
The Western Corporate Media often claims that âNorth Korea prosecutes (or even executes) its people for watching South Korean dramas.â
Itâs hard to ascertain if thatâs actually the case, as fake news about North Korea is the norm. The only allegations of this phenomena come from unreliable defector testimony of known liars (like Park Yeon Mi), who are rewarded for telling hyperbolic lies; or from dubious South Korean sources like the rightwing Chosun Ilbo.
These hyperbolic claims are then amplified by right wing anti-communist organizations (like Liberty in North Korea) and the US MSM.
However, contrary to these dubious claims, we can ascertain with certainty that South Korea does prosecute people for screening North Korean films.
In fact, itâs not an exaggeration to say that much of what South Korea accuses North Korea of doing can actually be attributed right back to South Korea. In other words, these claims are projectionânot cinematic, but psychological.
Dangerous Dramas
According to the Jeju Today newspaper, the Yoon government is claiming that screening the North Korean film âThe Story of Our Homeâ, shown in South Korea in February 2019 as part of a national reunification festival, violated SK National Security Law. It is now investigating the organizers of the film screening three years later.
The North Korean film is a family drama about how a young teenage girl and her two younger siblings try to adapt to the loss of their mother. The community rallies to support her, but she is stricken with grief and acts out with hostility, especially towards a neighbor who tries to help out in caring, maternal ways. Itâs a common dynamic you might see in any foster or hybrid family here. Thereâs also an older brother, in the military, who is kept in the dark about the loss. Thereâs a math contest, a cooking contest, elegant bike ridingâand several puncturesâ and lots of pastoral greenery.
This is utterly harmless stuff, a story about neighborly kindnessâwith a wholesome message about studying math thrown inâbut the South Korean National Intelligence Service (NIS) is hounding the organizers, the former head and current head of the Jeju branch of the Progressive Party and the Secretary-general of the Jeju Federation of the National Farmersâ Association, for violating the National Security Law. They are accused of engaging in âideological educationâ and âpraising the North Korean system.â
The organizers of the screening have argued that the film was approved by the South Korean government (Ministry of reunification) itself for screening. The DVD, after the screening, was promptly returned to the ministry.
These prosecutions are happening within the current political context where the South Korean Yoon government is reverting to a full red scare/red-baiting mode, a reversion to the habits of the SK military dictatorships of the 60-80âs.
Yoonâs Strategy of Denial
The Yoon administration, with the recent promulgation of its Indo-Pacific Strategy, has gone full bore in adopting a confrontationalâif codedâmilitary, economic, and political escalation against China. As the identity of the name suggests, South Koreaâs strategy is in lockstep ideological, military, and political congruence with the USâs own Indo-Pacific strategy. This is a strategy developed to contain, constrain, and rollback Chinaâs economic development and global/regional prominence, and to prepare for kinetic engagement. South Korea is engaging in this extreme strategy despite the considerable risk this poses to its own economy. It is already seeing harm to its own domestic semiconductor industries.
The Yoon administrationâs coordination and co-militarization with Japan in the service of this US containment against China, along with its neoliberal policies and massive labor suppression, and its general incompetenceâleading to mass catastrophes such as the recent mass crush catastropheâhas resulted in fierce opposition by large numbers of South Korean citizens. To date, they have taken to the streets in mass âcandlelightâ demonstrations 23 times, on occasion, approaching a turnout of half million according to organizers. They show no signs of abating.
These huge weekly demonstrations have demanded Yoonâs immediate resignation along with prosecution of the first lady for corruption. The demonstrations also express strong opposition to US militarization and military exercises, demand the return of South Korean sovereignty, and charge President Yoon with selling out and betraying the nation. The Yoon administration currently has a 24% approval.
To counter this, the Yoon administration has been stifling and shutting down opposition to its policies with allegations that opposition is derived from pro-North sentiment or even alliance with North Korea. It is currently engaged in a massive political witch hunt of its opponents. It has arrested key top officials of the previous progressive administration, has raided the opposition party headquarters, raided opposition party candidateâs (Lee Jae Myungâs) house four hundred times and has just subpoenaed him, acts unseen in South Korean constitutional history. It is widely feared that Yoon will try to imprison the former progressive president, Moon Jae-in, possibly for acts of commission or omission in his policy towards North Korea. Even the South Korean military is alarmed: a former four star general, deputy commander of the ROK/US Combined Forces Command denounced Yoonâs administration as a âdictatorial regimeâ that is âsuppressing freedomââa military first.
