The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Jailed S. Korean leader draws small but growing protests

- By Kim Tong-Hyung

A small but growing army of often elderly men and women regularly swing South Korean banners and scream outrage at the jailing of a woman they consider their spiritual mother: disgraced former President Park Geun-hye.

They lash out against politician­s, judges and a government they never wanted, against media they accuse of lying to keep leftists, traitors and opportunis­ts in power. The nation’s only way forward, they say, is the release and redemption of Park, the daughter of a slain anti-communist dictator and conservati­ve icon.

“What was it that she did so wrong? Why is there so much hate against her?” a tearful Jang Hyeong-ryeol, 48, said outside the courthouse where Park appeared Friday. “This country is not normal. It has lost all objectivit­y. It’s dying.”

Park was stripped of her presidenti­al powers and jailed in March in South Korea’s biggest corruption scandal in decades. She could receive a lengthy prison term in a trial expected to reach a verdict in mid-October.

Pro-Park demonstrat­ions remain tiny relative to earlier protests that demanded her removal from office and brought millions into the streets. Her supporters refuse to accept the possibilit­y that Park may not be the selfless daughter of South Korea she has always portrayed herself to be.

The fury is the latest reminder of how deeply South Koreans are split along ideologica­l and generation­al lines, the result of a longsimmer­ing standoff with rival North Korea and the lingering fallout from the conservati­ve military dictatorsh­ips that ran the country until the late 1980s.

Thousands of Park’s supporters marched in the capital, Seoul, on Saturday in their biggest gathering in months, waving South Korean and U.S. flags. They shouted for Park’s release and urged a “dying” South Korea to “wake up.”

The latest rally was a reaction to a court ruling Friday that sentenced Samsung heir Lee Jae-yong, the country’s most powerful businessma­n, to five years in prison for crimes including offering bribes to Park. The protesters fear the ruling will work against Park in her own criminal trial.

“South Korea’s judicial system has committed suicide,” Jung Mi-hong, a former telev ision anchorwoma­n and one of the rally’s organizers, shouted into a microphone as she stood atop a van. “We need to take a stand against the North Korea-sympathizi­ng leftists who threw a person in jail when she didn’t even take a penny in bribes, and show them once and for all who’s in control.”

Despite a heavy police presence, some protesters fought with pedestrian­s, but there were no reports of injuries. About 8,000 people protested, according to a police officer at the scene who didn’t want to be named because he wasn’t authorized to speak to reporters.

Three people died amid violent clashes between Park’s supporters and police on March 10 after Seoul’s Constituti­onal Court formally removed her from office.

The angst is more than just political.

South Korea has a decaying employment market, a widening gap between rich and poor and arguably the worst elderly poverty rate among developed economies. Some experts see the pro-Park demonstrat­ions as driven by struggling older people who feel marginaliz­ed and cling to memories of the 1970s and ‘80s, when jobs were easier to get under the aggressive industrial­ization polices of authoritar­ian leaders including Park’s father.

The younger Park, 65, enjoyed a meteoric career as a politician before being elected the country’s first female president in 2012. She convincing­ly beat her liberal rival, current President Moon Jae-in. Her base was conservati­ve older voters who consider her father, Park Chung-hee, a hero who lifted the nation from the devastatio­n of the 1950-53 Korean War and rescued millions f rom poverty i n the ‘60s and ‘70s, despite a brutal record of civilian oppression.

Park Geun-hye’s image of selflessne­ss for her country collapsed for many amid allegation­s that she colluded with a longtime confidante to take tens of millions of dollars from companies in bribes and through extortion, and allowed the friend to manipulate state affairs from the shadows.

But to her remaining supporters, Park remains the wronged “mother of the nation.”

Kim Jeong-hi, 71, said Park couldn’t have taken bribes because she was “raised and educated by Park Chung-hee.”

Park’s supporters feel North Korea adds urgency to their cause.

Many of them call Moon, who took office in May after winning a presidenti­al by-election to replace Park, a “North Korea-sympathizi­ng leftist” who’s persecutin­g Park because of a political vendetta. Their rallies often rail against North Korea’s expanding nuclear weapons program, the policies of liberal government­s in Seoul that sought rapprochem­ent with Pyongyang in the 2000s, and Moon’s desire to reach out to the North despite a flurry of missile tests.

 ?? LEE JIN-MAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A photo of former South Korean President Park Geun-hye is seen with letters reading “Innocence, Release” on a supporter’s head band during a rally to call for her release in Seoul, South Korea.
LEE JIN-MAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A photo of former South Korean President Park Geun-hye is seen with letters reading “Innocence, Release” on a supporter’s head band during a rally to call for her release in Seoul, South Korea.

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