ADVERTISEMENT
The Sun Nigeria
  • National
  • Columns
    • Broken Tongues
    • Capital Matters
    • Diabetes Corner
    • Duro Onabule
    • Femi Adesina
    • Frank Talk
    • Funke Egbemode
    • Insights
    • Kalu Leadership Series
    • Kunle Solaja
    • Offside Musings
    • PressClips
    • Public Sphere
    • Ralph Egbu
    • Shola Oshunkeye
    • Sideview
    • The Flipside – Eric Osagie
    • Tola Adeniyi
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • The Sun TV
  • Sporting Sun
  • The Sun Foundation
No Result
View All Result
  • National
  • Columns
    • Broken Tongues
    • Capital Matters
    • Diabetes Corner
    • Duro Onabule
    • Femi Adesina
    • Frank Talk
    • Funke Egbemode
    • Insights
    • Kalu Leadership Series
    • Kunle Solaja
    • Offside Musings
    • PressClips
    • Public Sphere
    • Ralph Egbu
    • Shola Oshunkeye
    • Sideview
    • The Flipside – Eric Osagie
    • Tola Adeniyi
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • The Sun TV
  • Sporting Sun
  • The Sun Foundation
No Result
View All Result
The Sun Nigeria
No Result
View All Result
ADVERTISEMENT
Home World News

Past South Korean gov’ts blamed for abuses, deaths at facility

24th August 2022
in World News
0
Past South Korean gov’ts blamed for abuses, deaths at facility

Park Sun-yi, left, a victim of Brothers Home, weeps during a press conference at the Truth and Reconciliation Commission office in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, Aug. 24, 2022. The commission has found the country's past military governments responsible for atrocities committed at Brothers Home, a state-funded vagrants' facility where thousands were enslaved and abused from the 1960s to 1980s. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

(AP)

South Korea’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission has found the country’s past military governments responsible for atrocities committed at Brothers Home, a state-funded vagrants’ facility where thousands were enslaved and abused from the 1960s to 1980s.

The landmark report on Wednesday came 35 years after a prosecutor first exposed the horrors at the facility in the southern port city of Busan and details an attempted cover-up of incriminating evidence that would have confirmed a state-sponsored crime.

The commission’s chairperson, Jung Geun-sik, urged South Korea’s current government to issue a formal apology to survivors and explore ways to ease their suffering as he announced the initial results of its investigation into Brothers, including extreme cases of forced labor, violence and deaths.

The commission said the violence and abuse at Brothers were even worse than previously known. It said its examination of records so far point to at least 657 deaths at Brothers, which was higher than the previously known tally of 513 between 1975 and 1986 documented in the facility’s records.

The commission also confirmed that Busan police randomly seized people off the streets to send them to Brothers, regardless of whether they had easily identifiable homes or families. They often allowed Brothers employees, who toured the city in trucks, to do the kidnapping themselves.

Brothers, run by late owner Park In-keun and his family, also embezzled the wages of thousands of inmates who were forced into slave labor, which involved construction work both at Brothers and off-site and in factories making clothing, ballpoint pens and fishing hooks.

So far, no one has been held accountable for hundreds of deaths, rapes and beatings at Brothers.

Jung acknowledged that the recommendations the commission makes to the government aren’t binding but said its findings could be used as evidence for survivors if they pursue lawsuits for damages against the government or any remaining Brothers stakeholders. The commission did not directly recommend the pursuit of criminal charges.

Read also: Past South Korean gov’ts blamed for abuses, deaths at facility

The commission’s report was based on its investigation into the cases of 191 individuals, who were among 544 Brothers survivors who have so far filed applications. The commission plans to produce more reports as it continues its investigations.

Jung said the commission also plans to look into the foreign adoptions of Brothers children, which The Associated Press first confirmed in 2019. Through documents obtained from officials, lawmakers or through freedom of information requests, the AP found direct evidence that 19 children were adopted out of Brothers between 1979 and 1986, and indirect evidence suggesting at least 51 more adoptions.

