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Category: Reports


  • Destruction of Sea threatening soft coral habitats

    It was already reported on April 9 that:

    “‘It appeared that the sea area of the Beomseom (Tiger Island) designated as the government natural memorial is largely being threatened as big amount of mud water  was leaked from the Jeju naval base construction site into the sea, for the strong rain and wind last weekend.

    The Jeju branch of the Korean Federation for Environment Movement stated on April 8, confirm‍ing the fact that the damage of mud water  reached even to the sea areas of the Beomseom and Seogun Island where soft corals inhibit in group.  It would affect their ecology environment not a little. [..]” (See here)

    Despite that, the navy has been enforcing construction therefore the Jeju Pan-Island Committee for the Stop of Military Base and for the Realization of Peace Island (Pan-Island committee afterward) made a press conference in the morning of April 12 and demanded stop of naval base construction(destruction) and joint investigation on the affect on the ecology system, as well.

    The committee reminded that “The Gangjeong sea, the construction sea area, is a habitat of soft coral designated as natural memorial by the Cultural Heritage Administration of Korea. The focal content of its approval condition on navy base construction is on the   installation of silt protectors and thorough operation/management of those for the protection of soft coral habitats.”

    “However, not to mention great damage of silt-protectors by recent winds and sea waves, it was confirmed that the  status of management and installation of those are quite poor to the degree that those have been of no proper function already from the past.”

    he1
    Original photo by the Jeju Pan-Island committee/ The canvases of  silt-protectors are torn by pieces , functioning nothing for the protection of soft coral habitats(source)
    he2
    Photo by the Jeju Pan-Island committee/ Even the gaps between those torn canvases are great. The canvases have no function to prevent dirty water flowing into the soft coral habitats. (Source)
    he3
    The Pan Island committee’s press conference in the Island People’s Room of the Jeju Provincial Council on April 12. The banner reads, “The Jeju Island government should promptly demand stop on the navy’s illegal construction!
    Immediately carry out joint investigation on the ecology affect following illegal construction(destruction)!” (source)
    he4
    The Jeju Pan-Island committee’s press conference on April 12 (source)

     

    Even though it is righteous that there should be protection layers installed to prevent sea weeds onto canvases and should be works to remove those there, various sea weeds have already been propagating on the canvases.

    The ropes that have been installed to the bottom of sea water to prevent the move of the canvases were already cut in tremendous amount. No obligatory item on the repair of silt protectors has been kept, not to mention formal floating buoys of silt protectors only on sea surface. (decoration?)

    The committee criticized both the CHAK and navy and demanded the Island government to take prompt measures on those problems.

    “While it is already problematic that the CHAK approved navy construction only on the condition of installing silt-protectors as a way to protect soft coral habitats where tens of law-protection species inhibit, the navy’s behavior to carry out the condition only with formality is dumbfounding.”

    The committee also raised issue on ‘extreme exclusiveness’ of the naval base construction area that is in fact, ‘extraterritoriality zone.”

    The navy has intentionally delayed or refused visits even by the government officers who were to confirm the violations of laws inside the construction area.

    The committee, criticizing the Island government’s clear dereliction of its duty, demanded it to make a prompt order on the stop of navy’s illegal construction (destruction) and to take strong administrative measures on it.

    The committee also emphasized that there should be a joint investigation on the affect on the ecology system and independent post-EIA (Environmental Impact Assessment), joined by Gangjeong villagers and environment groups. It also claimed that there should be joint examination on the items of performance on the approval conditions within the naval base construction area.

    It should be noted that people have been demanding such things numerous times, pointing out the problems of illegal construction on the sea (for example, see here). The navy has always ignored people’s demands while the Island government has been irresponsible to take clear and strong measures on the navy.

    The Jeju Island government was told to have requested the navy to pose construction until the completion of restoration on the silt-protectors but the construction(destruction) noise in the construction area in the night was louder than ever on the very day (April 12) of its request to the navy.

    Thur_2
    Photo and caption by Park Inchun on April 11/ ‘Like  yesterday, the truck even without a back plate pours rocks unwashed and leaves remaining dusts behind. Cement lumps of heavy metals and chemicals from the Hwasoon port, too… ‘ See more photos by Park Inchun from the Moetppuri, here
    construction
    Photo and caption by Park Inchun on April 13/ ‘Even though the Island government made an agreement with the naval base project committee on April 12 that the committee would pose the maritime construction until the repair of silt protectors and investigation on it on Monday, April 15, construction(destruction) has been going on the night of April 12 and next morning of April 13.’ For more photos, see here.
    water 1
    Photo and caption by Park Inchun on April 13/ ‘In the areas of Gangjeong and Ackeun streams, sands are gone and the areas are full of rubbles flown from the construction site. It is told that sweet fishes, hairtails, squids can lay eggs where sands are many.. The navy is fitting water depth to the request by the United States[..]’ For more photos, see here.
    April 14 caisson
    Photo and caption by Park Inchun on April 14/ ‘These are the conditions of caissons seen from the Moetppuri. The caissons are going astray and having differences between  themselves. Despite repair on the broken parts, another cracks are occurring beside those..proofs of unreliable construction.. It has been only for short time since the repair.’ (source)
    excavator
    Photo and caption by Cho Sung-Bong/ a tough excavator that breaks rocks underwater. For more photos, see here.
    caissons
    Photo and caption by Cho Sung-Bong on April 14/ The Hankook Ilbo, April 8, 2013, reports..  ‘The work rate in the 1st and 2nd work area in the harbor and bay construction has been 39.3 % and 29.9% respectively [* according to the navy that usually exaggerates]. The construction on land could not even start. The military is concerning about,  if the current condition that even construction vehicles cannot properly pass by without the presence of police, the construction on breakwater could be delayed and imminent preparation for typhoon this summer could be difficult.” For more photos, see here.
    fence
    Photo by Cho Sung-Bong. Source 
    Cho Moet weather vanes
    Photo by Cho Sung-Bong/ Weather vanes put by an activist on the way to the Moetppuri. Source

    April 15, 2013

  • “Where there is oppression, there is uprising!”: Another activist to be imprisoned

     

    1. Mr. Kim Young-Jae, a peace activist was illegally arrested and got the arrest warrant.

    Y1
    Photo by Park Yong-Sung/ Mr. Kim Young-Jae was arrested on April 12, 2013.

