Monday 29 November 2010

Police probing Internet cafe praising North Korea

http://redantliberationarmy.wordpress.com/

November 26, 2010 BJ Murphy Leave a comment Go to comments
The significance of this article is to clearly point out the fact that it’s not the North who’s the police state. As we can clearly see here, if any of the two are a police state, it’s the South. Yet Western media wants us to believe that it’s a democracy? All I can say is good luck.
By Kang Shin-who
November 26, 2010
More alert than ever before, police have began investigating an Internet cafe for praising North Korea after the communist state committed a ruthless attack by shelling Yeonpyeong Island.
A number of compliments to North Korea were posted on the online community named “Cyber headquarters for people’s defense,” on Naver, the country’s No. 1 portal site. Members of the community have immediately drawn huge criticism online. A lot of angered netizens attacked the community with postings denouncing the cafe members. In response, the cafe manager removed all the critical postings.
According to the National Police Agency, the site is under investigation for violating the National Security Law, which prohibits praising or sympathizing with the communist state.
The cafe manager, “Hwang Gil-gyeong,” wrote, “The commander Kim Jung-un is doing it. You need wisdom to be always be alert and prepared,” under the title of “Everybody, you were very nervous yesterday?”
The message was echoed by other postings written by the online community members. One of them reads, “The general in command will proceed without the slightest glitch in full accordance with the North’s timeline.” Another posting said, “Do not mind the lives of hostages. We are confident that you will achieve your great feat.”
Police will punish Internet community members who wrote postings praising North Korea with the purpose of benefiting the North. A police officer said the Internet cafe was first operated on another portal, Daum, and closed in 2002, but reopened in 2007 at the current portal site. It has about 6,500 members. One of the members is in his 40s and was indicted last month on charges of spreading pro-North Korea propaganda.
North Korea’s attack on the island, Tuesday, the first of its kind targeting civilians since the Korean War, killed two marines and two civilians and wounded 18 others. The Korean War ended in 1953 in a truce, without a peace treaty and the two Koreas are still technically at war.

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South Korean Worker arrested for "highly praising" North Korea


According to the south Korean media including “ChungAng Ilbo”, “Money Today” and Ryunhap News, a south Korean worker surnamed Kim (45 years) who was arrested on charges of violating the “National Security Law” on October 14 highly praised President Kim Il Sung and leader Kim Jong Il during a trial at the Seoul district court.
He was reported to have carried on the Internet website “Cyber National Defense Command” on several occasions since last June articles praising President Kim Il Sung, leader Kim Jong Il and north Korea .
It was said that the Internet website “Cyber National Defense Command” was established around 2000 and operated by progressive figures of different circles in south Korea. It was coercively closed in late July by the suppression of the government and resumed its activity from August this year. And its members increased to 6,100 in October from 5,500 in June this year.
The security authorities arrested Kim on charges of violating the NSL for mere reason that he posted articles praising President Kim Il Sung, leader Kim Jong Il and north Korea .
Before the arrest he posted on the website “Cyber National Defense Command” the following article.
“My faith is as adamant as the steel and I will stand for trial with the same dauntless and dignified posture as was during the police investigation.
I will indomitably practice representing the brave ironclad cavalrymen.
In disregard of my detention I deem that a successor walked a small step, though meager, following the lofty acts of my preceding patriotic fighters and martyrs who devoted themselves for the national independence and the reunification by our nation itself against the foreign forces.
Dear patriotic ironclad cavalrymen!
You are proud and give me a great strength.
I love you.”
In the trial court he questioned how could it be a crime to praise the greatness of leaders Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il. He expressed his faith saying “leaders Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il are great men. I’m prepared to devote my whole life for them.”
He imposingly shouted that his determination to continue the posting of articles and photo editions in praise of the great men and north Korea in the future, too, is unshakable as the steel.
During the trial process that lasted over an hour he extolled the greatness of the two leaders and propagated the advantages of the socialist system in north Korea with so assertive and fluent expressions.
Astounded by his daring and faithful deed the prosecutors screamed saying “there are coming out more people who praise and follow the system of the DPRK by their firm faith.”
Meanwhile, many remarks in appreciation and inspiration of his valiant and righteous behavior are being carried on the Internet.
Posted on the websites including the “Surprise” were many articles condemning the NSL which bans any favorable sentiment or expression toward the north, saying “we all must feel shame before that dignified appearance toward the truth” and “we hardly repress the tears”.
In particular, an Internet user pen-named “Alive Child” said that the dignity of the Korean nation is shining thanks to the north which gains control of the imperialist forces headed by the US by dint of the Songun politics, holding that harboring the sentiment of following the north is a due truth.

Tuesday 23 November 2010

Temporary workers' strike at Hyundai Motor

Temporary workers' strike at Hyundai Motor gains steam with support from labor groups
ULSAN, Nov. 22 (Yonhap) -- A sit-in strike by temporary workers of Hyundai Motor, the nation's largest automaker, was gaining force as an umbrella union group with nearly 140,000 members pushed Monday for a general strike to join the protest in demanding formal employee status for the workers.

About 550 workers have taken over the automaker's main assembly line in Ulsan, 414 kilometers southeast of Seoul, since Nov. 15, clashing with riot police and partially crippling the factory's production. On Saturday, one worker tried to set himself on fire during a rally.

The Korean Metal Workers' Union (KMWU), the country's largest industrial union in the automobile, steel, machinery and shipping sectors, said after a meeting of representatives Monday that it will call a general strike in early December unless Hyundai Motor's management agrees to open negotiations with the striking workers.

A total of 401 KMWU representatives attended the meeting and 302 of them, or 75.3 percent, approved the general strike plan, union officials said.

"If the prolonged strike makes it impossible to operate manufacturing lines normally, the company has no option but to shorten the operation and close the factory," Hyundai Motor's Vice President Kang Ho-don said in a letter to employees.

With the strike gaining momentum, the Supreme Prosecutors' Office vowed to sternly act against the extended walkout.

"The strike by irregular workers of Ulsan factories is illegal," Lee Young-nam, senior prosecutor in charge of public safety, said, expressing concern that the labor dispute could grow into a full-blown and long-lasting one if the temporary workers form an alliance with other labor organizations.

He added that his office is currently preparing criminal proceedings to hold protesters responsible for the damage claimed by the company.

Hyundai Motor filed a suit last week against 27 workers who led the walkout, seeking 3 billion won for financial damage, and Monday filed another suit against them seeking an additional 3 billion won, doubling the compensation amount.

According to the company, the strike is expected to cause more than 100 billion won in production losses by Tuesday morning if the walkout continues throughout the day. It is the biggest loss caused by a non-regular workers' strike, the company noted.

"If the Korea Metal Workers' Union joins the strike, prosecutors will consider a response at a national level accordingly," Lee said.

The dispute began when the irregular workers, hired by a Hyundai Motor subcontractor, urged the automaker to abide by a Supreme Court ruling in July that contract employees who have worked for more than two years should be considered permanent workers. The case was remanded to the high court for further review.

The union of Hyundai Motor's formal employees remains undecided whether to join the irregular workers' move, according to union officials.

While the union of full-time workers at Hyundai Motor had gone on strike almost every year since its establishment in 1987, in 2009, it had a strike-free year after union leaders promised to cooperate to ride out a global financial crisis. The union also agreed to a wage deal in July this year, marking its second year without a strike.

Hyundai Motor and its affiliate Kia Motors control more than 70 percent of the domestic auto market.



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Monday 22 November 2010

Since One Week: Hyundai Motor's Irregular Workers on Strike!

CINA

Yesterday's Yonhap reported the following: The non-regular workers union at Hyundai Motor's Co. clashed with management over employment conditions on Saturday, with one employee trying to set himself afire.

Company and police sources said 550 workers who have blockaded themselves at the company's main assembly line in Ulsan since Monday clashed with members of management who asked them to end the takeover.

"Vice President Kang Ho-dong tried to speak directly with workers and called for an end to the illegal strike, but union leaders blocked his entry, resulting in clashes and fights," a company source said.
The source said several non-regular workers were injured while others, who were dragged out by company employees...

Police also said 170 non-regular workers tried to enter another Hyundai assembly line but were dispersed by management using fire hoses, while a 33-year-old worker tried to set himself on fire (but escaped serious injury, according to K. Times, 11.21) during a separate rally at the front gate of the carmaker's factory arranged by the Korea Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU)...