From the 1960s to 1980s, South Korean military dictators ordered roundups to beautify the streets. Thousands — including homeless and disabled people, as well as children — were snatched off the streets and brought to facilities where they were detained and forced to work.

In interviews with dozens of former Brothers inmates, many said that as children, they were brought to the facility after police officers kidnapped them, and that their parents had no idea of their whereabouts.

Many inmates were enslaved, raped and, in hundreds of cases, beaten to death or left to die, their bodies dumped in the woods, according to dozens of interviews with survivors and a review of an extensive range of government and Brothers documents obtained by the AP.

The commission said the facility’s death records describe many of the victims as already dead upon arrival at hospitals, which it said either indicates dismal health conditions at the overcrowded facility or an attempt to conceal deaths caused by beatings and torture.

The commission also highlighted an extreme case of a former Brothers inmate who reunited with his relatives nearly five decades after he landed at the facility. The man, identified only by his surname Seol, was grabbed from a Busan train station and locked up at Brothers sometime around 1974 and 1975. He was transferred years later to an orphanage, which registered him as an orphan, soon after his family registered him as dead following years of futile searches. Seol reunited with his relatives in June last year, following the commission’s investigation into his family background.

The roundups intensified as South Korea began preparing to bid for and host the 1988 Summer Olympics. Brothers, a mountainside compound in Busan, was the largest of these facilities and had around 4,000 inmates when its horrors were exposed in 1987.

Kim Yong Won, the former prosecutor who exposed Brothers, told the AP that high-ranking officials blocked his investigation under direction from the office of military strongman Chun Doo-hwan, who feared an embarrassing international incident on the eve of the Olympics.

The commission began investigating the Brothers abuse in May last year, following a years-long struggle for redemption by Brothers survivors, many of whom who are struggling with financial and health problems.

David

David

Sun News Online team

Related Posts

5 killed in confrontation in SW Pakistan
World

5 killed in confrontation in SW Pakistan

3rd February 2023
Missing schoolboy died by suicide – police
World

Missing schoolboy died by suicide – police

2nd February 2023
UN condemns deadly mosque attack in Pakistan
World News

UN condemns deadly mosque attack in Pakistan

31st January 2023
Next Post
New Zealand soldier killed in Ukraine while on leave

New Zealand soldier killed in Ukraine while on leave

Jailed Najib fell mightily from peak of Malaysian politics

Malaysia: Jailed Najib fell mightily from peak of Malaysian politics

Tropical Storm Ma-on barrels towards Hong Kong, Guangdong province

Tropical Storm Ma-on barrels towards Hong Kong, Guangdong province

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Highlights

I set my wife ablaze for failing to serve me food on time – Suspect

Wike to Buhari: New Naira implementation policy is anti-people

Atiku alleges plot to incite Nigerians, disrupt polls

New Naira note: Buhari, Emefiele, stop inflicting suffering on Nigerians — Oluwo of Iwo

Anambra police repel another gunmen attack on police station, recover bombs, others

Scarcity: Taskforce storms petrol stations in Delta, warns against hoarding

Trending

Cash shortage: Give me seven days to decide, Buhari tells Nigerians
Cover

Cash shortage: Give me seven days to decide, Buhari tells Nigerians

4th February 2023
0

• Doubts banks’ commitment to policy’s success  • Governors appeal for new and old currency to co-exist...