Republic of Prosecution
President Yoon, a former chief prosecutor, sometimes compared to a âKorean J. Edgar Hooverâ, had promised during his campaign that he would create a âRepublic of Prosecutorsâ and re-institute a 120-hour work week. (The previous Moon Jae-In administration had painstakingly winnowed down South Koreaâs working hoursâthe longest in the OECDâto a 52 hours per week cap). A silver-spooned dunce with no political experience, Yoon had failed the bar exam 9 times. He was pitted against a popular governor, Lee Jae Myung, who had workedâand was injuredâin sweatshops since the age of 12 but who had entered law school on a scholarship after taking night school classes. Lee had aced his bar exams.
Needless to say, the US backed the wealthy, underperforming dunce rather than the conscientious over-achiever. Candidate Yoon received the blessing and endorsement of top US leaders and the US power establishment. He was commissioned to publish an articleâa public confession of the doctrine of the faithâfor the Council on Foreign Relationsâ journal Foreign Affairs magazine, where he detailed his hawkish concordance with US policy against China and his desire to be a global âpivot stateââa clear reference to the âPivot to Asiaâ.
Seoul should seek a comprehensive strategic alliance with WashingtonâŠactively promote a free, open, and inclusive order in the Indo-PacificâŠ[and] willingly participate in Quadrilateral Security Dialogue..[and] trilateral security coordination with the United States and Japan.
The Obama administrationâs âPivot to Asiaâ had started the momentum for military encirclement and escalation against China; Trump escalated this hybrid war into the economic domain, initiating a trade and tech war against China. Biden rebranded the Pivot to Asia as âThe US Indo-Pacific Strategyâ and Trumpâs neo-mercantilist trade war as the âIPEF (Indo-Pacific Economic Framework)â, and has since escalated even further with full spectrum sanctions designed to destroy key Chinese industries. Yoonâs roadmap article for Foreign Affairs was widely welcomed and lauded, celebrated as an early Christmas in Washington, effectively the fulfillment of Bidenâs wish list for its Korean anti-China strategy.
After squeaking by on the tightest of margins in South Koreaâs electoral history, President Yoon has been making good on his promises to the US, shaping, sculpting, and subordinating South Korean military, economic, and foreign interests to align with US policy and goals. To backstop what are clearly unpopular, dissent-and-hardship-generating extreme far right policiesâand in fulfillment of his promise of creating a ârepublic of prosecutorsââYoon has appointed prosecutors who were subordinate to him to the majority of top administration positions, and prosecuting his opponents without mercy. Anyone who shows the slightest sign of opposition to his foreign or domestic policy has been put in the cross hairs of his army of prosecutors. Itâs not an exaggeration to say that Yoon has sent his prosecutorial clown car barreling straight down on the road mapped out in his FP article, with âvaluesâ attached as a hood ornament, and âdemocracyâ attached to the bonnet as road kill. The vehicle deployed has been âRule of Lawâ, in particular, South Koreaâs National Security Laws.
For example, Yoon is claiming that the recent labor strikes in SK organized by the KCTU âwere upon orders from North Koreaâ, a hyperbolic claim completely denied and deried by the organizers.
The Devil in Democracy
SKâs national security laws (see here)âare a relic of the past red-baiting military dictatorshipsâand are some of the most draconian in the world. They have been applied to destroy lives and livelihoods, despite their commonsense-and-human rights-contravening extremism and punitiveness. Revised and massaged several times over the years, they are still imprinted with the core genes of their intent: a political version of the Malleus Maleficarum (a medieval guide for witch hunting) to destroy âsubversiveâ thought and movements in the South and to squelch political opposition. Like the Malleus, during South Koreaâs military dictatorships, they were broadly written, malleable in interpretation & application, and relied heavily on confession extracted under torture. They are outdated and incompatible with any notion of a modern state, let alone South Koreaâs much self-promoted âfreedom and democracyâ and ârespect for individual rightsâ â.
