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Category: military


  • After Eight Years of Protest of Construction of Naval Base, Gangjeong Villagers Sued by South Korean Navy

    Re-blogged from here

    On the 100 bows and dances mentioned in the main content of the article, click respectively here and here.

    By Ann Wright

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    The South Korean Navy filed a civil lawsuit against 116 individual anti-base protesters and five groups including the Gangjeong Village Association, demanding $3 million in compensation for alleged construction delays caused by protests over the past eight years.

    In one of the longest, strongest protests against more military bases in our world, the villagers of Gangjeong, Jeju Island, South Korea have achieved international recognition of their spiritual and corporal resistance and persistence in trying to preserve unique natural features of their community, the Gureombi Rocks.

    Samsung was the primary contractor for the $1 BILLION dollar project and who filed a lawsuit against the government for slow down of work caused by the protests. Samsung’s profit margin was impacted by the protests!

    Villagers are very angry about the lawsuit that, if upheld, would bankrupt everyone named. To show its displeasure to the Navy, the village moved its City Hall to a tent on the main road across from the entrance to the base. The Vice-Mayor holds city meetings in the tent and sleeps there!


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    (image by Photo Ann Wright)   DMCA

     

    Lawyers for the activists wrote that the navy’s lawsuit is “an unjustified declaration of war against the people. When the reckless development of the state and large construction companies threaten the right of citizens to a peaceful existence, the right of citizens to oppose this must be guaranteed as their natural and constitutional right since sovereignty rests with the people. To condemn this action as illegal is to delegitimize the foundation of democracy.”

    To buy off public support for the $1 BILLON dollar unnecessary naval base, the South Korean government built a huge sports complex for use by the local community. The facilities are located on the upper part of the area condemned for the naval base. The area has a track and field sports stadium, a 50-meter indoor swimming pool, indoor gymnasium, library, computer center, two restaurants, a 7/11 convenience store and a hotel on the top floor.

     

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    (image by Photo Ann Wright)DMCA

    Villagers commented that major sports facilities were built in the nearby city of Segiwopo and have been used by them for years. They say that these facilities will not make up for the loss of the cultural and spiritual areas dynamited and concreted forever.

    That’s why the protests continue at Gangjeong Village!

    100 Bows Morning Vigil

    Every morning for the past eight years, at 7am, rain, snow or good weather, Gangjeong Village activists reflect through 100 bows to the universe on their lives of activism for a peaceful world while confronting the war machine at one of its gates.

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    (image by Photo Ann Wright)DMCA

    The thoughts represented in 100 Bows span all religions and spiritual traditions. A few of the thoughts include:

    1. While holding in my heart that truth gives freedom to life I make my first bow.

    7. As I hold in my heart that possessions create other possessions and wars only give birth to other wars and cannot solve problems, I make my seventh bow.

    12. As I hold in my heart that the way to life-peace is to accept the world’s pain as my own pain I make my twelfth bow.

    55. As I resolve to let go of chauvinistic nationalism which makes other countries insecure, I make my fifty-fifth bow.

    56. As I resolve to let go of the superiority of my religion which makes other faiths insecure, I make my fifty-sixth bow.

    72. As I resolve to respect all lives without any prejudice and bias, I make seventy-second bow.

    77. As I remember that the beginning of violence starts from my opinionated ideas and hatred towards others because of differences, I make my seventy-seventh bow.

    100. As I pray that the light that I kindle leads all sentient beings to live in peace and happiness, I make my one-hundredth bow.
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    (image by Photo Ann Wright)DMCA

    Human Chain Noon Vigil

    One day I was at Gangjeong Village this week we endured a cold wind and rain for the noon time “Human Chain” at the entrance of the Naval Base at Gangjeong Village. The winds were fierce — the southern coast is known for its very strong winds and one of the reasons why many were perplexed that the naval base was proposed for an area of the island where high winds and high seas are most frequent around the island.

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    (image by Photo Ann Wright)   DMCA

     

    Other days I’ve been here, the weather was nice for the singing and dancing in the roadway to remind the South Korean Navy that the opposition to the construction of the naval base has not ended, despite the construction being complete.

    The great spirit continues to challenge the navy base and militarism with the noon dance. For those who have visited Gangjeong, both events and the sounds remain with us — as we remember that each day dedicated activists in Gangjeong Village continue the struggle against militarism.

