http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/23/world/asia/23korea.html?ref=asia

Seoul Journal
Tracking an Online Trend, and a Route to Suicide 

 
Seoyong Lee for The International Herald Tribune
A worker at Utopia Memorial House in Ansung last week walked by ashes of Jeong 
Da-bin, left, and Yuni, two entertainers who killed themselves. 

  a.. 

By CHOE SANG-HUN
Published: May 23, 2007
SEOUL, South Korea, May 22 - From their nondescript sixth-floor office, Kim 
Hee-joo and five other social workers troll the Internet to combat a disturbing 
trend in South Korea: people using the Web to trade tips about suicide and, in 
some cases, to form suicide pacts.

"There are so many of them," said Mr. Kim, secretary general of the Korea 
Association for Suicide Prevention, a private counseling group working to 
decrease the number of suicides, which nearly doubled from 6,440 in 2000 to 
12,047 in 2005, the last year for which government figures are available. 

One of the recent Internet suicide pacts involved two women who died of carbon 
monoxide poisoning in a one-room apartment south of Seoul. 

In another, five young men and women who made a pact over the Internet and had 
failed in two previous suicide attempts drove to a seaside motel to discuss 
more effective methods. There, one member of the group had a change of heart 
and slipped out to call the police.

Figures released by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development 
show that South Korea's suicide rate stood at 18.7 per 100,000 people in 2002 - 
up from 10.2 in 1985. In 2002, Japan's rate was the same as South Korea's, but 
the rate in the United States was 10.2 per 100,000.

Experts attribute the increase to the stresses of rapid modernization and the 
degradation of rural life, but they are also concerned that the Internet is 
contributing to the jump. South Korea has one of the world's highest rates of 
broadband access and, as in Japan in recent years, the Internet has become a 
lethally efficient means of bringing together people with suicide on their 
minds.

In hardly more than a generation, South Korea has transformed itself from an 
agrarian society into an extremely competitive, technologically advanced 
economy where the pressure to succeed at school and work is intense.

Meanwhile, the traditional support base, the family, is under pressure: divorce 
rates are at a record high. And guarantees of lifetime employment evaporated 
with the Asian financial crisis in the 1990s.

In 2005, in the first rally of its kind, hundreds of high school students 
demonstrated in central Seoul, shouting, "We aren't study machines!" They 
gathered to mourn 15 students from around the country who had killed 
themselves, apparently because of the intense pressure to succeed.

The government does not compile figures on how many suicides may have been 
inspired or aided by the Internet. But in an analysis of 191 group suicides 
reported in the news media from June 1998 to May 2006, Kim Jung-jin, a 
sociologist at Korea Nazarene University, found that nearly a third of the 
cases involved people who had formed suicide pacts through Internet chat sites.

In Korea, the Internet has been implicated not only for helping people get 
together to die, but also for widely sharing individuals' suicidal thoughts.

One well-known actress, Jeong Da-bin, 27, posted her thoughts on her Web site a 
day before killing herself on Feb. 10.

Under the title "The End," she wrote: "For no reason at all, I am going crazy 
with anger. Then, as if lightening had struck, all becomes quiet.

"Then the Lord comes to me. The Lord says I will be O.K. YES, I WILL BE O.K."

Counseling centers in Seoul said calls for help jumped in the days after her 
death. 

Notes like Ms. Jeong's - or ones that call for help in dying - are not 
difficult to find on Internet bulletin boards in Korea.

"I really want to kill myself," said a Yahoo Korea Web posting in April by an 
anonymous teenager who complained of bullying at school and his parents' 
pressure to improve his grades. "I only have 30,000 won," or about $32, he 
wrote, adding: "Can anyone sell me a suicide drug? I don't want a painful death 
like jumping from a high place."

In March a 28-year-old man who ran a suicide-related blog called "Trip to 
Heaven" was arrested on a charge of selling potassium cyanide to a 15-year-old 
boy he met via the Internet. The boy used the poison to kill himself.

Since 2005, Web portals, acting under pressure from civic groups, have banned 
words like suicide and death from the names of blogs. If a user keys in 
"suicide," search engines display links to counseling centers at the top of 
their search results.

Also in 2005, the Korea Internet Safety Commission, a government watchdog on 
cyberspace, ordered the removal of 566 blogs, chat groups and Web postings that 
encouraged suicide, up sharply from 93 cases a year earlier. The figure 
declined to 147 in 2006 and rose again to 161 in the first four months of this 
year.

The government is taking or discussing other measures to impede suicide as 
well. Since nearly 40 percent of South Koreans who kill themselves do so by 
drinking pesticides or jumping, the government is considering making pesticides 
less toxic and is installing more barriers on rooftops and bridges.

The Seoul subway system began erecting glass walls on platforms after 95 
people, some wearing black plastic bags over their heads, threw themselves in 
front of subway trains in 2003, according to transit officials. Doors in the 
glass wall open only when trains pull into the station.

Kim Hee-joo's counseling group discovers an average of 100 suicide-related Web 
sites each month and asks portals to delete them. A few are serious enough that 
the staff alerts the police to possible violations of laws against assisting 
suicide or trading in hazardous substances.

"People used to use blog names like 'Let's Die Together,' " said Mr. Kim. "Now 
they're more careful. Once they've met each other they shut down the site and 
switch to e-mail and cellphones. You need a lot of searching and hunches and 
luck to track down these people."

Recently Mr. Kim's team discovered a blog called "Life Is Tough," described by 
its creator as a meeting place for people contemplating suicide. The site 
attracted several people who left their cellphone numbers and e-mail addresses 
to link up with others who wanted to "take the trip together."

The police are now searching for the blog's creator, who could face charges of 
aiding suicide, a crime punishable by up to 10 years in prison on conviction.

"People are social animals," said Jason Lee, director of the Metropolitan 
Mental Health Center in Seoul. "Some apparently want a companion even when 
committing suicide."


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



Post message: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subscribe   :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
List owner  :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Homepage    :  http://proletar.8m.com/ 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 

Kirim email ke