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[NPR] Civil Rights At Issue In Korea, But Not The Korea You’d Expect
[NPR] — When you hear about rights abuses on the Korean peninsula, the conversation usually focuses on North Korea. But lately, the North’s democratic neighbor, South Korea, is also drawing international concern for how its government is dealing with dissent.
In November, 60,000 people showed up in downtown Seoul for a mass protest against President Park Geun-hye, raising “a gamut of ongoing concerns about freedom of expression, freedom of association, freedom of peaceful, public protest,” says Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director of Human Rights Watch.
Demonstrators opposed the government’s push to pass union-busting labor laws, attempts to ban protests, jailing of journalists, use of a Cold War-era national security law to criminalize certain kinds of speech and a recent move to force schools to use state-written history textbooks.
A wider international audience is now paying closer attention to President Park’s government and how it is handling dissent. [READ MORE]