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    (image by Photo Ann Wright)   DMCA

     

    Navy Week on Jeju Island — Finding Part of Gureombi Rock

    While I was in Gangjeong Village, the South Korean Navy had “Navy Week on Jeju Island.” Navy weeks are designed as a public relations event to get favorable public opinion. Most activists would not have been allowed on the navy base even if they had wanted to go — which they did not want to do. I wanted to see where the massive amount of concrete poured into the area had gone — so I produced my passport and I and another recent arrival were passed onto the base. We saw Aegis missile destroyer ships, helicopters, landing craft and demonstrations of martial arts.

    But the most important thing we saw was what we think is the only remaining part of Gureombi Rock. Behind the first building on the left side of the main road past the entrance gate, is a small lake with one side of what appears to be a very small piece of the Gureombi Rock! The other side of the lake is composed of rock fill, but the northern side seems to be original rock.

    The coastline surrounding Gangjeong Village consisted of one contiguous volcanic rock called Gureombi which was a 1.2 kilometer-long rock formed by lava flowing into the sea and rocks rising from the seabed. The estuary informed in this area was Jeju Island’s only rocky wetland and acted as home to several endangered species and soft coral reefs.


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    (image by Photo Ann Wright)   DMCA

     

    In 1991, the Jeju Provincial government designated the coastline surrounding Gangjeong Village an Absolute Conservation Area (ACA). In 2002, the area where the naval base construction is currently ongoing was designated a UNESCO Biosphere Conservation Area. In December 2009, Jeju Island Governor Kim Tae-hwan nullified the ACA designation to proceed with the naval base construction. The Jeju Branch of the Korean Federation of Environmental Movements have criticized the Navy’s Environmental Impact Assessment noting that several endangered species are absent from the report.

    During its recent archeological excavation of the Gangjeong coastal area the Jeju Cultural Heritage Research Institute discovered artifacts dating back to 4-2 B.C.E. inside the naval base construction zone. According to the director of the Korean Cultural Heritage Policy Research Institute only 10-20% of the site was dug up during construction, violating the cultural properties protection law.

    At a talk that I gave two days later, many from the village discussed how to ensure that the tiny portion of Gureombi Rock remains intact and continues its cultural and spiritual ties to Gangjeong Village.

    I mentioned that in some military bases in the United States, there are plaques to remind us of those who lived there before the U.S. government took over their lands.

    And even in the family housing area on the naval base, there are two murals that represent the indigenous peoples.

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    (image by Photo Ann Wright)   DMCA

    We hope that some type of mural will be created on the naval base depicting the importance of Gureombi Rocks so that hopefully the remaining rocks will not be blown up or concreted over!

    Peace Farming

    How do anti-war, peace activists in Gangjeong village support themselves? Some work in the Peace Farm Cooperative! One rainy morning Joan of Ark took us to two peace cooperative farms. The first was in the protected, covered greenhouse where they grow corn and beans-I asked how big the greenhouse was and she said 800 pyeongs — apparently a word indicating how big a grave should be — the length of a person’s body. An interesting way of measuring!

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    (image by Photo Ann Wright)DMCA

    Then we went out of the village to their second farm in a …cemetery — or actually next to a cemetery where they grow corn and peanuts. The grass in the cemetery is allowed to grow over the gravestones and once a year a family may come to clear out the area around the gravestone. After 30 years, the family may have the ashes removed to another place.

    Currie, an activist from the US, mentioned that in the US, some people want to be buried in a natural area where grass and weeds are allowed to grow, not in a formal cemetery.

    Customers buy produce online from the Peace Cooperative!

    St. Francis Peace Center


    Ann11 (image by Photo Ann Wright)DMCA

    The St. Francis Peace Center in Gangjeong Village has a remarkable history. In the 1970s, Father Mun was jailed for his protests during the military dictatorship and 30 years later he was awarded compensation for wrongful arrest and years in jail. With the compensation money, he purchased land overlooking the pale where the naval base was to be constructed. The Bishop of Jeju Island decided to help build a peace center on the land — and now a wonderful place for those working for peace and social justice is in Gangjeong Village! It is a beautiful building with a 4th floor viewing area so the eyes of the peace house can alert the community to what the war machine is doing!
    Ann Wright is a 29 year US Army/Army Reserves veteran who retired as a Colonel and a former US diplomat who resigned in March, 2003 in opposition to the war on Iraq. She served in Nicaragua, Grenada, Somalia, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Sierra Leone, Micronesia and Mongolia. In December, 2001 she was on the small team that reopened the US Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan. She is the co-author of the book “Dissent: Voices of Conscience.” (www.voicesofconscience.com). She has written frequently on rape in the military.
    June 11, 2016

