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South Korean government besieged by demonstrations and strikes
By James Cogan
14 June 2008
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South Korean President Lee Myung-bak heads a government under
siege, facing another week of demonstrations demanding his resignation
over his decision to lift a ban on US beef imports, and a national
strike by truck drivers over rising fuel prices.
As many as 13,000 unionised truck drivers began strike action
yesterday, defying government threats to deprive any striker of
a $14,500 annual fuel subsidy and to deploy military vehicles
to take over their jobs. The countrys major ports are being
affected severely. While union drivers make up only 3 percent
of the trucking workforce, they move 20 percent of shipping containers,
according to a report in the New York Times. The number
of trucks transporting containers out of the port of Pusan fell
to just 13 percent of normal levels.
The strike enjoys considerable public sympathy and support.
Its key demands are for a slashing of the cost of diesel, increased
haulage fees and a guaranteed minimum wage. Thousands of non-union
drivers, who have been just as hard hit by the rapid rise in fuel
prices over the past year, have joined the industrial action.
At the port of Incheon, where only 157 drivers are union members,
over 2,000 non-union drivers refused to load cargo.
The leadership of the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions
(KCTU), to which the truck drivers union belongs, has threatened
to call a general strike of its entire membership if the government
arrests any strikers or uses force against them. Workers in major
industries, such as auto and ship-building, are already holding
meetings over whether to launch political strikes in support of
the protest campaign against US beef imports.
The beef ban was imposed in 2003 after a case of Bovine Spongiform
Encephalopathy (BSE) or Mad Cow disease was discovered in American
cattle. At the time, South Korea was the third largest market
for US beef.
The issue became a major sticking point in negotiations that
began 18 months ago on the terms of a Free Trade Agreement between
the US and South Korea. South Koreas corporate and financial
elites are desperate to finalise the agreement before the Bush
administration leaves office. The US Democratic Party, reflecting
the interests of American auto manufacturers, has come out against
any pact, as it would give their South Korean rivals greater access
and competitiveness in the US market. Barak Obama, the Democratic
nominee for president, and the candidate the South Korean establishment
fears will win the election, has been one of the most vocal opponents
of the proposed trade pact.
Upon assuming office in late February, Lee Myung-bak set out
to resolve the impasse. In April, his government announced it
was lifting all restrictions on the sale of US beef. The outrage
among South Korean workers and youth was immediate and has rapidly
grown into a mass political movement against the entire policy
agenda of Lees conservative Grand National Party (GNP) government,
as well as against South Koreas political and military alignment
with the United States.
Lees popularity has collapsed to only 17 percentjust
six months since his election and after only three months in office.
His government is seen as the embodiment of a corrupt US-backed
corporate and financial oligarchy that has amassed vast wealth
from the exploitation of the Korean working class and is indifferent
to ordinary peoples problems and concerns.
As demonstrations have grown in size and scope over the past
two months, protestors have increasingly carried placards portraying
Lee as a rat. As well as opposition to beef imports, demonstrators
have denounced rising fuel and food prices, the governments
education and health policies, moves to privatise state-owned
companies, an unpopular plan to build a canal across the country,
the presence of US troops in Korea and Lees hard-line attitude
toward the North Korean regime.
More than one million people demonstrated on Tuesday in the
largest political rallies in South Korea since the protests to
bring down the military dictatorship in 1987. Last night, over
10,000 people assembled in central Seoul for a vigil to mark the
sixth anniversary of the 2002 killings of two young girls by a
US military vehicle. The Associated Press reported that speakers
demanded both the withdrawal of US troops from South Korea and
Lees resignation.
A student, Sin Jung-ah, told the rally: I think South
Korea is a colony of the United States. We will make efforts to
change the situation where both of you [the girls killed six years
ago] died unfairly. I hope you will support us from the heavens.
Kim Kwang-ho, a cook interviewed by the Associated Press, said:
I want Lee Myung-bak to resign now. Hes not qualified
to be our president because he unilaterally decided to import
US beef without thinking about peoples health.
Another vigil is being held today in memory of Lee Byeong-ryeol,
a 56-year-old worker who died after setting himself on fire during
an anti-government protest on May 25.
A demonstration is taking place tomorrow to mark the eighth
anniversary of the first summit between North and South Korea
in 2000. Millions of Koreans had illusions at the time that the
summit would lead to the countrys ultimate reunification
and an end to decades of tensions and the constant threat of war
on the Korean peninsula. Instead, they have seen the Bush administration
embark on a continuous policy of provocation against the North
Korean regime, preventing any significant progress toward stability.
More demonstrations have been scheduled for next Wednesday
and Saturday by the Peoples Association for Measures Against
Mad Cow Diseasea coalition of 1,700 groups that has been
organising virtually daily protests against the government.
In a statement issued on Wednesday, the coalition set June
20 as the deadline for Lee to renegotiate the beef agreement to
ensure that no US cattle older than 30 months will be sold in
South Korea (younger cattle are less susceptible to contracting
BSE). The statement declared: If the government decides
to ignore the mandate from the people, who hold the sovereign
power in this country, we will not hesitate to launch a campaign
to drive President Lee Myung-bak out of office.
Lee claimed later on Wednesday to have secured a verbal undertaking
from the Bush administration that no cattle older than 30 months
will be exported to South Korea. He also announced he was delaying
privatisation and the construction of the canal across the peninsula
from Seoul and Pusan. Both policies have attracted mass opposition.
In a further attempt to appease opposition, he unveiled subsidies
for truck drivers and concessions for low-income earners. He is
preparing a major reshuffle of his cabinet and may appoint a new
prime minister.
Lees desperate efforts to end the protests are a measure
of how deeply they have shaken the Korean ruling elite. Their
greatest concern is that masses of people are beginning to organise
outside the parties that have dominated Korean politics since
the end of the dictatorship. Amid the outpouring of anger at Lee,
the opposition United New Democratic Party of former President
Roh Moon-hyan has registered no significant increase in its support.
The underlying cause of the eruption of social discontent is the
profound alienation of the Korean working class from the entire
political establishment.
See Also:
South Korean government unravels in the
face of mass political protests
[12 June 2008]
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