    On April 12, Mr. Kim Young-Jae, a dedicated Gangjeong peace activist and a member of the SPARK (Solidarity for Peace And Reunification of Korea) was arrested. He was standing in front of a truck around 1 pm in protest to illegal environment-destroying construction (destruction). His arrest marked the 2nd arrest this year, following the  April 8 arrest of Mr. Bae Gi-Chul, representative of the Jeju Pan-Island Committee for the Stop of Military Base and for the Realization of Peace Island (Pan-Island committee afterward). Mr. Bae was released next night.

    On April 14, the prosecutors filed for an arrest warrant against Mr. Kim Young-Jae and the Jeju court issued it against him around 2 pm.  With prof. Yang Yoon-Mo who hits his 74th prison day as of April 14, 2013, Mr. Kim became another current prisoner.  The total numbers of  imprisonment became 24.

    Mr. Park Young-Sung, a fellow activist, has reported on April 12 that the arrest on Mr. Kim Young-Jae was illegal and unreasonable. He reasoned that:

    1. Even though Mr. Kim  left the site after the police’s 2nd request for leaving, the police obstinately and illegally arrested him

    2. Even though another activist with a sign stayed longer than Mr. Kim, sitting on chair in front of the truck, the police arrested only Mr. Kim.

    Y2
    Photo by Park Yong-Sung on April 12/ Mr. Kim Young-Jae holds a sign

    It should be mentioned that Mr. Kim Young-Jae has been remarkably dedicated activist responsible for coordinating activists in Gangjeong, as well as being a member of the SPARK that has been targeted by the government for years. He was also one of the five who climbed up to a caisson dock in Hwasoon in protest to naval base construction on the opening day of 2012 WCC (World Conservation Congress) Jeju, Sept. 6, 2012.

    YJ
    Photo source: Fr. Mun Jeong-Hyeon’s tweeter/ Mr. Kim Young-Jae being detained in the Dongbu Police station, Jeju City on April 14.

     

    2. “Where there is oppression, there is uprising!”

    Amid the people’ fury for the arrest of Mr. Kim, a big trailer advanced into a gate of the naval base project committee building complex 30 minutes later of his arrest on April 12. The trailer was ignorant and uncouth to load its heavy weight on a small road in front of gate. There were risks that protesting people might be injured or some of them could be arrested, too…

    In the afternoon, there were also Pan-Island committee activists who visited Gangjeong for protest after their press conference in the morning, which was on the environmental destruction for the naval base  construction (destruction). The police  forcefully encircled them with physical force, too. However, as the words that ‘where there is oppression, there is uprising, stated by people during 4·3 uprising are still remembered by many people, more people will rise up against bigger government oppression . The aspiration for peace would be greater.

    0
    On April 12, a big trailer advanced into a gate. For more photos, see here.
    3
    The Pan Island committee’s banner reads,  “The Jeju Island government should promptly demand stop on the navy’s illegal construction!
    Immediately carry out joint investigation on the ecology affect following illegal construction(destruction)!”
    4
    A Jeju activist stops a truck, April 12, 2013
    5
    Police forcefully encircling protesting activists on April 12, 2013
    Cho
    Photo and caption by Cho Sung-Bong (site) / The sign reads… “Police, there can be no difference between you and [the oppression force during the 4·3! At the time of 4·3, people’s public sentiments exploded! Ignoring the public opinion that cause should be healed, U.S. captain Brown (* Commander of the US military of Jeju then) killed more than 30,000 Island people, led by military and police, saying, “ I am not interested in the cause of the uprising. My mission is to crack down only.”
    Brown
    The content is clearly exhibited in the Peace Memorial Hall of the Jeju April 3 Peace Park.

     

     Trucks and police were coming every 30 minutes…

    (video by Pang Eun-Mi on April 12)

    dance
    Photo and caption by Cho Sung-Bong/ “How can you endure this tough world without dance?,” she/he asked. You may dance if you love. For more photos by Cho Sung-Bong, see here.
    meal
    People who can’t leave the gate.. photo by Cho Sung-Bong. For more photos, see here.

    April 14, 2013

  • Villagers Vote ‘No’ to Military Residence Housing Project in Village

    1. Villagers vote ‘No’ to the military residence housing project in the village

    Voting
    Photo by Cho Sung-Bong.  Villagers vote. For more photos, click, here.

     

    In the villagers’ general meeting that was held from 8 to 10 pm, April 10, the villagers made a decision on the two: 1. To have the Life and Peace Pilgrim throughout the Island during this summer (concrete time and details will be talked later), 2. Not to invite  military residential house in the village.

    Regarding the 2,  the matter of ‘yes’ or ‘no’ on the invitation of the project was decided by vote. The voting result was 114 people for ‘no,’ 3 people for ‘yes’, 1 abstention, of total 118 seated electorates. The total number of the present people in the meeting was 145. The villagers have already fiercely dissipated the navy’s presentation on the navy’s military housing project within the village three times. Those were May 29, June 15, 2012 and March 26, 2013.

    At the time of 3rd presentation when Yoon Seok-Han, navy captain and director of the construction management said that he would drive for another hearing by sending the village an official letter that the villagers claimed that it was not mailed, Kang Dong-Kyun, mayor of the Gangjeong Village Association said that the village would decide the matter on the drive for presentation through the village’s temporal general meeting.”