  • Gangjeong Village Story: Monthly Newsletter |May 2016 Issue

    May 2016_Final_Page 1In this May Edition:

    5.15 Okinawa Peace March an Inspiration for Gangjeong; Our daily mass a seed of peace; May 24 International Women’s Day for Peace And Disarmament; Andrew and Debbie visiting Gangjeong; Brando and Omi; One person protest; War vessels for drills and tours;  Update of the incident on military drill in April ; International Conscientious Objector Day; Trial updates; Remembering Gwangju; Jeju Forum; Fundraising concert in Seoul; A memorial site to be preserved;  Children’s Day; Fr. Mun Kyu-Hyun awarded in Gwangju; Samgeori faces crackdown; 2016 Grand March for Life and Peace ad; In remembrance of Shimabukuro Rina; and Gangjeong Friends ad.

     

    Download PDF

    June 8, 2016

  • Gangjeong Village Story: Monthly Newsletter |April 2016 Issue

    April 2016_Page 1In this April Edition:

    The first Gangjeong film festival ends with success; The Navy should drop the wrongful lawsuit; Global Days of Action on Military Spending; Jeju and Ukraine in a larger picture of US military operation; The Power of Film; Yonaguni Solidarity; Activities to remember 16 April;  Dolphin’ monitoring;  Protest to navy soldiers arriving in the village; trial update; Koh Gilchun’s art on April 3rd; There should be no air show and no war exercise; protest against the navy’s concerts; Gangjeong Peace Film School; Gangjeong Friends candle vigil; and more.

    Download PDF

    May 8, 2016

  • Navy cruising around Gangjeong Village with Weapons

    On April 28th (Korea-time), the Korean Navy was found cruising around Gangjeong Village in a truck stowing soldiers with their hands firmly affixed to their rifles.

    Passing by Gangjeong Elementary School, the drive shocked villagers and activists alike, who have adamantly requested for the Navy to stop treading the village grounds.

    Mayor Cho and others stopped the truck and demanded to know if the weapons were loaded, and if this was a strategy to create an atmosphere of fear in the village. Silence from the soldiers ensued. The officer kept repeating the line that he would retreat.

    This clear show of militarism comes at a very sensitive time vis-a-vis the lawsuit against the village measuring up to 3 million USD. To some activists, this drive represents an act of taking over the village through violence and force, just like the lawsuit is intended to do.

    Please check out Gangjeong People on Facebook to see the entire coverage of this affair.

    See also here.

     

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    April 30, 2016

  • Gangjeong Villagers billed 3 MILLION USD by the Korean Navy

    On 29th of March, the Korean Navy revealed that on the day before, it filed a complaint to Seoul Central District Court regarding the delay of the Jeju Naval Base construction, and demanded recompense.

    This order was given to Gangjeong Village Association, 5 related organizations, and 120 individual personnel, all implicated in interrupting the base’s construction.

    As a result, the date of infrastructural completion was delayed by 1 year and 2 months, while racking up an additional 23 million USD for the construction’s fee.

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    The Navy demanded the Gangjeong Villagers to take about 3 million dollars out of that 2 billion as their own burden. This order was based on the hefty loss of public tax revenue used to build the base as evidence. Using this logic, the Navy concluded the command as morally just and legally sound, and placed the activists with the legal blame that came with the supposed financial responsibility.

    This obviously has stirred massive indignation among the villagers and ignited another conflict with state actors. Why using public revenue to fund the base’s construction in the first place is not a point of legal and moral concern or how demanding about 3 million USD to peace activists, mandarin farmers and fishermen is anything but rational and just are among the thousands of actual questions that are not raised.

    But for now, how to address this massive financial burden is the primary question on everyone’s mind, and it’ll need another consolidated spirit to overcome one of the biggest obstacles yet that has descended upon the village.

     

     

    March 30, 2016

  • Navy conducts anti-North exercise near new Jeju base (Yonhap news)

     

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    SEOUL, March 2 (Yonhap) — The Navy conducted its first military exercise near its new base on the southern island of Jeju on Wednesday to improve readiness to intercept suspicious vessels and submarine infiltration by North Korea.

