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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
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- From: nyxfer%panix.com@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu (N.Y. Transfer)
- Subject: NEWS:No Democracy in S.Korea/WW
- Message-ID: <1992Jul28.035236.18991@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Date: Tue, 28 Jul 1992 03:52:36 GMT
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- Via The NY Transfer News Service ~ All the News that Doesn't Fit
-
- No democracy in South Korea
-
- By John Catalinotto
-
- South Korean authorities held a trial in the Pusan District Court
- June 22 and sentenced 33 leading members of the union at the
- Hyundai Motors Co. to imprisonment.
-
- They sentenced union head Li Hon Gu and 14 others to prison terms
- as long as two years and six months. Eighteen others got terms of
- up to 18 months. The unionists were charged with having led
- Hyundai workers in a struggle for higher wages.
-
- South Korea's repressive measures against workers get little
- coverage in the U.S. media. Washington gives full political and
- military aid to the dictatorship in Seoul, and presents it as
- having moved toward "democracy."
-
- Far from being democratic, Seoul's regime is based on military
- and police force used openly against workers' organizations,
- student protests, and most of all against pro-socialist and
- pro-communist parties. Anyone sympathetic with the government in
- the socialist northern part of Korea is singled out for
- especially harsh treatment. The regime uses the National Security
- Law and harsh anti-labor laws to enforce this repression.
-
- Among the better known political prisoners is Rim Su Gyong (Im Su
- Kyong). In 1989 Rim, a former student in south Korea, attended
- the World Youth Festival in Pyongyang in northern Korea in a
- daring protest against south Korea's travel ban. When she openly
- attempted to cross the demilitarized zone between the two parts
- of Korea on Aug. 15 that year, Rim was arrested and charged with
- visiting the north. For this "crime" she was sentenced to five
- years in prison.
-
- South Korea still holds former soldiers captured during the
- 1950-53 Korean War. They should have been treated as prisoners of
- war and repatriated to the north when the war ended. Because they
- fought with guerrilla units, they were treated as terrorists and
- held in prison for decades.
-
- Those released from prison in the past few years, like journalist
- Li In Mo, have been refused permission to be reunited with
- relatives in the north. Li was recently seized when he attempted
- to meet with representatives from north Korea who were in the
- south on a diplomatic mission.
-
- Starting Feb. 8, The People's Korea, a weekly newspaper published
- in Tokyo, began publishing records of the 5,186 prisoners of
- conscience arrested in south Korea from 1988 to Nov. 10, 1991. On
- that date, there were 1,136 prisoners of conscience still in
- jail, mostly students and workers.
-
- -30-
-
- (Copyright Workers World Service: Permission to reprint granted
- if source is cited. For more info contact Workers World,46 W. 21
- St., New York, NY 10010; "workers@cdp!igc.org".)
-
- -----
- NY Transfer News Service
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