redevelopment? This is highly unusual. Does this reflect more widespread despair and desperation?
This photo is befitting. It says, "Security State, Murderous State. Today is January 20, 1989." It's that bleak. It's that reminiscent of the authoritarian military-police state.

Considering the history of how these eviction and redevelopment protests have unfolded in Korea, it's no coincidence that evictions like this take place in the dead of winter. That's always been the favorite time for evictions. And it's likely that the escalating violence and the fires were instigated by the professional thugs hired by the developers and condoned by the police. Eyewitnesses confirm that the thugs had been taunting and harassing the protesters and families for days, and that they were seen numerous times trying to set fires.
All this focus on "violent protests" shouldn't take away from understanding the cause. All this madness surrounding "New Town" redevelopment and "Grand Canal" construction? Escalating violence inflicted by the neoliberal state acting with impunity. It's not just Lee Myung-bak. It's emblematic of the violent dispossessions enacted in the name of capitalist development.
***
Even the former president DJ shed a tear.
The elderly writer Cho Se-hui came out to the Yongsan site to make a statement. He's the author of the classic novel The Dwarf which was a heartbreaking story about urban redevelopment struggles in the 1970s. He's on the verge of tears with outrage, and his disbelief is palpable. He calls this incident nothing short of a massacre. This was the description of The Dwarf (new translation by Ju-Chan Fulton), and I think it's worth quoting in full:
The dark side of South Korea's "economic miracle" emerges in "The Dwarf", Cho Se-hui's enormously popular and critically acclaimed work. First published in 1978, it speaks to the painful social costs of reckless industrialization, even as it tellingly portrays the spiritual malaise of the newly rich and powerful and a working class subject to forces beyond its control. Cho's lean, clipped, deceptively simple style, the rapidly shifting points of view, terse dialogue, and subtle irony evoke the particularities of life in 1970s South Korea in the presence of global economic forces. The desperate realities of life for the dwarf, the proverbial little guy upon whose back Korea's economic transformation largely took place, are emotively rendered in twelve linked stories examining the lives of a laboring family, a family of the newly emerging middle class, and that of a wealthy industrialist. The stories have overlapping characters and situations: the murder of a swindler, a family's eviction from a squatter settlement, the assassination of an important executive, the dwarf's fantasy of a planet where life is easier, his later suicide and the subsequent fate of his dispersed friends and family members.
What Cho wrote in his author's preface to The Dwarf also rings true.
"When a revolution was needed, we didn't undergo a revolution. So we're unable to grow. Like so many nations in the Third World, our revolution was thwarted by small retreats and tiny reforms of the old regime. We are the witnesses."
Yesterday, Cho said in an interview:
Violence isn't just something that the military or the police commit. This day and age, if we stop a child from crying from hunger, that's violence. We didn't directly point the water hose and kill the evicted, but we're guilty of not preventing it. I'm just as guilty.
We're all guilty. We're all accountable.
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Tags: development, Korea/Diaspora, LMB, protest3rd VANCOUVER RALLY TO END THE SIEGE ON GAZA & PROTEST ISRAELI WAR CRIMES !
We were struck by the predominance of Palestinian families at the rally on Saturday -- a bit different from similar protests in the SF Bay Area, from what I remember.
In the meantime, the terror continues... burst out crying at the gym this morning, watching BBC news...
3rd VANCOUVER RALLY TO END THE SIEGE ON GAZA & PROTEST ISRAELI WAR CRIMES !
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Saturday Jan 10 @ 1 pm
Vancouver Art Gallery
For info email vancouver.gazaprotest@gmail.com
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Nearly 1000 people have came out in the midst of snowstorms on Monday Dec 29th and January 3rd to show our solidarity with the people of Gaza. With the ground invasion starting this week and a growing number of fatalities, our ongoing support for the people of Palestine - along with millions ofother people of conscience worldwide - is critical.
Demonstrations across Canada this weekend were held in Winnipeg, Ottawa, Calgary, Edmonton, Windsor, London, Hamilton, as well as Montreal and Toronto where 10,000 people gathered in each city. With further actions being planned globally, please come out for a 3rd rally (rain, snow or shine!) to demonstrate your outrage and our collective humanity in response to the latest massacre of Palestinians.
==> TAKE ACTION!!!
The latest crisis is the single largest massacre in Gaza since Israel illegally occupied Gaza in 1967, many among the dead are civilians and children and the numbers keeps mounting. Israeli Defense Minister, Ehud Barak, has stated that, "the operation will last as long as necessary". Israel's latest massacre in Gaza occurs with official US and Canadian complicity towards Israel’s illegal siege and ongoing sanctions over the civilian population in Gaza. Over the past two years the Gaza Strip has been undergoing the daily violence of a wide-ranging humanitarian catastrophe triggered by severely reduced access to energy, food, and medicines.
