-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the Oct. 10, 2002
issue of Workers World newspaper
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IN SOUTH KOREA, ANGER AT U.S. OCCUPATION GROWS

By Yoomi Jeoung

[From a talk at the Sept. 21-22 Workers World Party 
conference. Jeong, a leader of the Korea Truth Commission, 
was a guest speaker.]

On Sept. 16, the New York Times ran an article titled, 
"Korean Mob Briefly Detains U.S. Soldier after Subway 
Fight."

The so-called mob was a group of Korean student activists 
who belong to Han Chong Ryun, an "illegal" vanguard south 
Korean university organization. They were distributing 
flyers about the killings of two 13-year-old girls, Shin Hyo-
Soon and Shim Mi-Sun, by a U.S. military armored vehicle on 
June 13.

Instead of simply rejecting the flyer, the U.S. soldiers 
cursed at the youths.

The leader of south Korea's reunification movement, Suh 
Kyung-Won, witnessed the confrontation. He was punched by 
one of the soldiers when he tried to intervene. Suh had been 
jailed nearly 10 years for visiting the Democratic People's 
Republic of Korea without a visa.

The outraged youths took the soldier to a memorial rally 
where they ordered him to apologize in front of the 
thousands of people who assembled for the memorial rally for 
these two girls.

The people's actions demonstrate that anti-U.S. and anti-
Pentagon issues have become a part of the south Korean 
peoples' public discourse.

We Koreans weren't allowed to express and share our pain and 
suffering at the hands of U.S. military, due to various 
reasons. Chief among them were the National Security Law of 
south Korea and extra-judicial state violence that was 
directed and supported by the U.S. against our people.

However, the ugly cover-up by the U.S. military of the 
killings of the two girls contributed to the largest anti-
U.S. demonstrations in south Korea.

Since the incident, major mass demonstrations were 
organized; action centers were formed in the towns and 
cities at the local and national level. Students organized 
mass demonstrations, something that didn't happen for 
several decades in south Korea.

Teachers took students to the demonstration site as part of 
a school field trip.

Thanks to the Internet, housewives, donning black ribbons, 
organized and participated in the demonstrations.

Recently, Moon-Wha News Agency conducted a survey. It found 
that nine out of 10 Koreans expressed anti-U.S. sentiment, 
compared to seven years ago, when four out of 10 Koreans 
were against the U.S.

In the past, being anti-U.S. labeled you as a pro-communist 
and permanently condemned you to isolation from the rest of 
society.

The Korean people are making connections between Bush's 
unending aggression against world peace and their past half-
century of suffering.

People are starting to see through the reasons for U.S. 
military occupation along with its racism and that the U.S. 
is the stumbling block to our reunification. People are 
realizing that we must act together!

The south Korean movement has endorsed the Oct. 26 marches 
in San Francisco and Washington and is organizing a 
solidarity demonstration on the same day. This fall, it is 
possible that the parents of Shim Hyo-Soon and Shin Mi-Sun 
will visit the U.S. and will need your support in their 
struggle for justice.

- END -

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