    The Gangjeong Village Association said on April 11, after the vote result: “The vote is based on the village regulation that the numbers of the seated have to be more than two third and the resolution has to be approved by more than half. Therefore the vote this time is effective.” The village also stated that, “The general meeting on the day was a temporal general meeting with the prior process of 7 days’ public notification term, constant announcement broadcasting that encourages villagers’ participation, mailing of the correspondence that explains the agenda content. We declare that it is an official result that represents the villagers’ collective opinions.”

    notice
    Image source: Jeju Sori, April 11, 2013/ The Village Association’s  prior notice on the vote and village map. Among six candidate areas, the navy has decided B area as the final candidate.

    The village emphasized that “we strictly warn the navy that there should not be its words and actions that it is to drive for the building of  military housing in the Gangjeong village saying that Gangjeong villagers hope installation of it.  The navy should be responsible for all the conflicts and social ripples following such.”

    Counting
    Photo by Cho Sung-Bong/ Villagers count ballots.

     

    Regarding the atmosphere of the voting date, dir. Cho Sung-Bong delivers one villager’ remark in the general meeting on April 10: ‘A villager stood up and talk to the others,

    “Since the blast of the Gureombi Rock, not to mention dust, mixed muddy water and oil are floating on the underground water. There has been no such things by now. [..]

    Even though I have reported it to the Water Resource headquarter, its officer dropping by here, left only words that there is no problem for farming. I appeal you to decide your vote after thoughtful consideration.”

    The navy was told that it would build the military residence in the new town of the Seogwipo city if the Gangjeong villagers do not agree on the project.  It is questionable what the navy and Island government would make their next decision after the result of the villagers’ vote. It was a general meeting with the atmosphere of heavy silence and tension.’

    woman 1
    Photo by Cho Sung-Bong. An Old woman villager in the meeting.
    woman2
    Photo by Cho Sung-Bong/ Young activists in the village are watching the villagers’ vote

     

    April 10_ Opening speech by mayor Kang Dong-Kyun (Video by Pang Eun-Mi)

    April 10_Villagers vote on the matter of yes or no on the invitation of military residence housing project

    (Video by Pang Eun-Mi)

    April 10_Villagers count ballots (video by Pang Eun-Mi)

    April 10_Mayor Kang reports the result of vote and people cheer (Video by Pang Eun-Mi)

     

    2. On April 10, the Jeju court(Judge: Kim Kyung-Sun) sentenced mayor Kang Dong-Kyun with 300,000 won fines for the charge of installing structure two years ago in the coast of the village where the naval base building is enforced

    The judge applied to him with the charge of violation on Public Waters Act(the law on the reclamation and landfill on the public water and its vicinity surface).   Mayor Kang was charged that he had installed artificial structure of wooden cross with an artifact of ‘red-feet crab,’ on the coast within the naval base construction area without permission of jurisdiction office in April 2011.

    The structure had been set up to protest to the destruction of the habitats of the red feet crabs during the time when opposition struggles were being done centered around the Joongdeok coast (of which most part we call as the Gureombi Rock).

    Judge Kim reasoned her court decision saying that she “referred to the fact that the area of wooden cross is narrow and it is not installed any more.” However, mayor Kang expressed his will for appeal saying that, “at the time, the [navy and companies] were  destroying rock floor without permission to work on the public water and its vicinity surface. Further the so called witness cannot even say exactly where it was. I am no guilty.” (Source)

     

    3. New chief of the Jeju Prosecutors’ Office

    Lee Myung-Jae(53), new chief of the Jeju Prosecutors’ Office who was inaugurated on April 10 expressed his tough position on the opposition struggle against the Jeju naval base project, emphasizing so called ‘law and principal.’   He was born in Choonchungnamdo province  and has worked in Choonchun, Incheon, Seoul, Chungjoo.   The people have strongly denounced on the abuse of the prosecutors’ power on March 21.

    new chief
    Lee Myung-Jae(53), new chief of the Jeju Prosecutor’s Office (source)

     

    April 13, 2013

  • Update on Yang Yoon-Mo on his 68th prison day and international solidarity messages


    Yang Yoon-Mo hit his 68th prison day as of April 8, Monday. On April 10, he would hit his 70th prison day.

    On a sunny Monday, the way to the meeting room of the Jeju prison was filled with green trees and magnolia.

    Yang Yoon-Mo was still in patient cloth. Though still thin, he looked bright. His hairs were cut in tidy fashion.  The international team member could not tell him that there clash began in front of the construction sites from the early morning of the day because she worried about his heath that is still in recovering process.

    Web_tree
    A tree seen on the way to the meeting room of the Jeju Prison

    Instead she delivered him some international solidarity messages sent to him after the end of his 52 days’ fast as of March 24 and asked his reply to the people who sent those.

    For all the international solidarity messages mainly sent on March 31, please see the bottom. Here is his reply:

     

    “Thanks to the international team, the news on me has been informed. It is my honor to be  one with the peace activists in the world.

    I will not do anything more to bother my body. I think it should be my return for the friendship and support of those.

    I will do all my efforts to renew my daily change always. It is the will to be along with all the living creatures, not regarding body merely as an individual matter.

    I thank all the friends in the world, especially to Bruce Gagnon, who helped me to realize that.”

     

    The below is his reply on the question of his health, such as dyslexia:

    ‘ I will eat rice gruel by the end of this month so it will be thankful if people could send me enzyme by the end of this month. I need two bottles of enzyme a week. Since my power of concentration has become very weak, I can hardly read letters yet. I am planning to apply for a meeting with psychologist in the prison.

    Currently five people including me are in a same sick room. Since the other people in a room prefer to watch the TV, It is hard for me to mentally concentrate. There is no clash with them but I suffer in my head as I try to overcome my inner conflict.

    My only way is to hold mass alone at 11 am,  same time with Catholic mass that is held in the village and focus on it. It feels like I have given stress to my physical body for last two months’ fast.

    Since relaxation is needed to release stress, I am trying not to push compulsion in my body. I have experienced chill three times since the end of my fast because of lowered immunity. I felt my body was shivering like an aspen. Since my body has become very sensitive even to cold wind, I restrain myself even from outdoor exercise (which is allowed for 15 to 20 minutes a day for every prisoner) I make efforts not to make my body to be excessive.”

