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Mayor and Community Leaders Apologize for the 2004 Miryang Rape Case

South Korea has definitely come a long ways in the past twenty years in regards to how it treats sex crimes. The Miryang Rape Case was a major example of how lenient the government treated sex crimes at the time:

Government officials and community leaders in the southeastern city of Miryang, South Gyeongsang Province, jointly issued a public apology Tuesday for an infamous gang rape case that occurred two decades ago, saying it was “all of our responsibility.”

“We all share the responsibility to make a better community, yet we (the people of Miryang) have not apologized or reflected on this tragedy, just because it is not directly related to our family or friends,” said Mayor An Byeong-gu, a Miryang native himself who took helm of the city in April this year. “We apologize for everyone who has been hurt.”

Officials of the city government, city council and some 80 civic and religious groups based in the area participated in the public apology at the city hall, collectively bowing their heads for one of the worst sex crimes in South Korean history. They did not take questions from reporters who attended the event.

The 2004 Miryang gape rape case has recently reentered the national consciousness after YouTubers began revealing the personal information of some the alleged perpetrators. Forty-four high school boys in South Gyeongsang Province were alleged to have brutally assaulted a then-middle school girl physically and sexually over the course of a year, but all of them escaped criminal punishment on account of them being minors at the time.

A subsequent investigation found that four other underage girls, including the primary victim’s older sister, had been raped by the group who called themselves the “Miryang Coalition.”

What fueled public furor was the widespread victim-blaming by the local community and secondary damage inflicted by the police. A 2005 survey of 645 residents of the city showed that 64 percent pointed the finger of blame at the victim for the heinous crimes, and a police officer’s blunder led to the victim’s family having their information leaked to the public.

Korea Herald

You can read more at the link, but there was another horrible sex crime back in 2004 that involved a U.S. Soldier getting rape by a taxi driver soon after she arrived in Korea:

ROK Authorities Find that Some North Korean Trash Balloons Have Human Excrement in them Filled with Parasites

This should give everyone further indications on how healthy the people in North Korea are:

Parasites have been detected in some of the trash-filled balloons sent by North Korea to South Korea, but no harmful substances were found, Seoul’s unification ministry said Monday.

In recent weeks, North Korea has sent more than 1,000 trash-carrying balloons toward the South on multiple occasions in retaliation for South Korean activists’ leaflet campaigns condemning the North Korean regime.

“Numerous parasites, such as roundworms, whipworms and threadworms, were found in the soil contained in the trash,” the ministry said in a press release, adding that the parasites are believed to originate from human excrement.

The findings are based on an examination of 70 balloons.

Yonhap

You can read more at the link.

Tweet of the Day: Battery Fire Footage

President Yoon Condemns North Korea-Russia Military Pact on 74th Annivesary of the Korean War

The ROK government is still showing its unhappiness with Russia over its recent military pact with North Korea:

President Yoon Suk Yeol on Tuesday denounced a pact signed between North Korea and Russia last week as “an anachronistic act” that goes against the progress of history and Pyongyang’s repeated provocations as “despicable and irrational.”

During his televised speech to mark the 74th anniversary of the outbreak of the Korean War on June 25, 1950, Yoon said the pact, which forges stronger military and economic cooperation between Pyongyang and Moscow, “blatantly violates the United Nations Security Council resolution” designed to contain North Korea through sanctions.

Korea Herald

You can read more at the link.

North Korea Launches Latest Round of Trash Balloons at South Korea

The trash attacks into South Korea are continuing:

North Korea on Monday sent balloons presumed to be carrying trash toward South Korea again, Seoul’s military said.

The Joint Chiefs of Staff said the balloons appeared to be travelling in a southeastern direction from the northern part of Gyeonggi Province that surrounds Seoul.

It advised the public to not touch fallen balloons and report them to military or police authorities.

On Friday, Kim Yo-jong, the influential sister of the North’s leader, hinted about launching more balloons after North Korean defectors in the South sent balloons with anti-Pyongyang leaflets toward the North earlier in the week.

Korea Times

You can read more at the link.

Picture of the Day: Major General Lombardo Takes Command of 2nd Infantry Division

New commander of U.S. 2nd Infantry Division in S. Korea
New commander of U.S. 2nd Infantry Division in S. Korea
Maj. Gen. Charles Lombardo salutes during his inaugural ceremony as the commander of the 2nd Infantry Division in South Korea at Camp Humphreys in Pyeongtaek, 65 kilometers south of Seoul, on June 21, 2024. (Yonhap)

State Department Report Recognizes South Korea for Efforts to Combat Human Trafficking

South Korea is now on the best level in regards to combating human trafficking according to the U.S. State Department:

The State Department put South Korea back on a top-tier list of countries for meeting standards for the elimination of human trafficking, while leaving North Korea in the lowest third tier for the 22nd straight year, its annual report showed Monday.

The department released the 2024 Trafficking in Persons Report, where South Korea was listed in the Tier 1 group of 33 countries and territories, including the United States, Britain, Taiwan, France, Germany, Australia, Singapore, Poland and Sweden.

Countries, whose governments fully meet the Trafficking Victims Protection Act’s minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking, are included in Tier 1. South Korea was put into Tier 2 in the 2022 report for the first time in 20 years and remained in the tier in last year’s report.

The report measured progress in efforts to eliminate trafficking in 188 countries and territories. Its reporting period was from April 1 last year through March 31.

“The Government of the Republic of Korea (ROK) fully meets the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking,” the report read, referring to South Korea by its official name. “The government made key achievements to do so during the reporting period; therefore the ROK was upgraded to Tier 1.”

Yonhap

You can read more at the link.

Tweet of the Day: Chinese EV’s Are Better?

Picture of the Day: ROK Army Field Maneuvers

Tanks, howitzers, rocket launchers at drill
Tanks, howitzers, rocket launchers at drill
South Korean-made K1E1 tanks, K9 howitzers and Chunmoo multiple rocket launchers are on standby for an integrated field maneuver at the training field of the Army’s 17th Division in Incheon, 27 kilometers west of Seoul, on June 21, 2024. (Yonhap)

22 Reported Dead from Fire in Lithium Battery Factory in South Korea

This has to be the worst type of fire that a firefighter could try and extinguish. We have all seen the videos of how hard it is to extinguish an electric car that catches fire, imagine trying to put out the flames from an entire factory of lithium on fire:

At least 22 workers, mostly Chinese nationals, were killed in a lithium battery plant fire in Hwaseong, south of Seoul, Monday, firefighters said, in what could be the worst accident to occur at a chemical factory in the country.

The death toll could rise further as one went missing while being out of contact, according to the authorities.

As of 6:30 p.m., 22 workers had been killed, with two seriously injured and six others suffering mild injuries.

Among those confirmed killed, 20 are foreigners — 18 Chinese nationals, one Laotian and another whose nationality is not known, they said.

Yonhap

Here is how the fire supposedly started:

One witness, who escaped from the second floor of the plant, told the Hwaseong Fire Station that an explosive combustion occurred in one battery cell at the time of the fire.

The station said the fire spread rapidly as the battery cells inside exploded continuously, making it difficult for rescuers to go inside and search. At least 35,000 batteries are believed to be inside the plant. 

CCTV footage unveiled by the fire authorities showed a small amount of smoke started from one battery cell and sharply grew to fill the inside of the factory in just 15 seconds

You can read more at the link.