국제문제/아시아

(아시아) 한국 도망자를 체포하기 위해 절을 포위한 경찰

밝은하늘孤舟獨釣 2015. 12. 9. 19:37

출처: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-35048139


South Korean police surround Buddhist temple to arrest fugitive

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  • From the sectionAsia
Gu Eun-su, commissioner of the Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency, arrives at Jogye Temple on 8 December to meet with senior monksImage copyrightEPA
Image captionPolice tried to persuade monks at the temple to help them, earlier in the month

Hundreds of police officers have begun an operation to arrest a trade union leader who has taken refuge in a Buddhist temple in Seoul.

Authorities say the man orchestrated clashes with police during a large protest in Seoul on 14 November.

Han Sang-gyun, head of the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions has been in the temple ever since the protest.

Monks earlier warned police not to force their way inside, saying it would be a breach of their religious rights.

In the early evening, shortly after a deadline passed to give himself up, police sealed off the Jogye Temple in central Seoul and began the operation to arrest Mr Han.

A protester hits a police bus with a ladder during the demonstrationImage copyrightAP
Image captionThe government says the demonstration, which turned violent, was illegal
South Korean protesters stage a rally against government policy in Seoul, South Korea, on 14 NovemberImage copyrightAP
Image captionThe rally was the biggest seen in the South Korean capital in years

Those at the protest in November had a diverse range of grievances, from President Park Geun-hye's business-friendly economic policies, to a decision to force the nation's schools to only use state-approved history textbooks.

The rally saw clashes between police using pepper spray and water cannon, and protesters, some of whom were armed with metal pipes and sharpened bamboo sticks.

The unforgiving police response prompted a smaller demonstration on Saturday - 14,000 people, rather than the 60,000 estimated at November's rally - to demand an apology from the president.

Ms Park had drawn the ire of labour unions and farmers for planning to make it easier to dismiss workers and to cap the salaries of senior employees. However, many of her labour market policies are more popular with the general public, according to polls.

The BBC's Stephen Evans in Seoul says there is an increasingly bitter division between South Korea's right of centre government and its left-wing critics, who accuse it of diminishing democracy.