     

    Yang was happy to hear the news that the 4·3 movie ‘Jiseul,’ has already attracted more than 70,000 audience throughout the nation, which is quite a remarkable record for an independent movie. He has originally dreamed at least 30,000 audience for the movie. He was also glad to hear that the 4·3 –remembering events were very meaningful this year because of the outcomes of two 4·3 movies(Jiseul and Binyom) and a book named, ‘You, Dear Gangjeong.’ Reports on the 4·3 events will come as soon as possible.

     ……………………………………………….

     

    International Solidarity message to Yang Yoon-Mo and Park Sung-Soo (Dungree)

    Here are the International solidarity messages mostly sent and collected on March 31. See the Korean translation, here. The village international team had asked the friends in the world to send the messages to the two people of Yang Yoon-Mo and Mr. Park Sung-Soo (Dungree) before it. Mr. Park Sung-Soo who has refused to pay unjust fines and to be volunteering to be jailed was suddenly released on April 1 as an anonymouse people paid for his fines without his knowledge and will.

     

    Bruce Gagnon, US

     

    Dear Yang Yoon-Mo,

    I was happy to learn you ended your courageous hunger strike against the Navy base.  It was a good decision to live and fight another day.

    Your efforts over the past couple of years have been deeply inside my heart and remain there.

    Each day you and others spend in jail is another day I look to do something, anything to help Save Gangjeong village and the nature that surrounds it.

    I often watch the video Island of Stone (* movie in 2011, see the below), which always brings tears to my eyes, to hear your profound analysis and sacred love for nature. I send you my best wishes for strong healing and hope your abdominal muscles are now working overtime.

    For peace with justice,

    ISLAND OF STONE from Island of Stone on Vimeo.

     

    Park Sung-Soo,

    I write to thank you so much for your excellent photos and videos which have helped me from so far away stay close to the resistance against the Navy base.

    I was sad to hear of your jail sentence but also felt proud of you for refusing to pay the illegal and immoral fines.

    Please know that your good efforts for real peace and justice are deeply appreciated by many of us. I send you my best wishes and look forward to your visual art works very soon.

    In peace,

     

    Bruce K. Gagnon

    Coordinator

    Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space

    PO Box 652 Brunswick, ME 04011

    (207) 443-9502

    globalnet@mindspring.com

    www.space4peace.org

    http://space4peace.blogspot.com/  (blog)

     

    *# Thank God men cannot fly, and lay waste the sky as well as the earth.  ~Henry David Thoreau

     

    Lindis Percy and Laila Packer, UK

     

    Dear friends Yang Yoon-Mo and Park Sung-Soo (Dungree)

     

    We are thinking of you so much and send you greetings, solidarity and love.

    We hope that the health and strength of Yang Yoon-Mo is recovering and that soon your body will be restored.

    Your mind has always been amazingly strong!  You are both very brave and courageous and inspiring people.

    We hope that the prison authorities are treating you well and with the respect you deserve.

    In peace and love

     

    Lindis Percy and Laila Packer

    Joint Coordinators

    CAMPAIGN FOR THE ACCOUNTABILITY OF AMERICAN BASES – CAAB UK

    www.caab.org.uk

     

    John Goss

     

    I am so sorry to learn of your imprisonment for taking a stand in protection of Jeju Island. Your efforts to stop the advance of US military occupation is inspirational. I pray for your release.

     

    Agneta Norberg, Swedish Peace Council

     

    I am so sorry to learn  of your imprisonment for taking a stand in protection of Jeju Island. Your efforts to stop the advance of US military occupation is inspirational.

    I pray for your release. We in Swedish Peace Council,Sweden, want to express our SOLIDARITY and support for Yang Yoon-Mo and Park Sung-Soo in their just and fair struggle against the US marine base in Gangjeong village.

    We also  want to express our disgust against the jailing of these two honest persons! We condemn SAMSUNGS COOPERATION IN US WARPREPARATIONS in SouthKorea.

    We say: Stay firm! We are with you in our thoughts!

    Agneta Norberg, Swedish Peace Council

     

    Carole from Luxemburg

     

    Dear Yang Yoon-Mo and Park Sung-Soo,

    From far away Luxemburg I am following your plight, courage and fight against injustices!

    I have great respect for what you do! With more people with your courage this would be a better and juster world!

    I can not do much here in Luxemburg to help, but talk about the fight in Gangjeong to everyone I meet.

    You are an inspiration!

     

    Carole from Luxemburg

    April 9, 2013

  • Company workers enforce illegal construction, blocking the gates

    Update: The arrested was released in the night of April 9. See the below.

    trucks
    Photo sent by Fr. Kolbe Jung on April 9, 2013
    Above: company workers blocking the main gate from people
    Bottom: Fr. Mun Jeong-Hyeon, mayor Kang  Dong-Kyun and people blocking the trucks. For more photos, see here.
    Yange_Gone
    Photo by Yange Gone on on April 8/ People blocking construction trucks.

     Gangjeong has been in emergency from the early morning of April 8.

    While company workers block the gates, police are intentionally silent on it. People are desperately keeping the gate. Company workers’ violence to people is very high possibilities. One young man was hit in eye glass and needed medical investigation in face on April 8. One person was arrested on the same day.

    It was from the early morning of April 8, Monday, that such change in situation happened in front of the naval base construction sites in the village. During the conflicts between the people and construction company workers, Mr. Bae Gi-Chul, co-representative of the Jeju Pan Island Committee for the Stop of Military Base and for the Realization of Peace Island was arrested while he was sitting in front of a truck. He was the first arrested this year. (See the video underneath. Update: He was released in the night of April 9)

    Village siren rang on April 9 following April 8.