Meanwhile, according to KCTU, KMWU is calling for a 'General Strike'. "It can’t be ruled out that Hyundai Motor's militant trade union for regular workers take collective action", today's K. Times reported.

http://blog.jinbo.net/CINA/?m=2006-02

Friday 19 November 2010

Thursday 18 November 2010

END IMMIGRATION RAIDS!

Today's rally in front of Seoul's Immigration Office was organized in protest of the vicious crackdown that was held in preparation to the G-20 Summit which resulted in the death of a Vietnamese migrant worker(*).

http://blog.jinbo.net/CINA/?m=2006-02

Demanding Compensation and an End to Immigration Raids

Protest statement concerning the death of a Vietnamese worker Trinh Cong Quan as a result of an immigration raid in South Korea.

On November 3, Trinh Cong Quan, a 35-year-old Vietnamese worker, tragically lost his life. His death was the result of the South Korean government's vicious crackdown on undocumented migrants. On October 29, immigration officers raided the factory where T was working in the Gasan district of Seoul. They entered the factory by surprise without presenting a warrant and Quan found himself trapped. With other pathways blocked, he tried to escape through a window and fell to his death.
Since his arrival in South Korea in 2002, Quan had worked diligently at small-scale factories. Only a little while ago he fell in love and began a family. He and his wife had a child who is now 4-months old. This newly born child has lost his father, and yet the South Korean government refuses to take responsibility.

The Ministry of Justice has stated that because there was no physical contact between Quan and the immigration officers, it is not at fault for his death. Similarly, the Seoul Immigration Service has made no official statement of apology and has not taken steps to compensate the family for their loss.

Sadly, the manner in which the raid on October 29 was carried out, with no due process or precautionary measures, was typical for South Korea. Immigration officers routinely chase down migrant workers without presenting warrants or giving prior notification. This is not the first time a worker has died or been injured in a raid. The cases are too numerous to count. Only a few weeks ago, another Vietnamese worker was indiscriminantly beaten after being caught by immigration officials. These facts demonstrate the racist and inhumane attitude of public officials towards migrant workers. Such attitudes have led to and are reproduced by South Korea's immigration law, which does not require the presentation of warrants or adequate safety procedures during raids and which contains no policy for dealing with undocumented migration other than indiscriminate crackdowns.

We wish to emphasize that the problem of undocumented migration cannot be solved though immigration raids. Undocumented migration arises from the lack of good jobs in home countries and the lack of sufficient legal pathways to enter and work in destination countries.

Undocumented migrant workers are not criminals, nor are the obstacle to the successful holding of the G20 Summit. Nonetheless, the government has been using the G20 as an excuse to intensify the immigration crackdown. We cannot help but believe that Quan's death is directly connected to this increased repression ahead of the G20 Summit. While the government believes the G20 Summit with enhance South Korea's international reputation, it is quickly falling far behind concerning international human rights standards.

We will not stand by while innocent people are abused and murdered simply because they do not have visas. We express our solidarity for migrant workers and their supporters in South Korea who struggling to win respect for their rights. Together with them, we make the following demands on the South Korean government:

1. We demand that the South Korean Ministry of Justice and the Seoul Immigration Service take moral and legal responsibility for Quan's death.

2. We demand a full investigation of the non-warranted invasion and improper safety procedures that lead to his death, and that those responsible are punished.

3. We demand that Quan's bereaved family be given proper emotional and financial compensation.

4. We demand that Ministry of Justice stop using the G20 Summit as an excuse to repress migrant workers and stop the crackdown immediately.
http://migrant.nodong.net/?document_srl=54504#2

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Struggle for the Labor Rights

Nowadays as the economy faces ever-serious crisis day by day and the toiling masses﹊ right to existence get worse more and more the struggle against the government﹊s anti-people misrule is intensifying among the south Korean labor circle.
On October 29 members of the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions staged a struggle in Gumi, North Gyeongsang Province, denouncing the government﹊s moves to liquidate the trade unions.
They held a rally in front of the main gate of a factory, supporting the struggle of its women workers who continued the sit-in for several days to protest against the government﹊s suppression of their trade union.
As the puppet police mercilessly suppressed the rally blockading the factory﹊s gate and threatening with helicopters and water canons, the unionists took the streets and waged a violent demonstration shouting slogans such as ﹍Stop the suppression of workers!﹎, ﹍Let us defend the democratic trade unions!﹎, ﹍We want to work!﹎ and ﹍Let us overthrow the Lee Myung-bak government which kills workers and common people!﹎.
Then they held a rally in front of the Gumi Station, expressing their support to the struggle of the women workers fighting to frustrate the government﹊s moves for liquidating trade unions and to bring about a just world.
That day, various women organizations including the Women﹊s Committee of the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions, the Women﹊s Solidarity, the General Confederation of Women Peasants Associations and the Women﹊s Committee of the Democratic Labor Party called a press conference in front of the factory﹊s main entrance and strongly demanded the puppet authorities stop the suppression of the women workers and accept their demands.
On October 30 a rally was held in Seoul under the sponsorship of the ﹍Commemoration Committee for the 40th anniversary of the death of young Jeun Tae-il﹎ of south Korea. Jeun was a worker who burnt himself to death, protesting against the government﹊s suppression of workers in 1970.
Present there were some 6000 people including the members of different civic organizations including the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions, the People's Solidarity for Participatory Democracy and the Solidarity for Progress.
Speakers there indicated that the part-timers conducted the vigorous struggle against the government﹊s anti-worker policy. They expressed their will to actively struggle in unity for a world without the part-time job and discrimination of the workers. Then they watched a performance in commemoration of martyr Jeun Tae-il .
On the same day, the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions held a workers﹊ rally to abolish the part-time job.
It also held a national rally of workers with participation of over 40,000 unionists in front of the Seoul municipal office on November 7 and published a resolution in denunciation of the G-20 summit meeting.
The resolution noted that the G-20 summit meeting is a festival of the haves to ponder over a legal method of exploiting the workers and the authorities neglected the workers﹊ rights in the course of preparing the meeting. It called for the settlement of the part-timers﹊ issue and total revision of the labor law.

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Opposing the Fascist Suppression

AINDF

The south Korean people﹊s struggle intensifies as the days go by against the government﹊s confrontation moves against the compatriots which get more undisguised with the ﹍Cheonan﹎ sinking case as a momentum and its fascists suppression of the democratic and progressive forces.
- Recently the Solidarity for Democracy, People's Life, Peaceful Reunification and Sovereignty published a statement under the title ﹍the Security authorities, stop the suppression overusing the National Security Law﹎.
It noted that the security investigation team of the Seoul District Police Office coercively searched the houses of chairman Kang Jin-gu, and other former leading members Choe Han-uk, Kim Ja-gyung and Song Hyun-a of the Organizational Development Committee of the Solidarity for Realizing the June 15 South-North Joint Declaration on charges of violating the NSL. It condemned that the government applies the evil law again to them who suffered the suppression ranging from search to detention for an allegedly fabricated case of the solidarity.
The solidarity will never tolerate the security authorities﹊ suppression, the statement asserted and stressed that they will struggle to the last together with all the people to abolish the anti-democratic, anti-human rights NSL.
- The media and academic headquarters under the South Side Committee for Realizing the June 15 joint Declaration made public a joint statement on October 29 in denunciation of the government﹊s suppression of the Solidarity for Realizing the June 15 South-North Joint Declaration. Lurking behind the continuous suppression by the security authorities is an impure intention to stir up a terrible atmosphere among the people so as to arrest the mounting mood for reunification, the statement asserted.
It condemned the Lee Myung-bak government for totally denying the June 15 joint declaration and the October 4 declaration, stepping up the confrontation against the compatriots and driving the inter-Korean relations to a catastrophe.
It demanded the security authorities stop at once the suppression of the solidarity and apologize before the people.
- The South Headquarters of the National Alliance for the Country﹊s Reunification disclosed in a statement published on October 29 that the Defence Security Command forcefully searched the house of the vice-chairperson of the Ansan City Committee of the Democratic Labor Party on charge of violating the NSL finding fault with her husband record in pro-reunification movement organization.
It also divulged that the Security Investigation Corps investigated Lee Tae-hyung, co-executive chairman of the Incheon headquarters of the South Side Committee for Realizing the June 15 joint Declaration.
The government which sticks to the fascist suppression surpassing that of the preceding dictatorial regimes will sustain a terrible revenge of the people, the statement warned and stressed that the progressive forces and other people will judge the fascist government for sure by the concerted efforts of the nation.
- The Students Committee of the Youth and Students Solidarity for Realizing the June 15 Joint declaration released an appeal on November 3 to call on all the democratic forces to turn out in the struggle to frustrate the government﹊s suppression.
The appeal exposed that the present government enacted a special law to mercilessly suppress the people's rally and demonstration by mobilizing police and even army on the ground of holding an international meeting. It is little short of a martial law declared against the people, it criticized.
Illegal investigations of civilians, detentions and coercive searches of members of progressive organizations are conducted almost everyday by the government and the number of suicides protesting against suppression increases, the appeal clarified.
The appeal noted that democracy of the society is ruthlessly tramped down and the people's suffering ever grows daily due to the government﹊s dictatorial rule, and the people can no longer remain on-lookers to the anti-people acts of the government.
All the people should struggle against the government﹊s suppression in order to realize democratization of the society and achieve the right to existence, the appeal said.
- The Joint Conference of Human Rights Organizations and other civic organizations held a rally in Seoul on November 5 to denounce the group of traitors hell-bent on liquidating democracy.
Speakers there deplored that the people's rights are mercilessly violated due to the government﹊s repressive moves.
They noted that the repressive forces spread the horrific atmosphere where they can doubt and arrest the people at random. They stressed that they would dynamically struggle to frustrate the government﹊s suppression.
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Wednesday 17 November 2010

