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Month: December 2014


  • The budget was passed. Navy plans to dismantle people’s sit-in tent.

    Y
    Since November, people have taken 24 hours sit-in in front of the military residence construction area inside the village. A big sit-in tent and village bus block the whole main gate of it. (Photo by Park Yong-Sung)

     

     

    People resist to the lying navy who enforces the building of military residence inside the village

     

    Admiral Hwang Ki Chul, the incumbent chief of Naval Operations of the Republic of Korea Navy since September, 2013, who is recently denounced for his scandalous involvement in the corrupt arms purchase from an unknown US arms company years ago (see here), has made a remark that the navy would never build military residence inside the Gangjeong village unless villagers agree with it. His lie still loudly rings to the ears of people who clearly remember what he said.

    But as Kim Sung-Chan, one of his predecessors, has later violated his own words that the navy would never expropriate villagers’ lands and would never start base construction without villagers’ agreement, Hwang and the navy has been setting to build 72 households of military residence on the way to the port inside the village, without consultation and agreement with the villagers (for more on the navy plan of military residence and people’s strong opposition to it, see the top articles of Oct. and Nov. newsletter, here and here.)

    As soon as the navy got permission from the Seogwipo City Hall on Oct. 7, this year, it moved two containers into the military residence construction area for 72 households, set up the fence, and installed surveillance camera on the top of its main gate.

    The navy’s enforcement of the military residence construction started along with the setting for the construction of a cruise terminal which is a part of so called ‘Civilian-Military Complex Port for Tour Beauty Project,’ an official name of the Jeju naval base project, ridiculous though as the navy seems to prefer to a ‘pure’ navy base.  The location of the latter is much nearer to the port. Signs of construction information for those swarm along the way to the port where one does not miss a scene of the transformed coast and sea covered with ugly base construction facilities and monster-like pollution-pouring barges.

    With urgency to save the 450 year old village from the building of military residence inside the village, people have begun to stop construction vehicles going to the area with 24 hours’ sit-in booth in the center road of the village and later on, with a large sit-in tent just in front of its main gate. The only village-owned bus was tightly chained next to the sit-in tent, totally blocking the whole gate from all the construction vehicles.

    Now, the sit-in tent site just in front of the military residence construction gate is people’s another struggle fronts along with the base construction gate site in the eastern part of the village and Samgeori(a three-fork road) where people have set a communal restaurant and residence containers for the purpose of occupation against navy’s robbing-off the area.

     

    Budget was passed with an unreliable condition, ‘Occasionally allocated’

     

    Despite people’s clear demand to cut the whole 2015 Jeju naval base budget, especially that of military housing project inside the village (for the details, see here), it was on Dec. 2 when the South Korean National Assembly passed the whole 2015 Jeju naval base budget of 298 billion won (about 290 million USD), but with the decision to compile the budget as the ‘occasionally allocated,’ which means the budget is compiled and managed by the Ministry of Strategy and Finance which would hand over the budget to the Ministry of National Defense whenever ‘a condition’ is implemented.

    The Jeju Island government stated on Dec 3 that the National Assembly condition meant an agreement between the navy and Jeju Island Government which had requested the former not to build military residence inside the village, following the result of its meeting with the representatives of the village association last month(see the headline article in Nov. newsletter, here). The Island government even stated that the execution of budget for the building of military residence became impossible for the navy without consultation with the Island government. It stated that it would do its best to consult with the navy so that the navy could purchase military residence in nearer and better location rather than building it in the currently planned site inside the village.

    However, no matter how confident the Island government appears in regards to its interpretation on the ‘occasionally allocated budget,’ such condition is not clearly written as a collateral condition to the budget passed by the National Assembly. Doubts are reasonably raised on such budget allocation, given that the Ministry of National Defense, and the Central Governments have never observed such National Assembly condition even in written forms. The Government-specifically the Ministries of Strategy and Finance and National Defense could be very arbitrary in its decision to allow the execution of the budget and to execute it respectively.

    (See a reference article in a Jeju media in Korean, here)

     

    The Navy’s shameless warning to dismantle people’s sit-in tent

    Navy notice Dec 10
    As the date of Dec. 9, 2014, the navy sent the village mayor the 1st warning notice to dismantle people’s sit-in tent and other sit-in facilities by Dec. 16, in the name of the Jeju Civilian-Military Complex Port Building Committee.

     

    Otherwise, on Dec. 10, the Jeju naval base project committee sent a written warning to the village association that it would carry out an administrative vicarious execution which means it would dismantle people’s sit-in tent and village bus unless the village association is volunteering to remove it by Dec. 16. The warning even threatens villagers that they may be even enforced to pay all the execution fees.