    The Jeju Pan Island Committee for the Stop of Military Base and for the Realization of Peace Island stated in April 9. See the Original Korean statement, here:

    ‘The navy has enforced construction in violation of the project approval conditions, such as dumping sands and stones on the sea even before the silt-protectors that have been damaged by strong rain and wind last weekend are restored. Further, large amount of earth and sands have been leaked into the sea due to the rainy weather last weekend, resulting in mud water,  while the people’s criticism on the navy’s illegal construction has been bigger.

    Moreover, the Jeju Island government, confirming the fact on the damage of the silt-protectors,  has noticed the navy to pose maritime construction until the completion of repair on them.  Despite that, the navy, enforcing construction(destruction), is oppressing the villagers and activists protesting to it, rather with mobilization of company thugs. And the police are abusing their state power, demanding people of ‘unconditional scattering,’ with neither understanding nor judgement on the people’s reason of protest.’

    For more photos of protests, see  here.

    Illegal construction, destroying the UNESCO-designated soft coral habitats

    As mentioned, illegal construction enforced with broken silt-protectors and dumped unwashed sands & stones on the sea was continued.

    A Jeju media, Headline Jeju on April 8 reads:

    ‘It appeared that the sea area of the Beomseom (Tiger Island) designated as the government natural memorial is largely being threatened as big amount of mud water  was leaked from the Jeju naval base construction site into the sea, for the strong rain and wind last weekend.

    The Jeju branch of the Korean Federation for Environment Movement stated on April 8, confirming the fact that the damage of mud water  reached even to the sea areas of the Beomseom and Seogun Island where soft corals inhibit in group.  It would affect their ecology environment not a little. [..]

    The organization stated that “Even though there was weather cast days before, the navy has had no prevention measures on it. [..]’

     

    sea1
    Photo by KFEM/ Headline Jeju, April 8, 2013: Sea water became muddy after the bad weather last weekend. Before and after.
    sea2
    Photo by KFEM/ Headline Jeju, April 8, 2013: Further, the broken silt protectors damaged even in their canvases function nothing, not to mention the sea water that has become muddy.
    Metburi
    Photo by Park Inchun (Metboori Park)
    met2
    Photo by Park Inchun
    human beings only
    Come only Human beings.. photo by Park Inchun

     

     

    Mr. Bae Gi-Chul, just before the arrest on April 8. The 100 peace bow music had been being played. The police threatening him to arrest under the charge of obstruction of business, finally arrest him.  video by Kim Bok-Chul.

    Don’t cry.. video by Kim Bok Chul on April 8.

    Company worker (security) violence to people during the catholic mass from 11 am to 12:20 pm. Video by Kim Bok-Chul on April 8

    People in front of 25 ton dump truck  on April 9.  Some people praying in front of it. Video by Kim Bok-Chul

    Fr. Mun’s teared rosary prayer in front of cement mixer truck on April 9 (Video by Pang Eun-Mi)

     

    April 9 protest (video by Peace Nomad)

     

    Words from Felice Cohen-Joppa, US

     

    ‘Take care, friends – thinking of you all… Your courage and persistence in the face of violence, in the struggle for peace, is an inspiration that echoes around the world. Last night Jack and I went to see Arlo Guthrie in concert – celebrating the 100th anniversary of the birth of his late father Woody Guthrie. He invited us to sing the last song with him, loud enough so that it would reach people around the world engaged in struggle.

     

    My Peace

     

    Words by Woody Guthrie,

    Music by Arlo Guthrie

     

    My peace, my peace is all I’ve got that I can give to you

    My peace is all I ever had that’s all I ever knew

    I give my peace to green and black and red and white and blue

     

     

    My peace my peace is all I’ve got that I can give to you

     

    My peace, my peace is all I’ve got and all I’ve ever known

    My peace is worth a thousand times more than anything I own

    I pass my peace around and about ‘cross hands of every hue;

    I guess my peace is justa ‘bout all I’ve got to give to you’

    April 9, 2013

  • A formal US Air force bombing range transformed into a Peace Ecological Park

    ¸ÅÇ⸮ ½Ä¸ñÀÏ Çà»ç
    Photo by Kang Jae-Hoon, Hankyoreh, March 31, 2013)


    Dreaming of Peace Ecological Park. . .Plum tree planting ceremony being held on March 30 at Maehyang-Ri, Hwasong, Gyonggi province, formal US Air force bombing range. . . Residents have stacked the shells of the bombs in front of the residents’ committee office that were collected in the sea and the residential area. . .Hwasong city decided to create eco peace park in this tragic land and planted about 5,000 plum trees wishing the village be filled with the scent of plum tree as the name of the village Maehyang means. . . It is located in the western coast of Korean peninsula, about one and half hours ride south from Seoul. . ..Residents have suffered extremely from numerous damages more than 54 years from Maehang-ri US bombing and shooting range(Kooni Range) until it was closed in 2005. . .Little media coverage. . .However, in 2000 and 2001, there was a nationwide protest to shut down this range . .This photo titled ‘This Moment’ is special edition of full page photo of Hangyoreh newspaper this morning on April 1.

    (See Hankyoreh, March 31, 2013)

    (Post by Regina Pyon)

    April 2, 2013

  • Update on the political prisoners as of March 31, 2013

    Breaking Update on April 2:  Mr. Park Sung-Soo (Dungree) was suddenly released as of April 1. He had strongly refused that people pay fine for him. But without his opinions consulted in advance, some anonymous person(s) paid his fines of 1,400,000 won on behalf of him on April 1 and he was released on the day. It was informed later that the unknown person(s) did it, reading media, from the kind heart to help him. Mr. Park Sung-Soo expressed both of his sorriness and thanks to the person(s).  Mr. Park Sung-Soo left for the main land and would stay there for a while as his family member is sick.

    Thanks so much to the friends who have sent solidarity messages for him. We would send all your solidarity messages sent to him by now through email to him.  From now on, please send support letters only to Yang Yoon-Mo who hits his 62nd prison day as of April 2, 2013. 

     

    …………………………………….