Seoul: Workers of 3M Factories (USA) rally against strike breakers

Media Summary
PHOTOS

http://www.demotix.com/news/510409/seoul-workers-3m-factories-usa-rally-against-strike-breakers


250 workers from a 3M (USA) Factory protested in Seoul against the use of strike breakers in their Factory as well as against payment cuts and violence of workers rights. Police forces kept them away from the US-Embassy. Seoul, Korea. 17/11/2010.

Today the Korean Metal Workers Union (KMWU) staged several demonstrations against their Employer 3M, an US-American multinational conglomerate which has several Factories in South Korea. 3M used strike breakers in the last months against striking workers and several workers got heavily wounded. Also there where cuts in payments and actions against Union Members. A branch leader of the KMWU set himself on fire two weeks before the G20 Summit in Seoul to protest against police arrests from striking 3M Workers.

Around 60 Protesters protested around noon at the Central Government Building in Seoul as well as near the US-Embassy. Heavy Police forces prevented around ten protesters to protest directly in front of the US-Embassy.

In the afternoon around 250 Workers protested directly in front of an 3M Business building against the Unions harassment as well as the high death tolls due to bad working conditions. Demonstrators threw eggs against the builduing, but the police did not intervene.












SOUTH KOREAN WORKERS CLASH WITH RIOT POLICE



Yesterday's Yonhap reported the following:


Hyundai Motor contract workers taken into custody...

see link CINA
http://blog.jinbo.net/CINA/?m=2006-02


Scores of non-regular workers of Hyundai Motor (factory in Ulsan) were taken into custody Monday during a heavy clash with riot police in a rally to demand formal employee status with the country's largest automaker.


More than 300 unionized contract workers were staging a protest in front of their factories in this city, 414 kilometers southeast of Seoul. Riot police used tear gas to disperse the demonstrators after a series of physical confrontations, but the workers reassembled at another factory building and were continuing their protest, according to witnesses.





And here's yesterday's news report by AFP:


Twenty injured in clash at Hyundai car factory


South Korea's top automaker Hyundai Motor said Monday that 20 people were injured in a violent protest by hundreds of temporary workers.


The company said 20 of its permanent employees were injured in an attempt to drive out temporary workers who have occupied an auto plant in the southeastern city of Ulsan.


Riot police used tear gas to end a violent protest by hundreds of temporary workers inside and outside the factory and detained 50 demonstrators, Yonhap news agency said.


Some temporary workers were injured, it said.


The dispute began when a contractor took over the company's car seat production. Temporary workers have refused to sign contracts with the new company, demanding formal employee status.


South Korea has an estimated 5.3-million "non-regular" or temporary workers, whose bosses are unwilling to employ them on a permanent basis, which would give them greater rights.


The union of Hyundai Motor's full-time workers has a history of militancy, going on strike almost every year since its establishment in 1987.


But in 2009 it had its strike-free year in a decade and a half after union leaders promised to help it ride out the global downturn. The union also agreed a wage deal in July 2010, marking its second year without a strike...

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TRAGETY OF YONGSAN
http://blog.jinbo.net/CINA/2330



Jeon Jae-sook, 68, third from right, cries out in grief after hearing the verdict of the Yongsan redevelopment tragedy and hugs her daughter-in-law Jeong Young-shin in front of the Supreme Court in Seoul’s Seocho District, Nov. 11. Jeon lost husband Lee Sang-lim and the government imprisoned her son Lee Chung-yeon due to the Yongsan Tragedy in 2009 that took the lives of five civilians and one police officer.
The Yongsan area was designated a redevelopment zone by the Lee Myung-bak administration, and many of the area’s poor residents were forcibly evicted and received paltry compensation.


Finalizing 22 months of disputes over a major fire that broke out during the police crackdown on the residents’ protest, the Supreme Court upheld Thursday the Court of Appeals verdict which pronounced nine protesters guilty, saying, “they illegally occupied a building’s rooftop in Yongsan to protest Seoul City’s urban redevelopment project.”


“The original verdict was correct in stating that the police’s operations to quell the protest were not conducting their duties improperly,” the top court said. “Molotov cocktails thrown by the protesters caused the fires at the guard tower.”


As a result, two protesters, including Lee Chung-yeon, 37-years-old and a leader of an association of Yongsan residents who were refused eviction, were sentenced five years in prison. Other five protesters, including a Mr. Kim, were founded in four years, while another defendant were found three years in prison with a four year suspended sentence and the last one two years in prison with a three year suspended sentence. The prosecutors previously cleared police officers of wrongdoing in an investigation marred by fair trial violations.


In response, the defendants said they will appeal the case to the United Nations in regard to human rights violations. Park Rae-goon, an advocate of the convicted protesters, said a group of lawyers would file a complaint with the UN Human Rights Commission.


“I believe the UN will take it differently,” Park told reporters after the ruling. “The police did not operate by the rules during the suppression. But the court ruled the protestors were fully liable for the incident. It is unfair.”


Meanwhile, the case against the police officers including then-Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency Commissioner Kim Seok-ki is on trial at the Supreme Court. Evicted Yongsan residents filed the case, arguing that the police’s crackdown was improper.


The National Human Rights Commission of Korea (NHRCK) issued an opinion in February confirming that the behavior of the police during the crackdown was illegal, and recommended indicting members of the police leadership, SMPA Commissioner Kim.


http://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_entertainment/448409.html





* The report has been filed under "Entertainment"(sic)!

Ermm, entertainment...?? Yeah, of course it's "entertainment"!! But only for the S. Korean ruling class, especially the Construction Mafia!!!

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Sentence is upheld in Yongsan fire

November 12, 2010
Finalizing 22 months of disputes over a major fire in Yongsan District - in which one SWAT officer and five squatters were killed - the Supreme Court upheld a sentence that convicted nine protesters on charges of setting fires at a building there in 2009.

The Supreme Court confirmed yesterday that Molotov cocktails thrown by the nine protesters caused the fires at the building and that operations by the SWAT officers were legally appropriate.

“The original verdict is right in that the defendants’ acts prevented SWAT officers from conducting their duties,” the court said. Seven protesters were given four to five years in prison. The other two were also involved in the incident, but the court determined that their role in setting the fire was less significant than that of the other seven protesters and they were given two and three year sentences, respectively.

Residents evicted from a redevelopment site in Yongsan took over the five-story Namildang Building on Jan. 19, 2009, demanding higher compensation for properties they owned that were to be demolished by a government-led redevelopment project.

When police dropped out of a helicopter and onto the roof of the building to eject the squatters on Jan. 20, a fire broke out. Prosecutors said on Feb. 9 last year that the squatters threw paint thinner and Molotov cocktails at the building. Initially, there was no decision in the first trial, which started on April 22, 2009, because lawyers and defendants repeatedly argued that prosecutors did not open the fire investigation records. Eventually though, the court convicted the squatters on Oct. 28, 2009. A second trial this May confirmed the first decision.

The defendants said they will appeal the case to the United Nations in regard to human rights violations.


By Kim Hee-jin [heejin@joongang.co.kr]

--------------------------------------

Monday 15 November 2010

REPORT ON SMASH SEOUL, SMASH G20 PROTEST IN LONDON

SOUTH KOREAN EMBASSY MADCAP SECURITY OFFICIALS’ FIREARMS AT THE READY DURING THE SMASH SEOUL, SMASH THE G20 PROTEST ON FRIDAY 12 NOVEMBER 2010

On Friday 12 November, people from various leftist groups and organizations turned up at the south Korean embassy in London to stand in solidarity with south Korean workers, G20 protestors, prisoners and all anti-G20 activists from across the globe who took part in the G20-protests in Seoul, south Korea on 11-12 November and condemn the Lee Myung Bak fascist style puppet regime of south Korea for it brutal onslaught on south Korean workers and their rights.