For example, Under the South Korean National Security Law, for the act of âpraising or sympathizing withâ North Korea (in the legislation, NK is always referred to as âanti-state group(s)â), South Korean individuals can be imprisoned for up to 7 years:
Article 7: Praising Or Sympathizing
Up to 7 years in prison for those who praise, encourage, disseminate or cooperate with anti-state groups, members or those under their control, being aware that such acts will endanger the national security and the democratic freedom.
If investigation of the KCTU labor strikes shows that they were âupon orders from North Koreaâ, as is claimed by the government, depending on the judicial outcome and the specific crimes they are charged with, the accused could be sentenced to death for âcommission of anti-state acts under the influence of NKâ:
Article 4: Commission Of Anti-State Acts
Members of an anti-State group or those who are under the influence of an anti-State organization who commit an anti-State act shall be punished as follows:
- Those who commit an act as defined by the Criminal Codes articles [92], [97], [99], [250.2], [338] or [340.2] shall be punished as set forth in the Codes.
- Those who commit an act as defined by the Criminal Codes article [98] or who access, gather, leak, transmit or compromise a national security secret shall be punished as follows:
- Death, life or minimum 10 years for violating Criminal Codes [115], [119.1], [147], [148]. [164] or [169]. [177.1] or [180]. [192] or [195]. [207], [208], [210], [250.1], [252], [253], [333] or [337], [339] or [340.1, 2]
- Death, life or minimum 5 years in prison for destruction of public or government buildings or other structures essential for transportation, communication; abduction or seduction of officials; or theft or removal of ships, airplanes, automobiles, weapons or other materialsârelated to the fore-mentioned functions.
- Minimum 2 years in prison for promoting or propagating acts defined in [1] or [5] or for creating or spreading false rumors aimed at causing social turmoil.
- Meeting with NK officials, as alleged against the organizers could result in a 10 year sentence.
Article 8: Meeting, Corresponding And Etc.
Up to 10 years in prison for those who confer, correspond, or communicate using other means with anti-state groups, members or those under their control, being aware that their acts will endanger the national security and the democratic freedom.
If any of the accused are successfully prosecuted, then those in their vicinity could be charged with âfailure to informââi.e. failure to ârat outâ their friends, neighbors, colleagues, or even family:
Article 10: Failure To Inform
Maximum five years in prison or a fine of 2000,000 won for those who fail to inform the police or security officials of persons who have committed acts defined in [3], [4], [5.1, 3 and 4]. This punishment may be reduced or waved in the case of involving family members.
The film organizers could be charged with âpossessing (even temporarily) or disseminating artsâ (from NK):
Punishments as defined in [1], [3], or [4] for those who create, import, duplicate, possess, transport, disseminate, sell, or acquire documents, arts or other publications for the purpose of committing acts as defined in [1], [3], or [4] respectively.
This devil here is not in the details, but in the conception. Summoned by the US as an anticommunist familiar to purge the peninsula clean of all challengers to Empire in 1945, the rightwing Yoon administration is stoking the coals and heating its branding iron again. South Korea is re-descending into a dark and dangerous path to war in service of the Unipolar Empire, and its long-enduring and long-suffering citizens are worried. What is certain is that it cannot find its way out with the road map the administration has adopted: there are no off-ramps or turning points. South Korea is already coordinating operations and exercises with a belligerently and rapidly remilitarizing Japan, and it has committed to participate in any conflict in the South China Sea or the Taiwan straits as part of its Indo-Pacific strategy.
Only the continued and dedicated struggle of South Korean citizens against US imperialism and for national liberation and sovereignty can find a way out of this dangerous and deadly situation.
In solidarity with these struggles, the first duty of the people of the Western Imperial core is to prevent their own governments from manipulating and militarizing South Koreaâand other countriesâto push them into a catastrophic confrontation with China.
If war breaks out in Asia, no one wins. History itself would come to a full stop.
Source: Mronline.org