    See also Bruce Gagnon’s Organizing Notes, March 31, 2013

    Yang Yoon-Mo and Park Sung-Soo (Dungree) hit 60th day and 7th day each in the Jeju prison as of March 31, 2013.

     

    Yang Yoon-Mo (No. 301)

    161 Jeju Prison Ora-2 dong, Jeju City,

    Jeju, the Peace Island, Korea

    Photo by Cho Sung-Bong

     

    Park Sung-Soo (No. 738)

    161 Jeju Prison Ora-2 dong, Jeju City,

    Jeju, the Peace Island, Korea

    Photo by Lee Wooki

     

    You may use internet letter(See the bottom of the link) to send letters to them. But if you concern that your letters would not arrive fast (Mr. Park Sung-Soo will be released around April 21) or are uncomfortable for your personnel information to be exposed to the ROK government, you may send your letters through email to the gangjeongintl@gmail.com.

    The Village International team will collect and deliver your email letters to them with the information of your  name (or nick name), state, country (no specific address needed).

    Thanks.

    Free all the political prisoners! 

    Stop the oppression of tremendous fines! 

    Stop the construction!

     

    People holding signs in front of the naval base project building complex as of March 28, 2013.
    ‘Today is Yang Yoon-Mo’s 7th day prison struggle to revoke the Jeju naval base project. His 4th time imprisonment and 5[7]th day in jail,’ ‘Your wage is the price of our fines, tears and lives,’ ‘The naval base in Gangjeong is the US sub-contract base_No War!,’ ‘Dungree hits 4th day in prison struggle laboring instead paying 1,500,000 KRW fines.’ Signs in front of the Jeju naval base project committee building as of March 28, 2013.
    ‘The coast village people who have made living by fishing and tangerine farming appeal to you with tear that they don’t want to lose the village, that you should not kill all of those warm things. We cannot but ask what is such high horse ‘security’ that destroys a peaceful village community, that kills a sea where endangered species breath, and that is gotten by breaking the beautiful Gureombi Rock that human being cannot even dream only with their hand skills.
    _Yang Yoon-Mo’
    March 31, 2013

  • Workers connect 4•3 and Gangjeong

    audience
    Succession of the spirit of the Jeju 4•3 uprising! ‘Workers’ Peace Cultural festival,’ March 30, 2013.

    It has been more than a decade that the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions visited the Island for the remembrance of 4•3 every year. It was this year, too.  And it has been years that the organization visited the Gangjeong village to express their support and solidarity to the people there in opposition to the Jeju naval base construction. The workers are aware that Gangjeong is the very site of the 2nd 4•3.

    The KCTU states in its press release. You can see its longer Korean script, here:

    ‘The Jeju 4.3 uprising is the Jeju Island people’s resistance and uprising that occurred by the starting point of police firing incident on March 1, 1947 under the division and U.S. Army Military Government ruling after the liberation of Korea. Since the armed group of the Jeju branch of the Workers Party of South Korea rose up on April 3rd, 1948, numerous people were sacrificed in the Jeju Island during the process of armed conflicts between the armed group and subjugation army and of the latter’s subjugation process, until the restriction areas in the Halla Mt. were totally opened on Sept. 21, 1954.

    This year when the Cease Fire Agreement of the cold war and confrontation system hits 60th anniversary, and today when war crisis is  higher than ever in the Korean peninsula, along with the above, we are to gather the workers’ resolution to succeed the spirit of the Jeju 4•3 people’s uprising and to realize complete peace and homeland unification.

    No war! Starting from the Jeju Island, we are to fully fill 2013 with the outcry of the workers in every place of nation from the Halla Mt. to Baekdu Mt, based on our powerful will and resolution for peace and unification.’

    Stop the oppression on the unions!

    Abolish the structured lay-off on the irregular workers!

    Total revocation of the Jeju naval base project!

    Sisa
    Image source: Sisa Jeju, March 31/ In his solidarity speech, Mayor Kang Dong-Kyun stated that even though 65 years have passed since the occurrence of the Jeju 4•3, state violence is continuing and the Jeju naval base project, so called a national security policy, is being enforced without people’s support.

     

    The program was:

    Succeession of the spirit of the Jeju 4•3 uprising! Peace Pilgrim

    _ Date/ time:  10:30 am to 6 pm, March 30, Sat., 2013

    _Venue: Jeju areas (Pilgrim on the remains of the Jeju 4•3 uprising)

     

    Succession of the spirit of the Jeju 4•3 uprising! Workers’ Peace Cultural festival

    _ Date/ time: 8 pm to 9 pm, March 30, Sat., 2013

    _Venue: Entrance of the Gangjeong Village (Village scoccer field)

     

    Succession of the spirit of the Jeju 4•3 uprising! Nationwide Workers’ rally

    _Date/ time: At 2pm, March 31, Sun

    _Venue: In front of the Jeju City Hall (march to Gwandeokjeong)

     

    Workers’ Peace Cultural festival in the Gangjeong village(made by Peace Nomad)

    The event was composed of people’s speeches, songs, and dances. One of the songs in the video is titled

    “A Sleepless Island in the South,” (lyric and composition by Ahn Chi-Hwan), which is the song on the tragedy of 4•3

    book-seling
    The people in Gangjeong raised some struggle funds by selling books to the workers. The book, titled, “Peace blossoming in Tears,”  published last year, is  on the 17 villagers’ life stories written by 17 writers. It is a great book that helps people understand the life and struggle of the villagers.

     

    March 31, 2013

  • Why Women Must End the Korean War

    Re-posted from the Foreign Policy in Focus

    By Christine Ahn, March 8, 2013

    korean-war-international-womens-day

    As women around the world gather to celebrate International Women’s Day, a light needs to be shone upon the Korean peninsula where a tinderbox situation is about to erupt into a full-blown military conflict.

    In response to the U.S.-led UN Security Council sanctions against North Korea for testing its third nuclear weapon last month, the DPRK has threatened to both nullify the 1953 armistice agreement that halted the Korean War and preemptively strike the United States. The North Korean foreign ministry said in a statement: “Since the United States is about to ignite a nuclear war, we will be exercising our right to preemptive nuclear attack against the headquarters of the aggressor in order to protect our supreme interest.”