    The Aegis destroyer Seoae Ryu Seong-ryong and three other Navy and Coast Guard vessels joined the drill which took place in the waters off the newly opened naval base on the south coast of Jeju Island, the Navy said in a statement.

    One submarine and two seaborne helicopters also took part in the exercise held earlier in the day.

    The military assets were deployed to intercept an enemy vessel in the scenario-based exercise where the Navy was ordered to stop and search a North Korean ship passing through the area with a load of weapons of mass destruction.

    The naval forces also demonstrated an operation to intercept the infiltration of a North Korean submarine, according to the Navy.

    “Through the latest exercise which the Navy conducted on the occasion of the Jeju private-military port’s completion, the Navy reaffirmed its determination to safeguard South Korea’s maritime life line,” the Navy said in the statement.

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    The construction of the naval base on Jeju makes it possible for the Navy to deploy military forces more promptly and provided a strategic sea stronghold to protect the main maritime traffic route towards the south.

    After 23 years of preparations and having spent more than 1 trillion won (US$810 million), the Navy opened the seaport base last week on the southern coast of Jeju.

    The new base is capable of docking 20 combat vessels and two cruise ships simultaneously.

    Navy officials have said the new facility will dramatically shorten maritime forces’ travel time to strategically important maritime hotspots.

    pbr@yna.co.kr

    (http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/news/2016/03/02/0200000000AEN20160302004200315.html?utm_content=bufferdfed9&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer)

    photos by Mpark.

    March 3, 2016

  • Putting North Korea and Gangjeong together in geopolitics

    By now, many of you must have heard about the recent headlines about North Korea. Its 4th hydrogen bomb test that has been proven successful by its own internal media has disconcerted the international community. South Korean government shown the most alarm (at least the gesture of it), and proceeded to create an assembly happening today with representatives from Japan and the U.S. arriving at Seoul to discuss directives toward the nuclear matter (what’s called 6자회담 or 6 Party Talks). They will take this discussion as a foundation to approach Russia and China for further diplomatic negotiations.

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    The anxiety and gravity of the situation that has triggered a frenzy of media reports and diplomatic talks seem surprising in light of a another crucial fact that has been conspicuously ignored by mainstream media pundits and diplomats in Korea. This is the overwhelming scientific reports that challenge the recent information about the North Korean hydrogen bomb test. International media, ever since the news about the bomb surfaced, has downplayed the situation. Whether it’s VICE, TestTube, ScienceMag, Reuters, etc., reporters have been issuing statements of skepticism. The 5.1 magnitude earthquake along with the detonation yield of 6-9 kilotons (CNTBTO calculation method) have suggested that yes, the experiment probably involved the nuclear, it probably was a failure or involved traditional fission-based weapon rather than a modern thermo-nuclear device.

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    In other words, international community, if you exclude governments, does not seem too worried, focusing on assuaging the intensity of the North Korean reports. On the other hand, Korean media has been treading on the opposite by inflaming the issue, and left-leaning news agencies like 한겨레 and 연합 hasn’t done much to combat the intensification and fear-mongering.

    The reason is obvious; generating fear in the public through mechanisms utilized by those above is profitable for fomenting nationalism, militarism, and strategic alliance among U.S., S. Korea and Japan. Already, U.S. has exploited the situation by investigating the possibility of sending an aircraft carrier earlier for military exercises to “send a warning message to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un” (Yonhap). Although the joint U.S.-ROK military exercises like the Command Post Exercise (CPX) and Field Training Exercise (FTX) were slated for March, recent nuclear transpirations have ushered the U.S. officials to ruminate on holding the exercises next month.

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    The irony of the situation is that the carrier that will arrive to South Korea is the Ronald Reagan (currently anchored in Yokosuka, Japan), a nuclear-powered warship, so the western concern about North Korean nuclear projects is met with a certain hypocrisy.

    There are more realistic concern for the people of Gangjeong, however. Although it seems impossible for the gigantic carrier warship to be docked at Gangjeong Naval Base, events like these will slowly enable the other U.S. naval forces to come down to Jeju Island. The U.S. needs a reason to send its forces to Jeju, and North Korea provides the perfect rhetoric and excuse.

    How to slow down this future is always the same: to call out the excuse and present evidences that challenge the mainstream narrative in order to avoid and prevent overreaction of the media and the government that try to create fear among the public for obvious reasons.

     

     

     

     

    January 13, 2016

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