The Korea Times

Confrontat­ional YouTubers disturb justice minister Han at his home

- By Lee Yeon-woo yanu@koreatimes.co.kr

Left-wing YouTube channel “Citizen Press The Tamsa” has found itself at the center of controvers­y after its staffers tried to confront Justice Minister Han Dong-hoon at his home on Sunday afternoon.

Comparing them to “lawless gangs,” Minster Han has pressed charges as the YouTubers entered the building without permission.

Han claimed that the YouTube channel The Tamsa collaborat­es with politician­s and they are doing what politician­s in the past hired gangsters to do. “The Democratic Party of Korea and The Tamsa are partners and they team up with each other to do certain things. Even when what they had said turns out to be false, they never apologize,” the justice minister said.

Five members of the YouTube channel claiming they are journalist­s appeared at the front door to Han’s apartment without making an appointmen­t. They livestream­ed their attempts to confront the minister on their channel.

One of them can be heard to ask, “Is Minister Han there?“Another said, “We are The Tamsa and we came to report on you.”

While they claimed they were there to report on the minister, they also made it clear that the purpose of their “unannounce­d visit” was retaliatio­n, after police conducted a search and seizure operation earlier that day at the home of one of The Tamsa’s reporters accused of stalking Han. “I hope you can realize how we felt when our reporter’s home was raided,” one of them said.

Earlier, Han had sought to take legal action against The Tamsa as one of its reporters had been following his vehicle while he was commuting over the course of one month. The reporter and the channel denied the stalking allegation­s, claiming it was simply an act of collecting informatio­n.

The members who visited Han’s home called out to the minister through his front door several times.

They tried to open the front door and handled a parcel left out front to check the recipient label. They left after receiving no response from anyone inside.

Later it was known that Han’s wife and child were at home at the time.

It is not the first time that The Tamsa and Han have been at odds with each other.

In October, Rep. Kim Eui-kyeom of the main opposition Democratic Party (DPK) accused Han of having a late-night drinking party at a luxury bar in southern Seoul’s Cheongdam-dong in July, with President Yoon Suk-yeol and 30 lawyers from the country’s top law firm. Kim said he had been cooperatin­g with The Tamsa.

The accusation turned out to be false, however, as the cellist who had originally said she witnessed the party later testified to police that her original story had been a lie.

The aggressive behavior of the YouTubers has caused a stir.

Unlike legacy media outlets that are regulated under the Broadcasti­ng

Act, an increasing number of personal broadcaste­rs operating YouTube channels are regulated only with respect to the portrayal of pornograph­ic or other illegal content.

“Imagine every stalker in Korea making their own YouTube channel and breaking into other people’s homes and claiming they are covering news. Do you think that would be accepted?” Oh Yoon-sung, a criminal justice professor at Soon Chun Hyang University, said to The Korea Times.

“If those actions can be justified in the name of news, then every media outlet in Korea can make excuses for such wrongdoing­s. It’s ridiculous,” he said. “Freedom of speech can be protected only when it is exercised within legal boundaries.”

He added The Tamsa’s actions not only border on stalking but also trespassin­g.

Kim Geun-sik, a professor of political science at Kyungnam University and a former lawmaker, also said the YouTubers went too far.

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