1) Email the prime minister, foreign affairs minister, and leaders of the opposition. Visit:
http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http://www.cjpme.ca%2Faction_gaza_2008_12.shtml
2) Respond to biased media coverage. Visit
http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http://letgazabeheard.wordpress.com to send sample emails to the BBC, CNN, and Fox News regarding their biased coverage and use those template
letters to send to Canadian media outlets.
==> ENDORSING ORGANIZATIONS
Adala - Arab Justice Committee
Al-Awda - Vancouver
Boycott Israeli Apartheid Campaign
Canadian Arab Federation - National
Canada Palestine Association - Vancouver
Canadians Against War
Canadian Islamic Congress BC
Canadian Muslim Union
Canpalnet
Code Pink Women for Peace (local chapter)
Independent Jewish Voices (Canada)
Indigenous Action Movement
Jews for a Just Peace - Vancouver
No One Is Illegal-Vancouver
Palestinian Islamic League - Canada
Salaam -Vancouver
Siraat Collective
Solidarity for Palestinian Human Rights - University of British Columbia
StopWar Coalition
Muslim Canadian Federation - Vancouver
Students for a Democratic Society (UBC)
The Organizing Centre for Social and Economic Justice
Vancouver Socialist Forum
Voice of Palestine - Vancouver
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Tags: activism, Gaza, Israel, Palestine, politics, protest, vancouver팔레스타인에 해방을!
Photo courtesy of kotaji

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Tags: activism, Israel, Korea/Diaspora, Palestine, politics, protestWorld Without War… part 1
I was going to write about a press release I received the other day, from World Without War. It's about conscientious objectors within the conscripted riot police in Korea, something that's come up briefly in the media coverage here and there. About how these young kids doing their compulsory military service are having to crack down on their friends and family among the ranks of the candlelight protesters.
I'll try to blog more later, but in the meantime, this OhMyNews article about the press conference got me all teary-eyed. (It's in Korean... I'll provide the English synopsis soon.)
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Tags: conscientious objector, Korea/Diaspora, militarism, protest, warStrikes, protests besiege South Korean regime
Strikes, protests besiege South Korean regime
By Sara Flounders
Published Jun 19, 2008
South Korea has been seeing nightly mass demonstrations for over a month, a candlelight march of 1 million people on June 10 and a strike wave of key industrial unions. All are connected to a trade agreement between Washington and the current government of President Lee Myung-bak that would allow U.S. beef into the country.
This huge movement is the biggest challenge to date to U.S.-imposed trade agreements around the world. The escalating mass actions deserve to be watched closely and supported fully.
So far no government in Washington's orbit has been able to resist the trade conditions imposed on them by the combined pressure of U.S. corporations, government negotiators, and the military reinforced by international banking institutions such as the IMF, World Bank and World Trade Organization.
In many countries of the developing world U.S.-imposed trade agreements have undermined and all but destroyed locally grown food production. They have driven tens of millions of small farmers off the land and created famines in the midst of surplus. They have also spread genetically modified, uninspected and tainted food into global food distribution networks.
The huge demonstrations and strikes in South Korea show that such agreements, imposed through complicit governments, can be challenged by a mass grassroots movement.
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Tags: activism, beef, FTA, Korea/Diaspora, LMB, politics, protestVideo: “What’s going on in South Korea?”
What's going on in South Korea? (Thanks, Mario, for sending me the link!)
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Tags: Korea/Diaspora, LMB, politics, protest, videoNYT: South Korea Seeks a Revised Beef Deal
South Korea Seeks a Revised Beef Deal
By CHOE SANG-HUN, NYTimes.com
Published: June 13, 2008SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea said Thursday that it would send its top trade negotiator to the United States to try to revise an agreement on American beef imports that has set off weeks of demonstrations against the government of President Lee Myung-bak.
Trade Minister Kim Jong-hoon, who negotiated a free trade pact with the United States last year, is to go to Washington on Friday to seek modifications in the terms of a deal to resume imports of American beef, signed in April.
At a news conference on Thursday, Mr. Kim was careful not to describe the meetings with Susan C. Schwab, the American trade representative, as a renegotiation. He called them “additional talks.”
For more than a month, South Koreans have taken to the streets daily to protest the agreement to resume imports of American beef despite widespread fears in South Korea of mad cow disease.
South Korean officials said Mr. Kim hoped to persuade Ms. Schwab to agree that American exporters would not ship beef from cattle 30 months old or older. The April deal did not include age restrictions.
In Washington, Deputy Agriculture Secretary Charles F. Conner said the United States had no intention of amending “national protocols that we have negotiated with the Korean government,” The Associated Press reported.
Even if Washington accepts the compromise suggested by Korean officials, it remained unclear whether that would placate the public. Civic groups have demanded a complete renegotiation of the deal, which they fear does not adequately protect Korean consumers.
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Tags: activism, beef, FTA, Korea/Diaspora, politics, protest










