The Borneo Post (Sabah)

South Korea retracts guidelines on look-alike K-pop celebritie­s

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SEOUL: Government guidelines aimed at promoting more diversity in South Korea’s Kpop world have been withdrawn after critics said they amounted to state censorship of a booming industry.

The guidelines issued last week complained that K-pop stars looked too alike, saying “the problem of ... uniformity among singers is serious”, and noting most idols were thin and wore identical make-up and skimpy outfits.

South Korea’s K-pop world is a multi-billion-dollar business, but so too is the plastic surgery industry in the image-obsessed country, and tens of thousands of people go under the knife every year in pursuit of the perfect look.

The guidelines from the ministry of gender equality drew criticism online — and also from a lawmaker who said it was reminiscen­t of censorship during the country’s period of authoritar­ian government which ended in 1980s. Demanding the state apologises, Lawmaker Ha Tae-keung said the guidelines were a “totalitari­an and unconstitu­tional idea”.

Until the late 1980s, censorship permeated every part of South Korean society and the state controlled everything from what could be screened on TV to the length of a man’s hair.

“It is truly surprising that South Korea is doing what communist dictatorsh­ips, like China and North Korea, would consider doing,” one online critic said.

In the wake of criticism, the ministry said Tuesday it would withdraw the recommenda­tion after it had “caused unnecessar­y confusion”.

But it added it had neither the intention nor authority to control TV production and it had simply tried to “prevent media, which has big influence on people’s daily life, from underminin­g human rights or fostering discrimina­tion unintentio­nally”.

 ??  ?? K-pop group SixBomb members posing for a photo during an interview in Seoul. —AFP photo
K-pop group SixBomb members posing for a photo during an interview in Seoul. —AFP photo

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