    While escalations of tension are nothing new, what they are revealing is that a major game changer is needed to break the silent stalemate between the United States and North Korea. And it’s going to take more than Dennis Rodman’s trip to North Korea. It will require the United States to take greater responsibility and leadership to end the Korean War, as well as a feminist, anti-militarist approach to achieve peace and justice on the Korean peninsula.

    Why the U.S. Must Take Responsibility to End the Korean War

    In 1948, after the close of the Second World War, the United States, with a nod of agreement from the Soviet Union, divided the Korean peninsula. During the war, the United States led the United Nations Command in waging a brutal scorched earth air bombing campaign across the Korean peninsula, particularly in the north, where U.S. bombs leveled 80 percent of northern cities and destroyed agricultural dams—actions considered war crimes under the Fourth Geneva Convention ratified that year.

    The Korean War was incredibly vicious. More bombs were dropped in Korea than on all of Europe during World War II, and U.S. President Harry Truman threatened to drop another atomic bomb. And it was during the Korean War that napalm was first used against civilians. Within three months of the war’s outset, 57,000 Korean children were missing and half a million homes were damaged or destroyed.

    One year into the war, U.S. Major General Emmett O’Donnell Jr. testified before the Senate, “I would say that the entire, almost the entire Korean Peninsula is just a terrible mess. Everything is destroyed. There is nothing standing worthy of the name…There were no more targets in Korea.”

    It wasn’t until some 4 million people had been killed that the Korean War came to an unresolved end on July 27, 1953 with a temporary armistice signed by the United States, North Korea, and China. South Korea was not a signatory because it had ceded military power to General Douglas MacArthur. A permanent peace agreement has never materialized, which means the war is technically still on. Sixty years later, the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) remains the world’s most heavily militarized border, with South Korean, North Korean, and U.S. troops poised for war amid over 1.2 million landmines.

    We are facing, once again, perilous times as tensions escalate in the Asia-Pacific. Most western governments and the mainstream media point to North Korea’s third nuclear test and perceived belligerence as the cause of the escalation when in fact there are two major initiatives fueling this militarized response.

    First is the so-called “pivot.” In 2011, the Obama administration announced a plan to transfer significant military resources to Asia and the Pacific, including expanding bases, surveillance, and equipment. The Pentagon has committed to deploying 60 percent of its air and naval forces to the region, including sending U.S. troops to Vietnam, the Philippines, and Australia. Without a doubt, the “pivot” is exacerbating tensions in a region that has still not resolved conflicts from the last century.

    Second are the perennial U.S-ROK joint military exercises against North Korea. North Korea justifiably views these war games as acts of provocation. The annual U.S.-ROK “Key Resolve/Foal Eagle” war games, usually staged in March, and “Ulchi Freedom Guardian” in August typically last for months and involve tens of thousands of U.S. troops and hundreds of thousands of South Korean troops. In the exercises, U.S. Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine, and Space Command forces simulate overthrowing North Korea’s leadership, occupying Pyongyang, and reunifying the peninsula under U.S. and South Korean control.

    When I think about the impact of all this militarization, I think about the elderly rice farmers in Pyongtaek who used their bodies to defend their community from being bulldozed to accommodate the expansion of a U.S. military base. I think about the tangerine farmers and women sea divers of Gangjeong village on Jeju island struggling day and night to stop the construction of a U.S.-backed Korean naval base. This is what the militarization of the Korean peninsula looks like, and the only road to peace runs through Washington.

    Why women’s leadership is crucial

    Women’s organizing to end the Korean War is strategic for three key reasons.

    First, the war has a disproportionate impact on the lives of women. As feminists, we know that nationalism, patriarchy, and militarism intersect. The militarization of the peninsula naturally leads to greater masculinization of society, which increases violence against women, including sexual violence by U.S. servicemen and the reallocation of resources from social welfare towards the military. But the partition also has very real consequences for North Korean women, especially those seeking a better life outside of North Korea.

    According to estimates by aid workers, 80 to 90 percent of female refugees from North Korea are trafficking victims. At a women’s circle in South Korea, one 19-year-old escapee talked of being raped four times during her journey—once by the Korean Chinese man who promised to find her work in China, a second time by the Chinese man who hid her from the authorities, a third time by the South Korean coyote who brought her into the country, and a fourth time by the South Korean CIA. This she had to endure so she could survive.

    Second, given our relationships with our families, children, and community, women have a reality check that is seldom there for men. Not only can women can bring into greater focus the experience of women and girls in militarized societies and armed conflict, we can provide crucial insights into the day-to-day consequences of the ongoing war on peoples’ lives.

    Finally, the deadlocked situation calls for game changers. As a group of people outside the structures of power, we have to use our ingenuity to go beyond conventional paths outlined and dominated by patriarchal institutions. Women are not cowed by limited notions of solutions; we use our imagination and creativity to break through repressive structures.

    Lights on the Water

    Once, in the fall of 2009, I woke up in the middle of the night. Instead of continuing to toss and turn, I decided to switch on my computer. On the homepage of the New York Times read the headline, “North Korea Opens Dam Flow, Sweeping Away 6 in the South.” North Korea had lifted the floodgates of a dam on the Imjin River, sending a tidal wave south and killing six South Koreans, including an 8-year-old boy. The water level had doubled, which meant North Korea’s farms could flood and wipe out the season’s harvest. To avert this perilous situation, North Korea allegedly released the water without any advance notice.

    This is so ridiculous, I thought to myself. Why can’t these two countries — that speak the same language, eat the same food, and share over two millennia of history — just communicate? Why couldn’t Kim Jong Il just have picked up the phone and given South Korean leader Lee Myung-bak a heads up?