Protestors handed out anti-G20 fliers to the passing public highlighting the issues.

However from the very start of the protest, south Korean officials of the embassy took a hostile stance towards the protest being held outside the front door of their embassy. Their armed security personnel immediately came out of the embassy and stood at the front of the entrance looking very uneasy and brandishing firearms in full view of the people lawfully protesting. Thus it appears they are so very worried about protestors handing out a few fliers, they now feel the urgent need to brandish firearms about the place to try and intimidate protestors and keep them away from the puppet embassy.

The British diplomatic police (also armed), as usual, were called in and were soon lording it over the protestors and throwing their weight about in less than 10 minutes, by ordering people to move to the other side of the road to their ‘designated’ protest area (10 metres away). The recent Millbank Tower Tory HQ riots are still fresh in the minds of the UK police force. Hence their fear of a possible repeat of those events at the south Korean embassy had enough people turned up. The police told us that the south Korean puppet officials had said that they were feeling very intimidated and harassed by our presence outside the embassy. That was the UK cops’ pretext to get us all arrested if we didn’t move. Is that also the reason why the south Korean embassy security felt the need to brandish firearms at the protestors? That they felt intimidated by people handing out fliers outside their front door? No, it is because they want to frighten us from protesting in larger numbers outside their puppet embassy in future. They think they can use the same vicious underhanded gangster-style tricks that they use against their own people of south Korean against protestors in Britain. A far cry when one considers how the south Korean puppet authorities use their tried and tested method of tear gas and brutal crackdowns and repressions against south Korean labour activists, civic organisations, or anyone who dare utter a word of sympathy in relation to North Korea. One south Korean member of the organisation ‘Solidarity for Implementing the South-North Declaration’ was inflicted with a 2 year prison term on November 8, on the charge of violating the draconian National Security Law of south Korea. He was sentenced for two years behind bars, charged with possession of ‘enemy-benefiting’ music CD-s praising the North of Korea (DPRK).

We initially refused to move and remained standing right outside the entrance of the embassy on the pavement (public highway) until the very last minute, when we were almost certain we were all going to get arrested under Section 14 (5) of the Public Order Act. At that point, we decided we would shift slowly over to the other side of the road and begin condemning the south Korean regime via a large megaphone so that the embassy staff could hear us loud and clear. Better to be there and piss off the south Koreans for a few hours, rather then give them the full satisfaction of having us removed completely from the embassy area in the back of a police van to the delight of those inside the puppet embassy.

One courageous protestor decided to remain defiant and risking arrest and receiving a Level 3 fine of maximum of 1000 pounds as punishment, refused to obey police orders and continued to stand right outside the embassy and continue handing out anti-G20 fliers. He was being harassed by the cops as usual and threatened with arrest if he did not move to the other side of the road to join the rest of us. But he remained defiant

The protestors condemned the UK cops for their own behavior in general, as well as the government agencies of south Korea for conducting crackdowns on undocumented migrants, during which migrants are brutally arrested, illegally imprisoned and then deported. The authorities of south Korea were also condemned for the detention and expulsion of several Philipino G20 activists. South Korean Police had been carrying out illegal and racist stop and search procedures just before the G20 Summit on whoever they think looked ‘suspicious’ or had ‘dark skin’. The government at the same time is continuing to carry out devastating attacks on south Korean workers, activists, labour unions and civic organisations

The demo called for the release of all south Korean prisoners, jailed under the draconian National Security Law. They condemned the south Korean embassy staff in London for brandishing firearms at the protestors who had the lawful right to be there outside the embassy, and demanded the dissolution of the brutal NIS (south Korean Secret Police) of south Korea. The G20 was condemned by the protestors as a bunch of crooks, by accusing them of attempting to make the world ‘safe’ for neo-liberal capitalism by forcing emerging economies to shoulder part of the burden of the crisis, promoting trade and investment liberalization dressed up in ‘new robes’, negotiating weak financial reforms that largely allow financial speculation to on unchecked and reviving the ailing IMF and other IFI-s, and this agenda being pursued despite the fact that neo-liberal capitalism is clearly a failed model, which only increases poverty and inequality around the globe.

Whilst this was going on, the courageous and defiant protestor handing out fliers and refusing to move to the “designated” protest area on the other side of the road and under threat of arrest or even worse (had south Korean security staff at the embassy opened fire on the protestor), was indeed arrested under section 14(5) of the Public Order Act (causing harassment, alarm or distress) ….i.e. and in this case, also for disobeying a legal order made by a senior police officer. He was driven off in the back of a cop car under the loud megaphone chants of “NO JUSTICE, NO PEACE, - FUCK THE POLICE!







At the police station, the police initially told the arrestee that he could be held until Monday 15 Nov if they could not have got him into court on Saturday 13 Nov. At midnight on Friday 12, luckily, he was released after been cautioned. Whilst being held for nearly 10 hours, he was also quizzed by the cops in an interview room, and asked about what happened outside the embassy and who the organizers of the event were in the interests of information gathering.

“NO COMMENT” was the response given to all questions by the brave and trusted comrade.


Well done to everyone who turned up on the day!

GLOBALISE RESISTANCE!
SMASH THE G20!

CAPITAL KNOW NO BOUNDARIES, SO WHY SHOULD WE.

SMASH THE LEE MYUNG BAK REGIME OF SOUTH KOREA!

FREEDOM TO ALL LABOUR ACTIVISTS AND POLITICAL PRISONERS IN SOUTH KOREA AND ACROSS THE GLOBE!!

And finally,
TO ALL SOUTH KOREAN EMBASSY PUPPET SECURITY PERSONNEL AND THEIR SOUTH KOREAN NIS AGENTS IN LONDON!

We say,
IN THE INTERESTS OF NOT TURNING UP THE HEAT AND AVOIDING A FLARE UP IN YOUR EMBASSY AREA, YOU HAD BETTER KEEP ALL YOUR FIREARMS AT BAY AND OFF THE STREETS OF LONDON, AND STOP BRANDISHING THEM AT PEOPLE WHO LAWFULLY PROTEST THE FASCIST-STYLE BRUTAL LEE MYUNG BAK REGIME OUTSIDE YOUR PUPPET SOUTH KOREAN EMBASSY!

WE ARE NOT INTIMITATED AND WILL NOT BE INTIMIDATED BY FIREARMS BEING BRANDISHED BY A BUNCH OF THIRD RATE CROOKS AND AGENTS OF THE TREACHEROUS LEE MYUNG BAK PUPPET REGIME OF SOUTH KOREA RESIDING IN THE SOUTH KOREAN EMBASSY IN LONDON!


SMASH SEOUL, SMASH THE G20

smashg20.blogspot.com

G20-SUMMIT PHOTOS

Latest post g20
CINA
1. Surprise, surprise: All the various anti-G20 activities (conferences, rallies and demonstrations) in Seoul were complete ignored in/by the int'l media!!(*)

2. Even the South Korean "left-liberal" newspaper Hankyoreh mentioned yesterday's "Int'l Day of Collective People’s Action" demo only with some few words: "Domestic and international activists hold a protest near Seoul Station and march to the Namyeong Station under the banner, 'Responsibility before the economic crisis: We denounce the G-20! The International People’s Cooperative Action Day' Nov. 11."

3. But today's Korea Times, one of the mouthpieces of the South Korean ruling class, noticed with satisfaction "G20 summit unmarred by violent rallies" !!!

Anyway, here two snapshots from yesterday's protests against the G-20 Summit during the so-called "Int'l Day of Collective People’s Action":







Thursday 11 November 2010

ANTI-G20 PROTEST IN SEOUL 11 NOV




ANTI-G20 PROTEST IN SEOUL 11 NOV

SEE LINKS

CINA


Today afternoon the final ('official') protest against the G-20 Summit, the "Int'l Day of Collective People’s Action" under the slogan "Put People First! G20, Stop Making Common People Pay for the Crisis!" took place in downtown Seoul.

After the opening rally and a culture program thousands (5000 according to Voice of People, 6000 according to NewsCham) of demonstrators took the streets and marched until they were stopped only few hundred meters afterwards (just two subway stations) by thousands of riot cops...(*)


A few hours ago Yonhap news agency reported the following about the event:


Activists, laborers stage anti-G20 protests in Seoul


South Korean labor and civic groups joined with international activists Thursday to stage protests to raise their voice against this week's G-20 summit in Seoul.


