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South Korean government tries to stem protests against US
beef imports
By James Cogan
24 June 2008
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The South Korean administration of President Lee Myung-bak
has announced significant concessions in order to placate mass
opposition to the lifting of a ban on beef imports from the United
States and broader discontent over falling living standards.
US beef was banned from South Korea in 2003 following the discovery
of a case of Mad Cow disease in American cattle. Lee, from the
conservative Grand National Party (GNP) and a former chairman
of the Hyundai conglomerate, announced an end to the embargo in
April in order to advance negotiations toward a US-South Korea
free trade agreement, which is desperately wanted by Korean auto
companies and other major corporations.
Lees decision on beef imports coincided with sharply
rising prices for fuel, food and other essentials, as well as
a slowing economy and rising unemployment. The ending of the ban
was widely viewed as symptomatic of Lees preoccupation with
pleasing the Bush administration and the Korean corporate elite,
and his indifference to the concerns of ordinary people. Protests
against US beef sales rapidly escalated into a social movement
against the new governments entire agenda, including its
hard-line stance toward North Korea and its plans to weaken the
regulation of big business, privatise state-owned companies and
construct a controversial canal from Seoul to Busan.
Despite an offer by Lees cabinet to resign, over one
million South Koreans demonstrated in 80 cities and towns on June
10, demanding that the president go as well. He has only been
in office since February, after winning elections last December
that were marked by popular disaffection from the entire political
establishment and a low voter turnout.
Since the June 10 protests, Lee has embarked on a desperate
campaign to end the protests. Negotiators were dispatched to Washington
for crisis talks with US trade representatives, aimed at amending
the terms on which US beef could be sold in South Korea. While
declaring his government could not re-impose a ban, Lee promised
that no beef from cattle older than 30 months would enter the
Korean market. Though no American cattle have been diagnosed with
BSE since 2003, older stock is considered more susceptible to
the disease.
Lee also announced the suspension of privatisation plans and
the scrapping of the canal project. On June 19, he gave a nationally
televised press conference in which he issued a grovelling public
apology. I and my government should have looked at what
people want regarding food safety more carefully, but we failed
to do so, he declared.
On Saturday, the government announced that it had secured a
voluntary agreement from the US that no beef from
animals older than 30 months would be exported to Korea. South
Korean inspectors will also have the right to inspect American
slaughterhouses.
A strike by thousands of unionised truck drivers over fuel
prices was brought to an end on the Sunday after freight companies
agreedunder pressure from the governmentto increase
hauling rates by 19 percent.
Lee is expected to unveil a major cabinet reshuffle this week
and has dismissed a number of his aides and advisors. Finance
minister Kang Man Soo announced last Friday that the governments
utmost priority would be stabilising prices
and looking after the lives of the people.
The corporate media has played its part in seeking to restore
political stability. Editorials and opinion pieces have declared
that the protestors have succeeded in moderating the governments
policies and that further demonstrations are therefore pointless
and damaging to the economy.
The protests since June 10 have been small by comparison. Police
estimated that some 10,000 people took part in a demonstration
on Saturday in Seoul, though the organisers claimed that as many
as 60,000 attended.
The lack of a political perspective, however, is as much a
factor in the ebb of the demonstrations as the governments
concessions and the medias lectures for protestors go home.
The June 10 rally called for the bringing down of Lees government.
That posed the question of what was to replace it. Millions of
people at present do not have an answer. While they oppose Lees
policies, they have no confidence in the parliamentary oppositionthe
United New Democratic Party (UNDP). Recent polls showed that the
UNDP had barely 20 percent support, while Lees popularity
stood at 17 percent.
The Democrats held power from 1998 until February under former
presidents Kim Dae-jung and Roh Moon-hyan. Kim Dae-jungs
administration was ruthlessly pro-big business, imposing wage
cuts, unemployment and high inflation on the population in order
to salvage the fortunes of corporations following the 1997-1998
Asian financial crisis. Moreover, it offered little resistance
to the bellicose US policy toward North Korea unveiled by the
Bush administration in 2001 that shattered initial steps towards
a rapprochement on the Korean peninsula and posed a real threat
of war.
Roh Moon-hyun narrowly won the December 2002 elections by making
nationalist appeals to anti-US sentiment, which had been aggravated
by the killing of two schoolgirls by an American military vehicle
earlier in the year. Upon taking office, however, he fell into
line with the Bush administration, going as far as to agree to
send more than 3,000 Korean troops to assist in the occupation
of Iraq. Rohs administration suppressed workers demands
for wage rises to compensate for the cuts suffered under Kim Dae-jung
and assisted Korean companies to further erode working conditions,
particularly through the extension of casual contracts.
The Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU)whose
militant strikes against the dictatorship in the 1980s were hailed
by some as evidence that trade unionism could achieve enduring
political and social changehas demonstrated its utter uselessness.
It repeatedly capitulated to the corporate agenda of the Kim and
Roh governments, while promoting the myth that they represented
a lesser evil to the GNP, the party of the old dictatorial
regime. The KCTU covers less than 10 percent of the workforce
and its membership has been in decline since 2002. After a decade
of widening social inequality, its one-day general strikes are
widely viewed by workers as unserious.
The disillusionment with the KCTU was sharply revealed in the
vote taken on June 13 on whether the federation should stage a
one-day general strike over US beef imports. Only 271,000 of the
511,000 members voted, with 169,000or just one third of
the total membershipendorsing a strike. The token industrial
action is scheduled to take place on July 2.
The movement against Lee was not initiated by the Democrats
or the unions, but by young people networking on popular web portals.
International Herald Tribune correspondent Choe Sang-hun
reported on June 16: There, people suggested that they stop
just talking and take to the streets. When a high school student
began a petition on Agora [a web forum] calling for Lees
impeachment, it gathered 1.3 million signatures within a week.
The police were caught off-guard on May 2 when thousands of teenagers
networking through Agora and coordinating via text messages poured
into central Seoul, holding candles and chanting No to mad
cow!
Beef imports were the trigger for the expression of pent-up
social tensions and the tremendous alienation felt by young people.
After a decade of economic hardship, million of people now have
to endure the consequences of rapidly rising inflation. In South
Korea, food prices rose 4.7 percent in May, transport costs by
10.6 percent, household costs such as electricity by 5.1 percent
and furniture by 4.7 percent. Overall inflation hit 4.9 percenta
seven-year high.
Even if the current protests dissipate, the underlying discontent
will not. Its ultimate source is opposition to the inequality,
injustice and militarism of the capitalist profit system. The
crucial question in South Korea is the development of a genuine
socialist movement that can give conscious expression to the aspirations
of the working class and youth for political and social change.
See Also:
South Korean government besieged by demonstrations
and strikes
[14 June 2008]
South Korean government unravels in the
face of mass political protests
[12 June 2008]
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