    After being thoroughly depressed about the situation of the two Koreas, I finally fell back to sleep. And then I had the most vivid dream, which I’ve held onto as hope for the future of a united Korea. In my dream, I was wading in a river alongside other Koreans. It was before the break of dawn and we were anxiously waiting for Koreans from the north. And just over the crest of the horizon, a light glowed. It was a group of people holding candles wading down the river. As we met in the river, there was an overabundance of joy and intense embrace. But I kept going forward up the river, bypassing this emotional scene to find the source. I came upon a ceremony of women huddled around a huge kettle stirring thick black liquid and pouring ladles of it into little pails carried by children. It was at that moment when I awoke and realized, aha, it will take Korean women on the peninsula and throughout the Diaspora to bring about peace and reunification for Korea.

    Now I have no idea what was in that black liquid, but what I do know is that peace and reunification on the Korean peninsula must be advocated without supporting any particular nation-state. We don’t want the reunification of two highly patriarchal, militaristic societies. Our immediate task is to talk about the unfinished war’s militarization of the Korean peninsula and the consequent violence against women, children, and the future. We need to confront head-on the military buildup that is destroying livelihoods, communities, and the natural world.

    So what can we do? We are powerless in the face of the military industrial complex, and we are cynical in the face of over 60 years of unfinished war. I don’t have the solutions, but I do have some dreams.

    Imagine if people severed the barbed wires along the DMZ and transformed it into an ecological park. Imagine if the elderly could board a bus that would take them to visit their families in cities in the north, like Kaesong, Nampo, or Pyongyang. Imagine if the resources allocated to buying drones or to launch a satellite were instead spent on education, childcare, or support for single mothers. Imagine if North Korean farmers could access all the materials they needed to yield abundant harvests.

    Central to all of this is ending the Korean War, with the United States signing a peace treaty with North Korea. But it will take more than signing a document to end over half a century of enmity and mistrust—it will take a new approach to achieving security. This is why it will take women’s leadership, because women realize that genuine security means having health, education, and freedom to live without fear and want. From Ireland to Liberia, women have stood up to end violence and conflict. We can and must do the same for Korea.

    March 31, 2013

  • Two reverends Joining the suffering of Yang Yoon-Mo and Gureombi Rock

    1-1
    Rev. Kim Hong-Sool, Busan SPARK/ Image provided by Rev. Kim Hee-Yong. For more photos, see here.

    Rev. Kim Hong-Sool, representative of Busan, SPARK, and Rev. Kim Hee-Yong, Gwangju, have taken a fast prayer meeting in solidarity with the sufferings of Prof. Yang Yoon-Mo and Gureombi Rock in front of the Jeju prison from March 26 to 29, 2013, during the Passion week according to the Christian faith before Easter.

    1-2
    Rev. Kim Hee-Yong, Gwangju (Image provided by Rev. Kim Hee-Yong)
    Pat Cunningham, a Columban Father said on March 26, “A wonderful expression of solidarity with Prof. Yang as he begins the recovery process back to full health! I pray this week as we remember the sufferings and deep humiliation that Jesus suffered at the hands of his oppressors and the subsequent humiliation of being put on trial and executed as a common criminal despite being an innocent man we pray that no more violence and injustice will be visited on the brave peace makers in Gangjeong village! As people of hope and people of the resurrection we pray that justice will flow like a mighty stream once again and that the village of Gangjeong will return to its rightful custodians-the villagers and not the navy!”

    It is told that, when the two visited Prof. Yang Yoon-Mo on the last day, Yang said to them, “I have been lonely to be alone, but was encouraged to hear that you were suffering with me outside. Let’s please gather power together.”

    In the press conference ending their fasts, they demanded release of the political prisoners for opposition activities against the Jeju naval base construction, retraction of fine sentence, and construction stop.

    In their statement to the citizens and Island people, they stated that it is the crucifixion of this era that there are the imprisonments of the villagers and peace activists who have peacefully made efforts to stop the naval base construction in Gangjoeng and the reality that a community that has lived peacefully from its ancestors is moaning.

    They explained that “From the heart to join the pain of the Gureombi Rock though it is a small gesture, we came here to the site of suffering, the Jeju Prison, where Yang Yoon-Mo has carried out decisive action with 52 days’ fast.”

    They scolded that “the war is a monster feeding itself with human blood. The humiliating activity to hand over here to the battle field of another country is a shameful deed that is nothing to do with peace and development. The naval base that is constructed destroying the nature and community is not self-reliant defense but [Korea] will be a consumption country for the war material–production corporations and their trash site.”

    Yonhap news-two revs
    Press conference ending the four days fast and prayer for the stop of Jeju military base and for the release of Prof. Yang. . .”War cannot be justified for any reasons nor any causes. . .as it is a monster living as eating human blood.” From the left, Rev. Kim Hong-sul, representative of Busan SPARK, and Rev. Kim Hee-yong, representative of Gwangju Citizen Center. . .They have fasted in a tent in front of Jeju prison for the past 4 days from March 26 during the Passion week. (image/ caption provided by Regina Pyon)

    Saying on Park Sung-Soo (38), a peace activist that chose a prison labor rather than fines of 1,500,000 KRW, that “a dedicated activist has entered the prison choosing hardships,” they urged to release all the prisoners and retract heavy fine sentences.

    They bowed saying that “more than 70 % of the Northwest Youth League that massacred people during the Jeju 4·3 were Christians. Even though we are not representing them, we would like to pay bows of repentance to the Jeju Island people and Gangjeong villagers from the heart to repent our sins.”

    bows
    Two reverends bow on March 29 (Image source: Headline Jeju, March 29, 2013)

    In their ending prayer, mayor Knag Dong-Kyun and chairman Go Gwon-Il joined the event.

    제주_소리_2
    ‘Trouble is not coming to us but it is for our approaching to it_by Rev. Kim Hee-Yong, March 26, 2013.’  Messages on the wire fence of the Jeju prison (Image source: Jeju Sori, March 26, 2013)

    (Summary by Regina Pyon and Sung-Hee Choi)

    March 30, 2013

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