    The notice was recently sent again to the village with the due date by Dec. 22. Barbarous however the navy’s plan is, a lawyer tells on the legal matter. According to the lawyer:

    ‘Even though there is an issue of violation of Constitution when a special group so called military directly carries out an administrative vicarious execution against general citizens, which oppresses their right to property and freedom, it has an authority on an administrative vicarious execution by the positive law, in cases the state or local self-governing organization is an enforcement administration of the applied construction.’

    The village association, confirming its will to fight against any outside oppression, declared that it would keep the sit-in tent and other sit-in facilities to the end. The Seogwipo City to which the village belongs to, has not cooperated to the navy in regards of dismantling villagers’sit-in tent, as the City is under the order of the Island government.

    The village denounced the navy saying that military residence building project denies the local residents’ right to self-governing decision and the existence basis of the village association. Not only that, it is an explicit extension of the Jeju naval base project, not to mention that it seriously threatens the villagers’ right to live. (see the collection of the articles on the navy letter and villagers’ protest statement in Korean here)

    The Jeju Pan-Island Committee for the Stop of military Base and for the Realization of Peace Island, which is composed of 31 parties, civic groups, and religious groups within the Jeju Island, denounced the navy in its Dec. 12 statement, saying that “it is exposed that the navy’s showy rhetoric by now such as ‘agreement by villagers,’ ‘conflict settlement,’ is merely a kind of a ‘false psychological war,’ which intends to mislead public opinion on the basis of military operation.’

    It is not clear yet when the navy would finally carry out its administrative vicarious execution, mobilizing its thugs and police.. Is the navy who has used sugar-coating words such as ‘co-existence of civilian-military’ and ‘civilian-military complex,’ willing to clash directly with the people? The time is approaching.

    And regardless of the navy’s shameless deeds, people keep their 24 hour sit-in in the tent. A peace activist writes:

    “Whatever, the politics, administration, and media do, there may not be much we can do. We have only our bodies and hearts. Nothing to be changed. We continue to sleep in the tent, clean it, perform traditional music, watch movies inside it, pack tangerines for fundraising, file fire woods, make fires in furnace, and stop vehicles with our bodies… regardless the navy comes to dismantle our sit-in tents whenever…”

     

    1
    People lightens a whole night with fire in front of the military residence construction area on Dec. 18 (Photo by Kim Eun-Hye)

    (See here for more photos)

    To save the village and to realize a true Peace Island, people’s fight will never end.   A new year is approaching: The 10th anniversary of the Jeju designated as the “Peace Island’ by the Government.

     

    0
    Protest banners are hung inside and even neighborhood village . The banner reads, “Navy! you are the outside power that destroys our hometown, Gangjeong! – Anti-navy base committee of the Gangjeong village” Choi Yong-Beom, Co-vice mayor of the village and a peace activist (Photo by Park Yong-Sung)
    village banner 0
    A banner by the anti-naval base committee of the Gangjeong village, hung inside the village. The navy plans to station about 7,000 people in the Jeju naval base that is currently being built. You may remember that the whole population of the Gangjeong villagers is less than 2,000. The banner explains the urgency of the struggle to stop the navy’s current project to build 72 households of military residence outside of the base but inside the village. (A photo by  Choi Yong-Beom, Co-vice mayor of the Gangjeong village)

     

    A rough translation of the banner above:

     

    “Gangjeong villagers!

    Currently the navy is saying that it is driving only for 72 households for patrol boat crewmen. And it stated that it has already purchased 34 households of civilian apartment in the outside and it would additionally purchase 184 households of apartment next year to use those as military residence.

    Then, will the navy’s military residence construction plan end only with it?

    The navy has originally stated that the numbers of people who would station in the [currently being built] Jeju naval base would be 7,000.

    Only with that fact, you can roughly guess the size of military residence. It is estimated that the maximum numbers of people who would be accommodated [in the currently being built military residence] inside the base would be no more than 5,000, even with combining all the numbers of people in 987 households for the singles and married, and of enlisted men’s barracks. It is planned that the military residence outside of the base would be mainly used by the company and field grade and it is estimated that the required numbers of the households for those would be around 500 at the minimum to 2,000 at the maximum.

    The navy’s position is that once 72 households are constructed in the Gangjeong village, it would, consulting Gangjeong villagers, progress building of additional 359 households, beside the purchase of apartment, . Do you think that is indeed the end? There is possibility that more than 1,000 households of military residence would be continuously built in the Gangjeong village until the size of stationing people fulfills.

    In other words, the Gangjeong village would be totally a military village as a result of it. It will be very likely that the navy would secure the initiative of the village association then extend the naval base in earnest through driving for military facilities such as magazine powder keg/ heliports.

