The Daily Telegraph

Threats to Korean women for spycam revolt

- By Nicola Smith and Junho Lee in Seoul

ORGANISERS of South Korea’s biggest women’s rights protests ever have been forced to hide their identities because of threats.

The group told The Daily Telegraph that they had been threatened with acid attacks and risked losing their jobs because of their opposition to sinister “spycam” videos and restrictio­ns to their reproducti­ve rights.

The Women’s March for Justice group said: “Women can only survive by maintainin­g their anonymity because Korean society is run by men.”

The conservati­ve society of Asia’s fourth largest economy has seen growing protests against sexist behaviour since the start of the year after a female public prosecutor went public with her allegation­s of workplace sexual harassment, adding a Korean voice to the global “Metoo” movement.

Last week, a tightening of anti-abortion enforcemen­t became the trigger for the latest protests led by women.

However, it is a boom in illegal “spycam” videos, filmed secretly in lavatories, changing rooms and other public places and posted as pornograph­y, that has provoked the most fury.

In early August, more than 40,000 women took to the streets of Seoul to take action over what has become a major invasion of privacy in daily life.

“The fear towards spycams that many Korean women have felt has now turned to anger,” said the organisers.

But as South Korean women revolt, they are also paying the consequenc­es, according to the group.

They said: “Men were live-streaming the event on the internet by shooting videos of the protesters’ faces.

“There were people on the internet claiming they will attack the protests with acid. There was even a case where a man followed a protester to her house, screaming about why she was taking part in such protests.”

The number of reported spycam crimes has surged from around 1,100 in 2010 to more than 6,500 last year.

The group said some women had been driven to suicide by such exposure, and the police and government had not addressed the problem seriously enough.

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