Aare Gani Adams appoints new aides

We haven’t endorsed any candidate –OPC

4th February 2023
CBN begs Nigerians over scarcity of Naira notes

CBN begs Nigerians over scarcity of Naira notes

4th February 2023
I set my wife ablaze for failing to serve me food on time – Suspect

I set my wife ablaze for failing to serve me food on time – Suspect

4th February 2023
PDP halts presidential campaign, intensifies efforts to pacify Wike, others

Wike to Buhari: New Naira implementation policy is anti-people

4th February 2023
ADVERTISEMENT

Follow us on social media:

Latest News

  • Cash shortage: Give me seven days to decide, Buhari tells Nigerians
  • We haven’t endorsed any candidate –OPC
  • CBN begs Nigerians over scarcity of Naira notes
  • I set my wife ablaze for failing to serve me food on time – Suspect
  • Wike to Buhari: New Naira implementation policy is anti-people
  • Atiku alleges plot to incite Nigerians, disrupt polls
  • New Naira note: Buhari, Emefiele, stop inflicting suffering on Nigerians — Oluwo of Iwo
  • Anambra police repel another gunmen attack on police station, recover bombs, others
  • Scarcity: Taskforce storms petrol stations in Delta, warns against hoarding
  • Voting for APC, PDP is like romancing with the devil- Majasan
  • New Naira notes scarcity forces students, soldiers clash at UNIBEN
  • Fuel Scarcity: Adeleke sets up special monitoring team in Osun
  • Nasarawa killings: Ortom will not be muzzled into silence – Tambaya
  • 2023: Imo PDP accuses Uzodimma of engaging in alleged vote buying scheme
  • Group tackles Atiku for allegedly playing politics with naira swap
  • We’ll deliver Tinubu, Nentawe, APC candidates in 2023 – Gagdi, Plateau Reps member
  • El-rufai an anarchist, shouldn’t be taken serious, group tells Nigerians
  • Borussia – Freiburg: preview by 1xBet
  • Police rescue 4 remaining pupils abducted from Nasarawa school 
  • I will not be deterred by antics of detractors – Bishop Anagbe

Categories

  • Abuja Metro
  • Anambra Watch
  • Arts
  • Broken Tongues
  • Business
  • Business Week
  • Cartoons
  • Citizen Joe
  • Columns
  • Cover
  • Culture
  • Duro Onabule
  • Editorial
  • Education Review
  • Effect
  • Elections
  • Entertainment
  • Events
  • Features
  • Femi Adesina
  • Food & Drinks
  • Frank Talk
  • Funke Egbemode
  • Gallery
  • Global Square by Kenneth Okonkwo
  • Health
  • Insights
  • Kalu Leadership Series
  • Kunle Solaja
  • Kunle Solaja
  • Letters
  • Lifeline
  • Lifestyle
  • Literary Review
  • Marketing Matters
  • Muiz Banire
  • National
  • News
  • Offside Musings
  • Opinion
  • oriental news
  • Politics
  • Press Release
  • PressClips
  • Public Sphere
  • Ralph Egbu
  • Shola Oshunkeye
  • Sideview
  • South-west Magazine
  • Sponsored Post
  • Sporting Sun
  • Sports
  • Sun Girl
  • Tea Time
  • The Flipside – Eric Osagie
  • The Sun Awards Live
  • The Sun TV
  • Thoughts & Talks
  • Time Out
  • Today's cover
  • Tola Adeniyi
  • Travel
  • Travel & Tourism
  • Trending
  • TSWeekend
  • Turf Game
  • Uncategorized
  • Updates
  • Views from Abroad
  • Voices
  • World
  • World News
  • About Us
  • Paper Ad Rate
  • Online Ad Rate
  • Change of Name
  • The Team
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

© 2019 The Sun Nigeria - Managed by Netsera.

No Result
View All Result
  • National
  • Columns
    • Broken Tongues
    • Capital Matters
    • Diabetes Corner
    • Duro Onabule
    • Femi Adesina
    • Frank Talk
    • Funke Egbemode
    • Insights
    • Kalu Leadership Series
    • Kunle Solaja
    • Offside Musings
    • PressClips
    • Public Sphere
    • Ralph Egbu
    • Shola Oshunkeye
    • Sideview
    • The Flipside – Eric Osagie
    • Tola Adeniyi
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • The Sun TV
  • Sporting Sun
  • The Sun Foundation

© 2019 The Sun Nigeria - Managed by Netsera.