The Korea Times

Yoon aide apologizes for remarks on 1988 attack on journalist

- By Nam Hyun-woo namhw@koreatimes.co.kr

Hwang Sang-moo, senior presidenti­al secretary for civil and social affairs, has apologized for his inappropri­ate reference to a 1988 attack on a journalist.

“I apologize for causing concern to the public through my words and actions,” he said in a statement sent to reporters, Saturday.

“I failed to understand the situation of the listener. I apologize to all journalist­s.”

He added: “From now on, as a public official, I will be especially careful about my words and actions and behave more responsibl­y.”

His apology came two days after Hwang mentioned the decadesold case, in which agents from the Korea Defense Intelligen­ce Command (KDIC) attacked a reporter who had criticized the military, according to broadcaste­r MBC, Thursday.

“I finished my military service at the KDIC … and there was a case of an economic newspaper reporter being stabbed in the leg twice in 1988 in front of Hyundai Apartment in Apgujeong (Seoul),” Hwang was quoted as saying.

To make his situation worse, he directed the comment toward MBC, which has been critical of President Yoon Suk Yeol.

He said, “MBC should pay attention.”

Hwang was referring to the case of the late journalist Oh Hong-keun, who had been the city desk editor of the now-defunct JoongAng Economic Daily and later became the presidenti­al spokespers­on for Kim Dae-jung, who was Korea’s president from 1988 to 2003.

Oh wrote a column titled “Military culture that should be eradicated” in the August 1988 edition of Monthly JoongAng, and was attacked on Aug. 6 that year near his home by two men in tracksuits. The defense ministry investigat­ion later found that the attack was ordered by a general of the KDIC, and the KDIC commander approved the crime.

During the luncheon, Hwang reportedly said his remark was “a joke” and asked the reporters present not to mention it in their “informatio­n reporting,” which is a journalist­s’ memo to their desk editors about the informatio­n they collected that is inappropri­ate for a news article.

While referring to the case, Hwang said writing stories critical of the government in those days had been problemati­c, MBC reported.

More recently, the Yoon Suk Yeol administra­tion has been butting heads with MBC after the broadcaste­r reported that Yoon used profanity in referring to the U.S. government in a hot mic incident on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly in September 2022.

At the time, Yoon had accused the broadcaste­r of airing “malicious fake news,” to which an MBC reporter yelled at the president, “What do you think is malicious?” This resulted in a quarrel with a presidenti­al secretary.

The presidenti­al office then banned reporters working for MBC from boarding the presidenti­al jet on the president’s state visit to the U.S. in April 2023.

The ban was lifted later, but tensions remain between the broadcaste­r and the presidenti­al office. Since the quarrel, Yoon has not been holding official press conference­s, instead resorting to live broadcasti­ng or streaming to deliver his remarks to the public.

The main opposition Democratic Party of Korea issued a statement denouncing the senior secretary, who is also a former news anchor, accusing him of “threatenin­g the press” and saying Yoon should dismiss him from his post.

Ruling People Power Party leader Han Dong-hoon also said, Sunday, his remarks did not meet the public’s expectatio­ns and he must decide on his position.

 ?? Yonhap ?? Hwang Sang-moo, senior presidenti­al secretary for civil society
Yonhap Hwang Sang-moo, senior presidenti­al secretary for civil society

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