The Hindu - International

Green onion takes the spotlight in South Korean vote, gets banned from poll stations

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One might have expected foreign policy, the economy, or Kim Jongun’s nukes to top the agenda ahead of South Korea’s crucial parliament­ary election on Wednesday.

Instead, it’s green onions on the minds of voters and election officials, who have banned the humble allium from polling stations over fears of electoral interferen­ce.

Used widely in South Korean cooking, including for kimchi, green onions are dominating discussion­s ahead of the April 10 vote after an apparent gaffe by the President sparked online outcry and turned the vegetable into an opposition rallying cry.

‘Reasonable price’

It all started on March 18, when President Yoon Suk Yeol — whose party is trying to win back control of the 300seat parliament — visited a grocery store in the capital Seoul, officially to check consumer prices, with food inflation a key concern ahead of the polls.

Looking at a bunch of green onions, Mr. Yoon said: “I have been to many markets and 875 won ($0.65) for this is a reasonable price.” But green onions typically sell for three or four times that sum, and local media have reported that the store had specially discounted the vegetable ahead of the President’s visit.

Mr. Yoon’s comments sparked an avalanche of online memes, with the Opposition quick to claim the episode showed the 63yearold politician was out of touch. Opposition leaders soon began brandishin­g green onions at campaign rallies.

After early voting started on Friday, people also began posting photos of themselves holding green onions at polling stations after they cast their ballots, adding hashtags like #earlyvoted­one #greenonion­s875won.

Early voting turnout has been high, official figures show, with some 13.8 million people out of a total 44.2 million eligible voters having already cast their votes.

‘Election interferen­ce’

But soon emerged, after the trend South Korea’s

National Election Commission (NEC) banned green onions from polling stations, citing concerns of “election interferen­ce”.

Green onions will not be allowed in the vicinity of voting booths because they could “interfere with the election,” the NEC said in a statement on Saturday.

“While people’s expression of political views should be respected to the maximum level, using a certain item as a means of expression other than for their original purpose has great potential to affect the election,” it said.

Meme galore

The NEC’s move has been widely mocked online, with more onion memes going viral on Koreanlang­uage social media over the weekend.

It has also set off a fresh rush to find green oniontheme­d memorabili­a to bring to polling stations.

“I was not initially thinking about the green onion issue, but after I heard about the ban, I bought a green onion hairband and I’m determined to wear it on election day,” 36yearold voter Hyun Jung said.

She said the NEC’s ban on green onions at polling stations was “too arbitrary to accept” and was “condescend­ing” to voters like her. “Should they also ban red or blue clothes then?” she asked, referring to the colours that represent Mr. Yoon’s People Power Party and the Opposition Democratic Party, respective­ly.

“Or what about a Dior bag?” she added, referencin­g a controvers­y over Mr. Yoon’s wife, first lady Kim Keon Hee, apparently accepting an expensive luxury bag as a gift. Adverts quickly began circulatin­g on Koreanlang­uage sites offering hyperreali­stic green onion headbands and keychains, giving interested voters a way to get around the ban.

While green onions themselves are restricted, “it is up to election officials on site to determine” whether green oniontheme­d items are allowed, an NEC official said.

Political analyst Yum Seungyul said that the NEC’s decision seemed a little hasty.

“The NEC’s ban is part of its discretion­ary role in the electoral process, but it comes across as too easily made,” Mr. Yum said.

 ?? AFP ?? Calm before storm: South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol at a grocery store in Seoul that sells green onions on March 18.
AFP Calm before storm: South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol at a grocery store in Seoul that sells green onions on March 18.

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