The rally ended without anyone being arrested or taken into custody, despite scuffles with the police as the protesters marched through downtown.


Organized by a confederation of 83 civic groups calling itself "Put People First! Korean People's G-20 Response Action," the rally began in front of the Seoul Station. Organizers claimed some 10,000 people showed up, but the police said it counted about 3,500.


The protest, also backed by political campaigners, college students, human rights activists and interest groups, was one of several planned in the city to coincide with the gathering of world leaders for the G-20 summit on Thursday and Friday. Heads of governments and financial chiefs along with leaders from non-G-20 nations have come to Seoul to attend the global economic forum.

Over 3,000 riot police stood guard with water cannons and other protest-quelling equipment.


The protesters scuffled their way past the police to march through downtown, arriving an hour later at a city intersection where they burned a coffin marked as symbolizing G-20 and free trade agreements, causing another physical clash.


Protesters' demands varied from job stability, fair distribution of wealth and scrapping of free trade agreements to the withdrawal of South Korean troops from Afghanistan. Placards read, "G20, Stop making people pay for the crisis," "STOP G20," "Withdraw troops from Afghanistan" and "No FTA."


A South Korean college student, waving a picket that said "G20 chairman = Labor repression champion," told Yonhap that he was protesting against the government's excessive crackdown on migrant workers and labor unions under the guise of the G-20.


Organizers said some 100 international activists also joined Thursday's rally.


Toshsiko Sogame, 64, from Japan, was among those who flew to Seoul to join the anti-20 events.


"I'm here to raise the voice for revision of immigration laws that discriminate against foreigners," Sogame said, flying flags written in Japanese...

---------------------------------------------------------


DEMOTIX

http://www.demotix.com/g20-summit

http://www.demotix.com/news/504453/g20-seoul-10000-rally-against-g20-summit-only-minor-scuffles

G20 Seoul: 10.000 rally against G20 Summit. Only minor scuffles.
Media Summary
Today around 10'000 Demonstrators protested against the G20 Summit held in Seoul. In the beginning they breached through a police line to start their march and in the end there where some further scuffles. Seoul, Korea. 11/11/2010.



Today around 10.000 Demonstrators protested against the G20 Summit held in Seoul.

After international activists and union leaders held speeches at the Seoul Station in the core of the city the demonstrators breached through a police line to start their march.

After around one hour the march stopped an an further police barrier. Their it came again to some minor scuffles and a small fire.

The police was with several thousand men in the area present, as well as with heavy gear.


----------------------------------------

LATEST POST 11 NOV

TENSE CLIMATE IN THE STREETS OF SEOUL


SEE LINKS HERE AND ON RIGHT

INDYMEDIA UK
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2010/11/467750.html

G20 Seoul: Breaking News/Links

cimc | 10.11.2010 22:59 | Globalisation | Social Struggles | Workers' Movements
G20 Seoul, South Korea UPDATE
Breaking News, Articles, Links, Videos

G20: SOUTH KOREA

Thursday afternoon and evening (late Wednesday night Western Hemisphere time) thousands of demonstrators will gather in front of Seoul Station and then try to march several miles to the National Museum where the G20 leaders will be attending a reception and dinner. This march will likely end in a serious confrontation between several thousand demonstrators and another several thousand well-armed police force, backed by trucks with water cannons.

The tense climate in the streets is being compounded by the local police state which has enacted laws specifically to suppress the freedom to dissent during the G20 summit in Seoul. The security chief has been given a green-light to mobilize the military against protesters if needed. The security chief can also designate some areas as a security zone and ban any activity or gatherings that they think are dangerous to the G20 summit. Furthermore, no information of the security zone is easily accessible to people, that means, the police can do anything everywhere. Gatherings and demonstrations where the government has a clear expectation of violence, threats, property destruction, or arson may be banned from being held. All outdoor gatherings must be reported forty-eight hours before they take place. During any outdoor gatherings, the boundaries of the assembly can be designated and enforced by the police. The police may take action to stop any noise if the organizers or participants of an assembly cause serious harm to non-participants.

As other international activists have already witnessed first-hand at G20 summits across the western hemisphere, the police, politicians, and CEO's will do everything in their power to systematically silence opposition to its destructive policies. From creating draconian laws to utilizing the latest in totalitarian technologies such as the LRAD, it always becomes clear during these summits just how despotic the collusion of international states, multinational corporations, and central banks can be. As for the citizens of the world, we see just how much control over our own lives we truly don't have.

SEE LINKS BELOW FOR MORE INFO or GO TO:
KOREA INDYMEDIA – Breaking News/Action Alerts
korea.indymedia.org/drupal/

BREAKING NEWS:

Progressive international activists who had been granted visas denied entry into South Korea and expelled without explanation
korea.indymedia.org/drupal/

What is the Special Security Law for the G20?
korea.indymedia.org/drupal/

Main demo against G20 summit on Nov 11th will be held 2pm at Seoul Station
korea.indymedia.org/drupal/

Temporary Media Center opened for the G20
メディアセンターについて | 인디미디어 Korea Indymedia
korea.indymedia.org/drupal/

[Solidarity Action Appeal] Help us fight the oppressive G20 regime right now!!
korea.indymedia.org/drupal/


OTHER ARTICLES:

The G20 Summit is NO EXCUSE for Repression!
kctu.org/9842

KCTU Calls for international participation in People’s Week of Collective Action protesting G20 Seoul Summit
kctu.org/9845

Labour Assembly: Southern Trade Unions’ Voice on Global Economic & Social Crisis
www.rinoceros.org/article9756.html


LATEST VIDEOS (as of 11/10/10):

Two PETA activists arrested in South Korea - no comment
www.youtube.com/watch

20,000 Protesters Clash With Police As Seoul, South Korea Gears Up For G20
www.youtube.com/watch

South Korea Prepares to host G20 SUMMIT - Seoul
www.youtube.com/watch


CALENDAR:

November 11th, (Opening Day of G20 summit)
Action Day protesting G20
Organizer: G20 People’s Response Preparation Committee
November 10th~11th
G20 Trade Union Summit
Organizer: ITUC, OECD TUAC, GUFs


RECENT NEWS ABOUT PAST G20 SUMMITS:

Toronto Police Rearrest Activist
toronto.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/20101025/g20-court-appearance-101025/20101025/

Ian Tomlinson death: senior judge appointed to oversee inquest
www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2010/nov/10/ian-tomlinson-inquest-thornton

ACLU Sues City Of Pittsburgh Over G-20 Mass Arrests
twincities.indymedia.org/2010/sep/aclu-sues-city-pittsburgh-over-g-20-mass-arrests

Democracy 101: Pittsburgh G20 Protests and the Police Occupation of Pitt University
www.youtube.com/watch

Long Range Acoustic Device (LRAD) G20 Pittsburgh
www.youtube.com/watch

The G-20 Song
www.youtube.com/watch
cimc

The G20 and its global economic agenda are an affront and a threat to people’s rights and welfare.
The detention and deportation of Filipino activists from Seoul and the harassment and intimidation of a number of other activists at the hands of Korean immigration authorities are manifestations of the undemocratic and anti-people nature of the G20 and further exposed the illegitimacy of this group of self-proclaimed caretakers of the global economy.

The protests and mobilizations in Korea of tens of thousands of people in clear defiance of the Korean governments security measures, is an indication of a clear disconnect between the agenda of the governments of the G20 countries and the interests and aspirations of their people.

The G20 Summit in Korea was supposed to address the issue of the growing gap between the rich and the poor in the wake of the global economic crisis. The G20’s prescriptions for economic recovery and development, however, anchored on the perpetuation of a flawed corporate driven, export-oriented development model would further exacerbate poverty and inequality and undermine social cohesion across the world.

The whole point of the Peoples Conference in Korea, and the reason why the deported Filipino activists came to Korea, is to articulate the peoples’ opposition and resistance to the G20 and to collectively discuss and put forward alternatives to the failed model of development that the G20 is so desperately trying to preserve.

