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*Samsung allegedly pressures Korean newspaper to kill coverage of
anti-Samsung film <http://feedly.com/e/iAYIKu7e>*
// *The Verge - All Posts <http://feedly.com/e/iAYIKu7e>*

The president of an online newspaper in South Korea allegedly ordered
editors to take down an article about the anti-Samsung film *Another
Promise*, then sent apologetic text messages intended for Samsung
executives who had apparently complained about the paper's coverage. But
the texts from *NewDaily Biz*'s president, Park Jung-kyu, were accidentally
sent to journalists at fellow South Korean publication *Pressian*, which
then published them with names
redacted<http://www.pressian.com/news/article.html?no=114385>.
The texts suggest that *NewDaily Biz* killed the article about *Another
Promise* under pressure from Samsung.

The article, which was posted on February 5th, reported that celebrities
were spending their own money to fund screenings of the film. *Another
Promise <http://www.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20140123000868>* is a
fictionalized portrait of Hwang Sang-ki, whose 23-year-old daughter died
from acute leukemia in 2007. Hwang Yu-mi fell ill after being exposed to
hazardous chemicals at a Samsung plant in Suwon, one of scores of workers
who have fallen ill globally after working in semiconductor plants. A Seoul
administrative court sided with Hwang's father in
2011<http://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_national/484347.html>,
saying there was a high probability that the leukemia resulted from her
exposure to hazardous chemicals.

Details of the film's story were altered to avoid legal action

In *Another Promise*, the company where Hwang Yu-mi works is called
"Jinsung." Filmmakers told
<http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/feb/05/south-korean-film-claims-sickness-samsung>*The
Guardian
<http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/feb/05/south-korean-film-claims-sickness-samsung>*that
they altered certain details about the film to avoid legal action from
Samsung. The film, which was released in South Korea on February 6th,
gained attention for being the first Korean movie to be funded entirely by
private donations and crowdfunding.

Those donations were driven in part by growing concerns about working
conditions for employees of semiconductor manufacturers. An activist group,
Supporters for the Health and Rights of People in the Semiconductor
Industry, told *The Guardian* that 200 employees of chipmakers have fallen
ill after extended exposure to chemicals. But few have successfully won
workers compensation.

Meanwhile, the company has suffered a series of toxic gas
leaks<http://www.theverge.com/2013/5/2/4292596/samsung-second-toxic-gas-leak-korea>and
acid
leakages<http://www.theverge.com/2013/3/4/4063214/samsung-apologies-for-fatal-acid-leakage>at
its Korean plants. The leak left
one worker 
dead<http://www.theverge.com/2013/1/28/3923918/samsung-fatal-gas-leak-hwaseong-semiconductor-plant>and
four others injured.

In the texts intended for Samsung, Park said he has had trouble sleeping
and managing his workload since becoming president of *NewDaily
Biz*earlier in the month. Per standard journalistic practice in Korea,
*Pressian* censored the names in the original report, including the
name of *NewDaily
Biz <http://biz.newdaily.co.kr/>*. The full details were published
later<http://www.mediatoday.co.kr/news/articleView.html?idxno=114919>in
an article by the Korean publication
*Mediatoday*. "To fix the trust issue between Samsung Group and *NewDaily*,
I plan to do my best," Park wrote in Korean. "I spoke with Park Jong-moon,
who told me that Samsung was upset about the *Another Promise* article we
published last month. After looking into the details, I have directly
ordered to take the post down. The columnist didn't have any ill intent,
and the senior managers didn't notice it at all."

Park said the article was a 'double post'

Questioned about the texts by journalists from *Pressian*, Park said the
article was removed on February 18th because it was a "double post" that
repeated information from a previous article. He subsequently denied that
Samsung pressured him. Samsung did not respond to a request for comment
from *The Verge.*

Samsung wields heavy influence in Korea, and local media have long resisted
writing articles that put the conglomerate in a negative light. When a book
critical of Samsung chairman Lee Kun-hee appeared in 2010, most mainstream
outlets refused to write about
it<http://www.theverge.com/2012/11/30/3709688/samsung-25-years-lee-kun-hee>.
Park's texts show the lengths to which Korean publications will go to
preserve good relations with the corporate giant -- and suggest how
aggressive Samsung is about managing its image in the local media.

*Hyunhu Jang contributed to this report.*

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