    Therefore, the navy’s current drive to build 72 households of military residence must be stopped. We should save the history of the 450 year old Gangjeong village.

    The anti-naval base committee of the Gangjeong village

    December 20, 2014

  • Tacoma priest in wheelchair travels to South Korea to protest naval base

     

    Re-blogged from here.   To see the related post, see here.

     

    By Steve Maynard, Nov. 28, 2014

     

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    The Rev. Bill Bichsel, center, is moved from his protest site by police during the Tacoma priest’s trip to South Korea earlier this month. COURTESY OF EUNMI PANG

    The Rev. Bill Bichsel, an 86-year-old Tacoma priest known for his acts of civil disobedience, has returned from a trip to South Korea to protest construction of a naval base there.

    Just three months ago, Bichsel was seriously ill and in the hospital in Tacoma. But his health — while still frail due to a heart condition — improved to the point he was able to make the trip using a wheelchair.

    He said his doctors didn’t try to stop him from traveling.

    “They just shake their heads,” Bichsel said. “They know I’m going so they don’t make a big fuss.”

    For nearly 40 years, the Jesuit priest known as “Bix” has protested against U.S. military programs and weapons. He’s been arrested dozens of times for trespassing during protests and jailed more than a half-dozen times.

    He wasn’t arrested in South Korea, but he realized the 12-day trip could set his health back.

    “I know I could go anytime,” Bichsel said.

    He was weak upon returning Nov. 20, but has gotten stronger since. And he was inspired by the trip.

    Bichsel and nine other people — nearly all from the Puget Sound area — traveled to Jeju Island to commit what he called “acts of civil resistance” against construction of a base by the South Korean Navy. The base has been under construction on the island off the southern tip of Korea for eight years.

    The efforts to stop it has been underway at Gangjeong Village since construction started, Bichsel said. The movement has united Catholics, Buddhists and those of no religious affiliation.

    “It’s the most inspiring, unified resistance that I’ve experienced,” he said.

    Bichsel said residents of the area believe the base will be used to service U.S. Navy ships. Some of those vessels could be armed with missiles as part of a defense system, he said.

    The base is a few hundred miles from China.

    The group joined other protesters — including Korean Catholic nuns and local villagers — to block cement trucks from entering the base.

    They sat in chairs in front of the gate. Bichsel sat in a wheelchair. While they blocked the entrance, a priest celebrated the Mass across the street about 50 yards away as part of the resistance.

    The protesters didn’t move until Korean police carried them away so the cement trucks could enter.

    Three police officers picked Bichsel up in his wheelchair four or five times a day and pulled him to the side, he said.

    He and the others would then go back and resume sitting in front of the gate.

    “It’s sort of like a choreography,” said Bichsel, who uses a wheelchair because he can’t walk long distances.

    The protesters, who numbered on average about 20, slowed the trucks but didn’t stop them from entering the base. No one was arrested, Bichsel said.

    He also protested at the Jeju Island base during another trip in September 2013.

    The priest said he’s demonstrating against the “continual militarization of South Korea, as well as our world, through the U.S. military.”

    Local residents “know eventually the base will be built, but that doesn’t stop the villagers from standing up against it,” he said.

    Bichsel, whose trip was financed by donations, said he was inspired by the commitment of Koreans who oppose the base.

    “We get from them just a tremendous sense of faithfulness, living out what you believe, trying to stop the militarization.”

    Bichsel has no immediate plans to return to South Korea. He’s planning his next act of civil disobedience much closer to home Jan. 17.

    That’s when he plans to take part in an annual protest against nuclear weapons at the Navy’s Bangor submarine base on Hood Canal.

    Steve Maynard: 253-597-8647 steve.maynard@thenewstribune.com @TNTstevemaynard


    Read more here: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2014/11/28/3513776_tacoma-priest-in-wheelchair-travels.html?sp=%2F99%2F296%2F&rh=1#storylink=cpy
    December 5, 2014

  • Gangjeong Village Story: Monthly Newsletter | November Issue

    In this November Edition:
    People demand to cut the full 2015 Jeju navy base budget, a shrine under threat of destruction, remembrance day for Yang Yong-Chan, visitors from the US Pacific Northwest, Okinawa trip reflection including recent Okinawa election, Henoko movie viewed in Gangjeong, Prof. Sasha’s presentation on the success of anti-base movements, women’s international solidarity, airborne arsenic dust damaging farming, a visit by a mother of a Sewol victim, two activists injured, trial updates and an introduction of the 12.13 Nanjing massacre event, and more!

    Download PDF

    December 3, 2014


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