We say NO to the G20 and the policies that continue to threaten jobs and peoples livelihoods, and erode workers’ rights and welfare;

We say NO to the G20 and policies that cause the expulsion and repatriation of migrants in the name of restrictive and Draconian migration policies and rules;

We say NO to the G20 and the policies that use women as safety nets in crisis, and is blind to the differential decision-making powers in the household and economy in general;

We speak out against the free trade agenda and the push of the G20 governments for more ambitious and comprehensive free trade agreements disguised as economic partnerships but are really instruments of economic domination and control by the rich over the poor within and across countries and regions;

We speak out against the development agenda of the G20 which threatens peoples’ right to food, destroys the environment, and perpetuates unequal access and control over natural resources in support of the profit-driven motives of corporations;

We say NO to the G20. It does not represent the interests of the peoples of the world and it cannot speak on our behalf.

We call on the peoples of the world to come together against the G20 and to intensify the struggle for a better and more just and peaceful world.

-----------------------------

CINA

Today's Korea Times reported(*): "With South Korea gearing up to host the leaders of the world’s 20 largest economies, a security fence has been set up on the roads surrounding Coex, the main venue for the Nov. 11 and 12 G20 Seoul Summit, to protect participants from possible terrorist attacks and protests..."
Well, almost 5 years ago the APEC Summit took place in Busan and the (very special^^) measures to prevent so-called "violent" protests by thousands of workers, peasants and resistance activists...

...ultimately failed(!!), as you can see here:

http://blog.jinbo.net/CINA/?m=2006-02

--------------------------------------------------


DEMOTIX
http://www.demotix.com/news/503233/korean-confederation-trade-unions-hold-protest
Korean Confederation of Trade Unions hold a Protest
Media Summary
Korean Confederation of Trade Unions Candlelight Cultural Event with international activists and representatives at Boshingak, Jongno street. 10/11/2010

The Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU) is a national trade union centre officially established in 1995. Its predecessor was the National Council of Trade Unions (NCTU), established in 1990 as an independent alternative to the Federation of Korean Trade Unions. With 682,418 members in 2007, the KCTU accounted for 40.6% of trade union members in South Korea.
In 2008, during massive "mad cow protests" the KCTU declared a general strike to protest the import of US beef on grounds that consuming the allegedly tainted beef could damage worker productivity
The KCTU has more than 1,200 affiliated enterprise-level trade unions. It is the second largest trade union national center in South Korea, following the Federation of Korean Trade Unions (FKTU). On 1 April 2009, KCTU delegates at a special session elected Lim Seong-kyu as President. Of the two, the KCTU is generally considered to be the more militant.
Korean Confederation of Trade Unions Candlelight Cultural Event with international activists and representatives at Boshingak, Jongno street.
---------------------------------------------------

Police stop FTA protests in Seoul
http://www.demotix.com/news/502934/police-stop-fta-protests-seoul
Media Summary
Police stopped protests and dispersed a small group of individuals this morning from central Seoul. The demonstration by Labour Union JEI against the G20 was quickly broken up by police and people were moved on. Seoul, South Korea. 10/11/2010

------------------------------------------


G20 Seoul: Korean Confederation of Trade Unions rally
http://www.demotix.com/news/503271/g20-seoul-korean-confederation-trade-unions-rally
Media Summary
The Korean Confederation of Trade Unions rallied today near the Soul City Hall against the G20 Summit starting tomorrow as well as against the FTA agreement. Around 300 people participated at the rally. Seoul, Korea. 10/11/2010.

The Korean Confederation of Trade Unions rallied today near the Soul City Hall against the G20 Summit starting tomorrow as well as against the FTA agreement.
Around 300 people participated at the rally; there where activists from the Democratic Labor Party Sit In as well as foreign activist, which arrived in the last day. Charles Santigo from the Malaysia Parliament held also an speech.
Several hundred Riot Cops where in guard in the surrounding streets.

-----------------------------

Wednesday 10 November 2010

GLOBALISE RESISTANCE! SMASH SEOUL SMASH G20 LATEST POST

Peoplesg20action.seoul@gmail.com


PHOTO REPORTS FROM DEMOTIX
http://www.demotix.com/g20-summit

----------------------------------------

Ahead of the G20 Summit
Civil society not welcomed in G20 Seoul

International civil society organisations, members of Our World is not for Sale, trade unions and the international peasant movement La Via Campesina condemn the deportation by the Korean government of seven activists from the Philippines who had been granted visas. Furthermore, other progressive activists from Asian and African countries were unjustifiably denied visas.
The list of individuals, mostly civil society leaders from developing countries, prohibited from entry, was based not on concrete evidence of actual threat or histories of dangerous acts, but instead on the goal of preventing their participation in civil society events critical of the G20, particularly the International Conference organized by Put People First!-Korean People's G20 Response Action.
Member of Parliament from Malaysia, Charles Santiago, expressed “While activists, critical to the G20 and neoliberal economic policies have encountered an antagonistic reception by the Korean government, 100 global business executives, gathering for the G20 Business Summit, will be welcomed with a red carpet.”
Deported labour representative from the Philippines Josua Mata added “Nothing demonstrates better the true nature of the G20 than the fact that while it is detaining and deporting activists from the global south, it is busy preparing to have an intimate dialogue with the world’s top corporate leaders. This only confirms what we have been saying all along – the G20 is undemocratic and not interested in improving ordinary people’s lives.”
“The G20 which is a non-elected and non-representative body and excludes majority of developing and poor countries has no legitimacy to be deciding on the economic and political directions of the world.” declared Yoon Geum Soon, representative of the international movement of small farmers La Vía Campesina.
Tyotyo James from the Confederation of South Africa Trade Unions (COSATU) concluded “Since 2008, the G20 has been nothing but a talk show and has failed to deliver any coordinated response to the economic and financial crisis. The future of global economic governance should be discussed, instead, at the United Nations”.
------------------------------------------

Arrest warrant for drawing rat on G20 promotion poster?
The prosecution sought an arrest warrant for a 40-year-old man who drew a picture of a rat on a G20 Seoul Summit promotion poster but the request was rejected by the court...

According to the Namdaemun Police Station, a 40-year-old university instructor identified only as Park and his friend were apprehended Sunday for drawing a black rat on seven of such posters with spray paint near Lotte Department Stores in central Seoul early in the morning.

The added image to the poster gave people the impression that a huge rat was holding the lantern symbolizing the G20 Summit with the words, “The world is watching Korea.”

The image of a rat is often used to mock President Lee Myung-bak by liberals.

Police asked the prosecution to file arrest warrants for the two for violence and damaging public assets.

However, the Seoul Central District Court rejected the request saying that there was no risk of them fleeing...

Park reportedly said, “I thought the government was making too much of a fuss about a trifling matter. Any G20 country can host the Summit and it is not much of a big deal. I drew a rat because in Korean the pronunciation, ‘Jee (rat in Korean)’ is similar to that of the English letter ‘G.’ It was an act of humor.”

His lawyer, Park Ju-min said, “It seems that the police are trying to make an example out of Park.”

“The G20 is a very important event for the country and tarnishing its promotional poster is not acceptable,” Cho Chang-bae, who filed for the warrant, told a local daily. “We felt that he was trying to defame the global event.”

http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2010/11/205_75731.html
http://blog.jinbo.net/CINA/?m=2006-02


main demo against G20 summit on Nov 11th will be held 2pm at Seoul Station
lun, 11/08/2010 - 12:50 — imc
Version imprimableEnvoyer à un amiPDF version
main demo against G20 summit on Nov 11th will be held 2pm at Seoul Station.
the heads from G20 countries will be attending a lunch party at Yongsan War Memorial.
so we will organize a big demo at Seoul Station and try to march toward Yongsan area,
http://korea.indymedia.org/drupal/?q=fr/content/main-demo-against-g20-summit-nov-11th-will-be-held-2pm-seoul-station



