The Borneo Post (Sabah)

S. Korea vows tougher laws on sexual abuse amid #MeToo wave

We all had a big shock, and there’s a higher consciousn­ess now that women cannot experience such terrible things anymore.

- Chung Hyun-back, Minister of Gender Equality and Family

SEOUL: South Korea vowed yesterday to strengthen laws against sexual assault and implement measures to reduce harassment as the #MeToo campaign sweeps the country and sparks calls for meaningful action to tackle sexual abuse.

Allegation­s of sexual assault against a rising star in the ruling Democratic Party, levelled by an aide in a dramatic television interview earlier this week marked a new high for the #MeToo movement in South Korea.

An Hee-jung, who had been seen as a future candidate for the presidency, quit his post as a provincial governor and announced his retirement from politics having taken responsibi­lity in a Facebook post for actions which police are now investigat­ing.

His is the latest and most high profile in a lengthenin­g list of scandals involving politician­s and prominent figures from the country’s religious community, and entertainm­ent and literary worlds.

“We all had a big shock, and there’s a higher consciousn­ess now that women cannot experience such terrible things anymore,” Chung Hyun-back, Minister of Gender Equality and Family told a press conference on Internatio­nal Women’s Day.

Chung credited the #MeToo campaign against sexual assault and harassment for bringing the issue to the surface in a South Korea’s male-dominated society.

“The #MeToo movement is an event where boiling rage has finally erupted against genderbias­ed power relations and gender inequality, which have been a long, deep-rooted evil of our society,” the minister said.

In response to mounting public outrage, the government said it plans to extend the statute of limitation­s for power-based sexual abuse cases, and the labour ministry would set up a process for victims to anonymousl­y report sexual harassment at their workplaces.

The government was also considerin­g toughening criminal punishment for employers found negligent in addressing sexual misdeeds, the ministry of gender equality said in a statement.

“We are focusing on sexual harassment and violence based on power relations,” Chung said. — Reuters

 ??  ?? People attend a protest as a part of the #MeToo movement on the Internatio­nal Women’s Day in Seoul, South Korea. — Reuters photo
People attend a protest as a part of the #MeToo movement on the Internatio­nal Women’s Day in Seoul, South Korea. — Reuters photo

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