South Korea: A Tale of Two Suicides
This month, two Korean men under heat from the law have made the news by taking their own lives, against a backdrop of social unease and anti-government feeling. This unlikely couple is wedded by not only timing, but also the response of the state, leery of any such feeling giving way to mobilization.
The more prominent of the two was former President Roh Moo Hyun, beset by the media and the law for allegedly taking $6 million worth of bribes while in office. The other was a leading militant of the Korean Cargo Transport Workers’ Union (KCTWU), Park Jong-tae, who hanged himself on May 3 while on the lam, after organizing illegal protests over the firing of fellow truck drivers.

Roh, who passed away on May 23, made his reputation in the 1980s democracy movement as a labor and human rights lawyer. He met with his own share of state repression after he provided assistance to militants at Daewoo during the 1987 “Great Workers’ Struggle.” After navigating South Korean party politics through the 1990s, he found himself the dark horse candidate in the 2002 presidential elections. Running on a populist platform that centered on a more assertive relationship with the U.S. and buoyed by anger over the killing of two schoolgirls by a U.S. tank that summer, he was narrowly voted into office.

However, his career in office illustrates a trajectory that should be familiar to followers of the Solidarity website. Once in power, he supported neoliberal domestic policies and gave insistent backing to a plethora of Free Trade Agreements (including one with the U.S.––the biggest such deal since NAFTA––which sparked a major opposition movement in the streets). His administration also saw to the deployment of Korean troops to Iraq. Accompanying these moves was the unremitting repression of social movements, labor, the poor and immigrants. While the right continued to bitterly oppose him, even managing to initiate unsuccessful impeachment proceedings in 2004, his base among liberals and the mainstream left attenuated. Seemingly unlike your usual machine politician, he left office in ignominy, like his predecessors Kim Dae Jung and Kim Young Sam.

Nonetheless, memorials have attracted both mourners and cops in the thousands. Public gatherings commemorating Roh have been aggressively cordoned off by a huge police presence. These gatherings are hardly “non-partisan,” decorated with banners denouncing the current President Lee Myung Bak––who sent a bouquet to a memorial for Roh that was promptly smashed to bits. Once earning the ire of just about everyone, Roh may become an accidental martyr yet (or perhaps not so accidental?), thanks to a case of political amnesia induced by the hard right Lee Myung Bak regime and the enduring institutional and affective relationship between activists and the center-left.

Park Jong-tae’s martyrdom was unmistakably intentional. Sitting beside Park’s corpse was a placard denouncing company interference in the union. Suicide is an unfortunate mainstay of social protest in South Korea, especially in the labor movement, and political martyrs loom large.
Case in point: a mass rally was held by the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions on May 16 to commemorate both Park and the anniversary of the 1980 Kwangju Massacre, as well as to signal the upcoming general strike in transportation. The ubiquitous riot police responded by rounding up over 450 protesters, but the cops have since been stymied in trying to crack down on the entire leadership of the KCTWU in further retaliation. A ban on labor assemblies has been put into effect, and it is unclear what striking workers will have to meet with when industrial action commences.
Another target of reprisals from the May 16 rally has been the student movement. South Korean universities have long been a bastion of resistance, though the student movement is hardly immune to general downturns in the movements, its power and numbers greatly diminished from the watershed of the late 1980s and early 1990s. Under fire in particular are members of the student wing of the Democratic Labor Party and the revolutionary socialist group All Together.
South Korea is reeling from the economic crisis––but unlike in the U.S., auto, construction (link in Korean), and transport workers are responding to layoffs, union busting and increasing precarity with strike action. Thus, we can expect an intensification of the repressive tactics described above. However, let’s hope that activists and organizers in South Korea––the site of the largest protest movement in the world last year––up the ante in response, in a manner that befits Park and numerous other fallen comrades and not the disgraced ex-President Roh.













a spectre is haunting in s. korea
the two suicides look miles apart, but they share roots: both are committed by victims of the current administration's purging of everything that looks "left" in their standards. the administration is expressing its deepest regret and vowing to cope with the following events (mostly related to the funeral procession) with utmost respect and high protocol. but the police have been blocking/containing mourners who had voluntarily set up ad hoc services for mourners in the city center. this has led to scuffles and outcries, both online and offline. enormous steam is building up among the masses. with mounting grievances under the current administration, south korea needs only a small spark for something big to blow up. a big showdown seems almost inevitable.
at the current moment, ex-president roh's death is overshadowing all other social issues (and will for a predictable time), including labor issues and the continuing yongsan struggle. but those issues can (and should) be bridged. i only hope for the active participation of labor and the leftist bloc in the construction of a broad united front. the importance of the two progressive parties in the national assembly is paramount. should they be able to show leadership and bridge the two events + the two constituents, this may turn into an opportune moment for the s. korean leftist movements in the long run.
Suicide, Shame, Martyrdom, Durkheim- oh my!
An interesting article providing a bit of context to the suicide of Roh Moo Hyun and insight into the social forces at work in today's South Korea.
In what ways are the unions resisting in auto other than strikes? If it's strikes alone, can't the company simply use it as a free shutdown, a time which to avoid labor and other costs associated with operating the factory, and to adjust the level of commodities that they have in circulation?
What trend does the revolutionary socialist group "All Together" represent? Who is their base? Students? Why does the government single them out?
Thanks for writing this article. If Durkheim was as revelvant I would have probably been a sociologist.
It's an good article
I agree with your opinion about "Once earning the ire of just about everyone, Roh may become an accidental martyr". Now in South Korea, activists debate about mourning Roh. Some leftists commemorate him. I think they don't remember Roh's works such as FTA, deployment of Korean troops to Iraq.
I'll answer some questions above.
"All Together" is trotskist group in my opinion. Mybe some people in them deny it. They are not only students. They are made of various people. Several years ago, the group was independent group, but now the group is member of the Democratic Labor Party.
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