What is the Special Security Law for the G20?
dim, 11/07/2010 - 18:38 — imc
Version imprimableEnvoyer à un amiPDF version
G20 특별법이란?
What is the Special Security Law for the G20?
한국정부는 강력한 현행집시법이 있음에도 불구하고 G20특별경호법을 만들었다.
이 법의 요지는,
The Korean government has made a special law just for the G20.
To sum up the law,
1 G20의 경호를 위해 군대를 동원할 수 있다. G20을 위해 6만명의 군과 경찰 병력이 동원될 예정이다.
군의 동원은 흡사 계엄령과 같은 상황을 만들어 군인과 시민이 대치하는 상황이 벌어질 수도 있는 것.
1. The security chief can mobilize the millitary. It might lead to the confrontation between soldiers and citizens as if under martial law.
2.G20 기간동안 집회와 시위의 자유를 원천적으로 봉쇄할 수 있다. 경호단장의 자의적 판단으로 특정 장소를 경호안전구역으로 지정하고 모든 행위를 제재하고 모든 집회를 금지할 수 있다.
게다가 어떤 장소가 경호안전구역인지 공지할 의무도 없기 때문에 모든 지역에서 집회와 시유의 자유가 원천 봉쇄되는 것과 마찬가지이다.
2. The freedom of speech and assembly can be thoroughly trampled down. The security chief can designate some area as a security zone and ban any activity or gatherings that they think are dangerous to the G20 summit. Furthermore, no information of the security zone is easily accessable to people, that means, the police can do anything everywhere.
참고로 한국 법이 정한 현행 집시법은 다음과 같다.
The Korean Law of Assembly and Demonstration is as below.
**현행집시법
현행 집시법은 집단적인 폭행․협박․손괴․방화 등으로 공공의 안녕질서에 직접적인 위협을 끼칠 것이 명백한 집회 또는 시위를 금지하고(제5조),
모든 옥외집회를 48시간 전에 신고하게 하며(제6조), 옥외집회가 신고된 경우에 공공의 질서유지를 위하여 필요한 경우에는 질서 유지선을 설정할 수 있도록 하고(제13조),
집회의 주최자나 참가자가 타인에게 심각한 피해를 줄 수 있는 소음을 발생시키는 것을 금지하면서 이를 위반할 경우 관할경찰서장이 확성기 사용 중지 등 필요한 조치를 할 수 있도록(제14조)
규정하고 있다.
Article 5 : Gatherings and demonstrations where the government has a clear expectation of violence, threats, property destruction, or arson may be banned from being held.
Article 6 : All outdoor gatherings must be reported forty-eight hours before they take place.
Article 13 : During any outdoor gatherings, the boundaries of the assembly can be designated and enforced by the police.
Article 14 : The police may take action to stop any noise if the organizers or participants of an assembly cause serious harm to non-participants.
http://korea.indymedia.org/drupal/?q=fr/content/what-special-security-law-g20



from http://blog.peoplepower21.org/English/20958
-------------------------------------------

The Denial of Entry and Repatriation of 6 Filipino Activists is based on Political Bias and a Manifestation of Racism

Activities/Statements : 2010/11/07 17:26
Progressive international activists who had been granted visas denied entry into South Korea and expelled without explanation.
-Participants to the Seoul International People's Conference condemned indiscriminately as a dangerous force; exaggerated blacklist.
-Most individuals denied visas or entry progressive activists from Asian or African developing countries.
After turning Paul L. Quintos, the Policy and Outreach Director for IBON International, away at the border, the Ministry of Justice has moved on to deny entry to 5 more people from the Philippines. These individuals, union officers and civil society activists, had arrived at 5:30pm on November 6 in order to participate in the International People's Conference organized by Put People First! Korean People's G20 Response Action. As soon as they landed, however, they were told their names were on a list of people prohibited from entering South Korea and immediately expelled without being given a chance to plead their case. All 5 individuals had been granted visas from the South Korean Embassy in the Philippines.
The list of the 5 individuals is as follows:
- Joseph Puruganan, Focus on the Global South
- Josua Fred Tolentino Mata, Secretary General, Alliance of Progressive Labor (ALP)
- Rogelio Maliwat Soluta, Secretary General, Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU)
- Jesus Mannuel Santiago, progressive Filipino singer
- Tatcee Macabuang, Migrant Forum on Asia (MFA)
When looking into the reason Director Paul Quintos was refused entry, the Korean People's G20 Response Action discovered that the list of individuals prohibited from entry was based, not on concrete evidence of actual threat or histories of dangerous acts, but instead on the goal of preventing participation in civil society events critical of the G20, and that most names were of civil society leaders from developing countries. Without knowing about or even considering the work these people have done in the past, the South Korean government is denouncing them all as impure elements or dangerous individuals. The government is using the need to protect foreign heads of state and national security as an excuse, but in fact, it is misusing the blacklist for the political purposes of preventing activists from developing countries from participating in the Seoul International People's Conference. This is nothing more than an act of violence--state violence--far more severe than the 'state of mass protest' the government has been worrying about.
We want particularly to point out that the individuals turned away at the border had all received South Korean government-issued visas. All had submitted the various documents required, including invitation letters from institutions in South Korea and proof of identification, and gone through the tedious process of applying for and receiving visas. There are many cases where individuals from countries that have agreements of visa exception with South Korea and therefore do not go through such a process are turned way. Putting the names of individuals who have gone through the process to secure visas on a blacklist with out any basis or room for discussion, however, goes against all reason and common sense.
The government's actions demonstrated a racist bias worthy of severe criticism from the international community. Most of those denied visas or turned away at the border have been civil society leaders from developing countries in Asia or Africa. Of the 5 G20 Summits, the one to take place in Seoul on November 11-12 is the first to be chaired by a country in an Asian, rather than European or North American, country. Yet civil society leaders from Asian countries are being discriminated against and excluded the most during the Seoul Summit. The South Korean government has been claiming that, as the first developing country to host the G20, South Korea will represent the interests of other developing countries, and yet it is refusing to listen to the voices of the peoples of developing counties and ignoring the criticisms of the neoliberal order being put forth by the peoples of the Global South. Even worse, the government is nakedly and shamelessly excluding and repressing these voices.
We cannot hide our deep disgust and anger at the backward attitude and actions of the South Korean government. While the government has been telling the Korean people to be proud of hosting the G20, it has in fact conjured in us a deep shame. The base and irrational actions of the Lee Myung-bak government are greatly tarnishing the image of the Korean in Asia and in the entire international community. To be boasting of South Korea's position as an international leader and at the same time trampling on the human rights of people from developing countries is self-contradictory and completely deceitful. The fact that the South Korean government has absolutely no right to call itself the chair of the G20 and the representative of developing nations has become clear throughout the world.
The 6 international activists from the Philippines were forced onto a plane and expelled from this so-called "Global Korea" at 9:30pm on the same evening they arrived. The fact that they were deported will not have a noticeable impact on the progress of the G20 Summit. From now on, however, the focus of international society, and especially international civil society, will be on, not the content of the G20 Summit, but the despicable anti-human rights nature of this act. The South Korean government will be denied entry into international society for its racist attitude. It will expelled from the hearts of the South Korean people, whose pride and honor have been greatly damaged by its disgraceful acts.
Put People First! Korean People's G20 Response Action

http://www.putpeoplefirst.kr, peoplesg20action.Seoul@gmail.com

http://korea.indymedia.org/drupal/?q=fr/content/denial-entry-and-repatriation-6-filipino-activists

Monday 8 November 2010

SOUTH KOREA ACTIVISTS USE G20 TO HIGHLIGHT MOON BEAR FARMS

7 November 2010

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-11705543?asid=e219bf9d

South Korea gets to parade its credentials as an emerging world power this week with its hosting of the G20 summit meeting in Seoul.

But animal rights campaigners hope to use the occasion to highlight something that they say undermines the country's modern image - the farming of bears for their bile.

Asiatic black bears, native to much of Asia, are sometimes called moon bears because of the crescent shaped markings on their chests.

They find themselves in cages because of the demand for their gall bladders, the bile from which is thought to alleviate a range of illnesses.

Used in traditional Chinese medicine, the bile is an expensive commodity and from the 1980s onwards farming became a cheaper and easier way to harvest it than the hunting of wild bears.

Continue reading the main story

Start Quote
Our national image is being harmed and we are trying to resolve the situation”
End Quote
Choi Jong-won

Environment ministry official
Farmers I have spoken to here in Korea say all farmed bears are now bred in captivity and are well looked after.

But animal rights campaigners disagree, saying that as South Korea prepares to host the G20 summit its status as one of very few countries to allow the practice is becoming a national embarrassment.

"Keeping bears in cages gives them a large amount of stress because they are wild animals by nature," Kim Mi-young, an activist at Green Korea United, tells me.

"There is an enormous amount of suffering. You can see them showing signs of mental stress, with repetitive movements. The cramped conditions make them aggressive and they fight each other and get injured."

Lax enforcement

Moon bears are on the endangered species list, international trade is banned and other major centres for the industry are being forced to act.

Vietnam, for example, has banned it - although enforcement is still lax - and China has introduced some monitoring of its bear farms.

Campaigners have taken their protest to the streets of Seoul But South Korea continues to allow farming for the domestic market and has even relaxed certain restrictions in recent years.

The practice of extracting bile using syringes or catheters from live, sedated bears has been banned.

But secretly filmed footage broadcast recently by one of South Korea's leading broadcasters shows that it continues, at least to some extent.

Connecting the issue of bear farming to Korea's international image during the G20 is not the first time campaigners have exploited the uncomfortable tension between traditional and modern Korea.

