A recent
news item from South Korea received almost no traction in the global news media
and no mention whatsoever (that I can find) in the United States mainstream
media.
According
to an article on the English version of Hankyoreh (translation - The Korean Nation), an
independent, shareholder-owned South Korea daily newspaper, we find the
following:
According
to the news item, on February 8, 2018, Seoul's High Court ruled on February 8,
2018 acknowledged that South Korea had actively encouraged prostitution in
military camp towns adjacent to U.S. military operations as follows:
"According to official Ministry of Health
and Welfare documents, [the state] actively encouraged the women in the
military camptowns engage in prostitution to allow foreign troops to ‘relax’
and ‘enjoy sexual services’ with them.
“In the process, [the state] operated and
managed the military camp towns with the intention or purpose of contributing
to maintenance of a military alliance essential for national security by
‘promoting and boosting morale’ among foreign troops while mobilizing
prostitutes for economic goals such as acquisition of foreign currency.
The state actively encouraged and justified
acts of prostitution within the military camp towns through patriotic education
praising prostitutes as ‘patriots who bring in foreign currency."
The first time that a South Korean judge
acknowledged that South Korea was responsible for prostitution at United States
military camp towns, commercial zones that were set up around U.S. bases in
Korea, was back in January 2017 when Judge Jeon Ji-won of the Central District
Court in Seoul admitted that "a serious human rights violation" had
taken place and that "it should never have happened and should never be
repeated".
Let's look at some background information on
South Korea's state-sanctioned prostitution with United States military
personnel. A
fascinating paper by Na-Young Lee and Jae Kyung Lee entitled "History
of U.S. Camptown Prostitution in South Korea and Challenges of Women's Oral
History" takes a closer look at this aspect of Korean history
which has been forced out of Korea's consciousness. According to
the paper, Korean people have
"...long treated them as pariah, dirty
trash, and/or fallen women, calling them highly derogatory names such as
yanggalbo (Western whore) and yanggongju (Western princess)..."
First, let's put the legacy of the 1950 to 1953
Korean War into perspective. After the
war which ended in a cease-fire rather than a peace treaty, there was extreme
privation and degradation in South Korea.
South Korea's economy was in tatters, facing approximately $3 billion in
property damage and destruction of much of the nation's infrastructure. The only stable legacy of the Korean War was
the establishment of camptowns which formed adjacent to U.S. military
bases. After the United States and the
Republic of Korea signed the Mutual Defense Treaty in November 1954, military
prostitution began to be organized into a "R and R" (rest and
relaxation) system as part of system of 18 camptowns that developed a symbiotic
relationship with nearby American military bases. As a result of the crushing poverty in South
Korea, many women who had lost their entire families and who suffered from both
poverty and hunger, made the difficult decision to turn to prostitution with
U.S. military personnel in order to survive.
Despite the fact that prostitution was illegal, the South Korean
government did little to actually enforce its own laws out of fear of losing
their American protectors. The women who
were referred to as "comfort women" were taught to "live with
pride" and were labelled as "personal ambassadors" by government
officials despite the fact that they were treated as pariahs by South Korean
society. Former comfort women state
that the South Korean government sponsored classes teaching them rudimentary English
and etiquette so that they would be more attractive to American soldiers. Camptown prostitution flourished into the
1960s as the Korean government, a military junta under Park Chung Hee, shifted
from a tacit permission to permissive promotion policy regarding camptown
prostitution; this led to the further development of business opportunities
associated with adjacency to a U.S. military base. The rapid development of camptowns turned
farm villages into commercial districts with clubs, bars and other enterprises
catering to American soldiers. In the
1960s, research shows that there was one South Korean prostitute for every two
or three U.S. soldiers and, in some cases, women in camptowns reported that the
number of women was almost the same as the number of soldiers.
The camptown economy was very important to the
South Korean government in the post-war period; it enabled South Korea to earn
foreign currency with U.S. troops contributing roughly 25 percent of South
Korea's Gross National Product in the 1960s.
In 1969 alone, roughly 46,000 Korean camptown workers earned $70
million.
In July 1969, the Nixon doctrine signalled that
the United States would withdraw one-third of its troops by the end of
1971. Koreans were extremely concerned
that the United States would abandon it entirely and that Communism North Korea
would invade once again. In the period
between 1970 and 1980, the Park government changed its philosophy and actively
supported the camptown system. In 1970,
one study from Kyonggi Province estimated that the comfort women earned enough
money to support an average of four family members; this meant that the
withdrawal of even a single U.S. soldier would have wide-ranging negative
impacts on the Korean economy. This
sense of crisis caused the Park government to classify camptown prostitution as
an integral part of South Korea's economic growth and national defense. In 1971, Park established the Base Community
Clean-up Committee (BCCUC), a committee with a policy of
"purification" for U.S. military camp areas in a move to prevent venereal
diseases from spreading among U.S. soldiers.
Women that tested positive for STDs were interred in segregated
facilities and were administered penicillin without their consent as part of
South Korea's attempts to woo American military protection. Here is a quote from the paper:
"Called for patriotic service through
selling sex, women became subject to intensive government control and
indoctrinated in intensive education regarding “good conduct” and proper
“etiquette” to induce more G.I.s. In the so-called “education class” held in
either at local government office or at health center, the importance to
improve women’s behavior and to prevent VD was emphasized."
Women were forced to take a STD test up to
twice a week and to carry a STD identification card which could be spot-checked
by Korean authorities. Women who were
selected for random STD checks and who did not have a health card were fined
and if they could not afford to pay the fine, they were imprisoned for five to
seven days. Women who tested positive
for STDs were imprisoned until they had recovered completely and were
administered penicillin without their consent as part of South Korea's attempts
to retain American military protection..
The camptown prostitution system is still in
existence but the majority of prostitutes today are from nations other than
South Korea, with the majority now coming from the Philippines.
In June 2014, 122 former comfort women filed a
lawsuit demanding a government apology and compensation for their detention,
seeking damages of 10 million won or $8900 for each woman. Here is how the lawsuit was reported on the
Library of Congress website:
Here is a news video about the lawsuit:
In the 2017 ruling, 57 of the plaintiffs were
awarded 5 million won which worked out to a rather paltry sum of $4,240 each,
far less than they had sought.
In the 2018 ruling, Hon. Judge Lee Beom-gyun of
Seoul's High Court ruled that 74 of the 117 former comfort women should receive
7 million won or $6370 and the remaining 43 women would receive 3 million won
or $2730, still a very small settlement for what can only be regarded as a
breach of basic human rights.
Just in case you thought the connection between
the U.S. military and prostitution in South Korea, here is a video trailer from a 1996 movie, "The Women Outside" showing that comfort women are still in place for American servicemen:
One thing is certain, women have played a
painful and costly role in Korean geopolitics since the early 1950s, an
unintended consequence of the Cold War mentality.
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