The trade in dog meat made unfavourable global headlines during this country's hosting of the Olympics and the World Cup.

For the South Korean government, its hosting of the G20 summit is a highly significant moment, the crowning glory of this country's transition from poverty to prosperity.

And it is uneasy about the moon-bear issue.

"Our national image is being harmed and we are trying to resolve the situation," Choi Jong-won, an official at the environment ministry, tells me.

"But the bears are private property and it is difficult to abolish the practice overnight."

Campaigners, though, sense an opportunity.

They hope to use the current international attention to persuade the government to find the millions of dollars needed to compensate farmers for the closure of their farms.

South Korean police fire pepper spray at protestors

Tens of thousands rally in S.Korea against G20 summit
(AFP) – 10 hours ago

SEOUL — Tens of thousands of activists protested in Seoul on Sunday against the Group of 20 summit to be held this week, with hundreds clashing with police who used pepper spray to disperse an angry crowd.

Labour campaigners and other activists -- numbered by police at 20,000 and by organisers at 40,000 -- chanted slogans and songs at Seoul Plaza outside the city hall, surrounded by thousands of riot police.

"We will never allow only 20 elite countries to decide the whole world's future," leaders chanted from the stage, as they also protested over the state of workers' rights in South Korea and a proposed free trade deal with the US.

Hundreds of protesters tried to march towards the city centre against police warnings, pushing and shoving against police riot shields. Police used pepper spray to disperse the demonstrators.

Thousands of others staged a candlelight rally at Seoul Plaza, surrounded by buildings draped with huge banners heralding the November 11-12 summit -- the nation's biggest appearance on the world stage since the 1988 Olympics.

Some activists wore vests with slogans reading: "Against the G20 that hampers labour rights and creates unstable jobs" and "Against the G20 that cuts social welfare and destroys public service".

Others held up mock traffic signs saying "Stop G20", while campaigners distributed leaflets urging people to "rise up against neoliberalism and globalisation".

"We will continue the struggle to raise the minimum wage, solve the youth unemployment issue," organisers -- who included the Korea Confederation of Trade Unions, a major workers' rights group -- chanted from the stage.

They also protested against a sweeping free trade agreement that US President Barack Obama wants his country and South Korea to sign before next week's summit, the Yonhap news agency reported.

More than 8,000 police were deployed around the city centre, the city police spokesman told AFP, adding that the force had expected violence.

Seoul will host world leaders including US President Barack Obama for the G20 gathering from November 11-12.

The country's police chief Cho Hyun-Oh said last month that police would be on high alert for demonstrators rallying around the summit venue, cautioning that South Korean protests "tend to be very violent and intense".

In addition to some 50,000 police officers, tens of thousands of troops will be deployed to key public facilities and mountain areas overlooking the summit venue, while naval forces and the coastguard will monitor vessels at sea.

Cho also raised the possibility that North Korea might try to disrupt the summit, though South Korean President Lee Myung-Bak dismissed that possibility, saying he was "confident in the safety and success of the Seoul summit".

Police have already drawn up strict security measures, creating a special unit to protect the G20 leaders and surrounding the venue with security fences over two metres (seven feet) high.

A special law came into force this month giving police greater power to break up street rallies and allowing a military presence in public place


Comment -this was normal for SK in the past to have armed troops on the street
and curfews and in the 1950s and 1960s even US troops patrolling

see photos
http://www.wgntv.com/news/nationworld/sns-ap-as-skorea-g20-protests,0,5066268.story

http://www.demotix.com/

South Korea Bars Foreign Activists From G20 Summit

Sunday, November 07 2010 @ 07:32 AM UTC

Contributed by: WeiLai

http://news.infoshop.org/article.php?story=20101107073223682

Views: 239

After turning Paul L. Quintos, the Policy and Outreach Director for IBON International, away at the border, the Ministry of Justice has moved on to deny entry to 5 more people from the Philippines. These individuals, union officers and civil society activists, had arrived at 5:30pm on November 6 in order to participate in the International People's Conference organized by Put People First! Korean People's G20 Response Action.

South Korea Bars Foreign Activists From G20 Summit
The Denial of Entry and Repatriation of 6 Filipino Activists is based on Political Bias and a Manifestation of Racism

Progressive international activists who had been granted visas denied entry into South Korea and expelled without explanation.
Participants to the Seoul International People's Conference condemned indiscriminately as a dangerous force; exaggerated blacklist.
Most individuals denied visas or entry progressive activists from Asian or African developing countries.
1. After turning Paul L. Quintos, the Policy and Outreach Director for IBON International, away at the border, the Ministry of Justice has moved on to deny entry to 5 more people from the Philippines. These individuals, union officers and civil society activists, had arrived at 5:30pm on November 6 in order to participate in the International People's Conference organized by Put People First! Korean People's G20 Response Action. As soon as they landed, however, they were told their names were on a list of people prohibited from entering South Korea and immediately expelled without being given a chance to plead their case. All 5 individuals had been granted visas from the South Korean Embassy in the Philippines.

2. The list of the 5 individuals is as follows:

Joseph Puruganan, Focus on the Global South
Josua Fred Tolentino Mata, Secretary General, Alliance of Progressive Labor (ALP)
Rogelio Maliwat Soluta, Secretary General, Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU)
Jesus Mannuel Santiago, progressive Filipino singer
Tatcee Macabuang, Migrant Forum on Asia (MFA)
3. When looking into the reason Director Paul Quintos was refused entry, the Korean People's G20 Response Action discovered that the list of individuals prohibited from entry was based, not on concrete evidence of actual threat or histories of dangerous acts, but instead on the goal of preventing participation in civil society events critical of the G20, and that most names were of civil society leaders from developing countries. Without knowing about or even considering the work these people have done in the past, the South Korean government is denouncing them all as impure elements or dangerous individuals. The government is using the need to protect foreign heads of state and national security as an excuse, but in fact, it is misusing the blacklist for the political purposes of preventing activists from developing countries from participating in the Seoul International People's Conference. This is nothing more than an act of violence--state violence--far more severe than the 'state of mass protest' the government has been worrying about.

4. We want particularly to point out that the individuals turned away at the border had all received South Korean government-issued visas. All had submitted the various documents required, including invitation letters from institutions in South Korea and proof of identification, and gone through the tedious process of applying for and receiving visas. There are many cases where individuals from countries that have agreements of visa exception with South Korea and therefore do not go through such a process are turned way. Putting the names of individuals who have gone through the process to secure visas on a blacklist with out any basis or room for discussion, however, goes against all reason and common sense.

5. The government's actions demonstrated a racist bias worthy of severe criticism from the international community. Most of those denied visas or turned away at the border have been civil society leaders from developing countries in Asia or Africa. Of the 5 G20 Summits, the one to take place in Seoul on November 11-12 is the first to be chaired by a country in an Asian, rather than European or North American, country. Yet civil society leaders from Asian countries are being discriminated against and excluded the most during the Seoul Summit. The South Korean government has been claiming that, as the first developing country to host the G20, South Korea will represent the interests of other developing countries, and yet it is refusing to listen to the voices of the peoples of developing counties and ignoring the criticisms of the neoliberal order being put forth by the peoples of the Global South. Even worse, the government is nakedly and shamelessly excluding and repressing these voices.

6. We cannot hide our deep disgust and anger at the backward attitude and actions of the South Korean government. While the government has been telling the Korean people to be proud of hosting the G20, it has in fact conjured in us a deep shame. The base and irrational actions of the Lee Myung-bak government are greatly tarnishing the image of the Korean in Asia and in the entire international community. To be boasting of South Korea's position as an international leader and at the same time trampling on the human rights of people from developing countries is self-contradictory and completely deceitful. The fact that the South Korean government has absolutely no right to call itself the chair of the G20 and the representative of developing nations has become clear throughout the world.

7. The 6 international activists from the Philippines were forced onto a plane and expelled from this so-called "Global Korea" at 9:30pm on the same evening they arrived. The fact that they were deported will not have a noticeable impact on the progress of the G20 Summit. From now on, however, the focus of international society, and especially international civil society, will be on, not the content of the G20 Summit, but the despicable anti-human rights nature of this act. The South Korean government will be denied entry into international society for its racist attitude. It will expelled from the hearts of the South Korean people, whose pride and honor have been greatly damaged by its disgraceful acts.

Put People First! Korean People's G20 Response Action
http://www.putpeoplefirst.kr, peoplesg20action.Seoul@gmail.com

From: http://en.putpeoplefirst.kr/102920#0