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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Korea
South Korean government faces backlash over police violence
against Daewoo workers
By James Conachy
21 April 2001
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The South Korean government of President Kim Dae-jung has been
significantly shaken over the last week by protests and other
expressions of outrage over a brutal police attack on 350 laid-off
Daewoo autoworkers outside the main Pupyong assembly plant in
Incheon city on April 10.
The workers had assembled at the plant to assert their rights
under an April 6 court directive that ordered Daewoo to allow
the Daewoo Motors Workers Union and its members access to the
union offices inside the complex. Two hundred metres from the
gates, 1,500 riot police blocked the delegation headed by union
lawyer Park Hoon.
The Association of Lawyers for a Democratic Society maintain
that when Park read out the court order and advised the police
that they were breaking the law, the commanding police officer
at Pupyong responded with the declaration, the government
is above the law.
After several hours of jostling, the police charged. Police
spokesmen claim that workers had cut off a group of about a dozen
police from the main body of 1,500 and were threatening them.
Video footage of the attack, which has been widely disseminated
by the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU), shows that
the majority of workers were sitting or lying on the ground, stripped
to their waists in preparation for a protracted standoff.
The footage shows police beating defenceless workers with batons,
kicks and the edges of riot shields, even after they were covered
in blood and attempting to protect their faces with their hands.
Those trying to run from police were knocked down and bashed relentlessly.
One Daewoo worker may lose his eyesight. Two others have been
temporarily paralysed below the waist. A broken rib punctured
one worker's lung. Virtually all workers present suffered some
degree of injury, with 43 requiring hospitalisation. Park Hoon
was kicked in the face and suffered a fractured pelvis.
The vicious character of the police attack provoked widespread
public outrage. The South Korean press has criticised the government's
handling of the incident and called for those responsible to be
dealt with. In parliament, the opposition Grand National Party
(GNP), the political instrument of the military-backed regimes
of the 1980s, seized on the issue to posture as a defender of
workers' rights.
In one of the more cynical speeches, GNP legislator Lee Byung-suk
declared: The government of the people has begun to attack
the public... This case harks back to the cruel acts of violence
on blue-collar workers in the 1970s and 1980s. The GNP is
demanding that Kim's prime minister, administration minister and
police head all resign over the Pupyong incident.
According to the KCTU, its website received tens of thousands
of visitors from April 11 to April 131.5 million hits on
April 13 alonealong with calls for action from around the
country. Such was the feeling among workers that the KCTU leadership
has been compelled to adopt a more critical stance towards the
government. At a rally of 4,000 workers on April 14 in Pupyong,
KCTU leader Dan Byong-ho declared: We will mobilise all
efforts to drive the Kim Dae-jung administration out of power.
In an effort to contain the growing hostility, the government
sacked the Incheon police chief and the national head of police
issued a formal apology. On April 17, however, the KCTU rejected
the apology and launched a lawsuit calling for charges of attempted
murder to be laid against five leading police officials.
Despite an unprecedented expression of regret on
the same day from Kim Dae-jung, the backlash has continued. Today
trade unions are staging demonstrations in 20 major cities to
demand that all police be withdrawn from the Pupyong plant, that
the government block a take-over of Daewoo by General Motors and
that it find ways to reinstate the laid-off workers.
Growing hostility to Kim Dae-jung
The Pupyong incident follows months of violent clashes between
police and Daewoo workers, as the government of Kim Dae-jung has
sought to use state repression to break the resistance of the
workforce to the company's restructuring and sale to the US auto
transnational General Motors.
Daewoo Motors, Korea's third largest auto producer, was taken
over by receivers last November 8 with debts exceeding $US13 billion.
In international financial circles, the restructure and liquidation
of Daewoo's assets is viewed as a test case of the government's
resolve to purge the Korean economy of dozens of companies that
plunged into bankruptcy during the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis.
On February 17, Daewoo's receivers, headed by the state-owned
Korea Development Bank, announced the sacking of 1,750 employees.
A total of 6,884 layoffs were slatedone third of the Korean
workforcein order to satisfy the terms demanded by GM for
the purchase of the company's Korean operations.
After 700 laid-off Pupyong workers occupied the plant in protest,
the government sent 4,000 riot police to smash their way into
the factory on February 19. Pupyong was reopened on March 7 with
a police garrison of 2,000 based inside its walls to intimidate
the remaining workforce and prevent union activity. Workers' rallies
outside the plant on February 24 and March 7 were viciously broken
up with tear gas and police baton charges.
By April 10, the unrest over the restructuring at Daewoo appeared
to be over as far as the government was concerned. The KCTU and
Daewoo Motors Workers Union had agreed in November that 3,500
layoffs were necessary to restore the company's competitive position
and had entered a joint management committee to negotiate a restructuring.
The unions had tacitly accepted the February layoff announcement
by calling off threatened solidarity strikes and allowing protests
to dwindle. While the unions made impotent appeals for pain-sharing
by the management, at least 5,500 layoffs had been carried out
by early April.
The fact that the issue has flared up again and the KCTU has
been compelled to adopt an openly anti-government stand has created
a political crisis for the Kim Dae-jung government which over
the last three years has relied heavily on the trade unions, particularly
the KCTU, to contain the growing anger of workers to its policies.
The KCTU backed Kim Dae-jung when he won the 1997 presidential
election, promoting illusions in him as a reformer
and democrat due to his history of opposition to South
Korea's military dictatorships in the 1960s, 70s and 80s.
Since his inauguration in February 1998, Kim Dae-jung has implemented
a series of measures demanded by the International Monetary Fund
in exchange for emergency loans to South Korea during the Asian
financial crisis. Life-time employment guarantees have been repealed,
corporate bankruptcies facilitated and steps taken to open the
economy to greater foreign competition and ownership. The consequences
have been mass layoffs and sweeping cutbacks to working conditions.
Wages have barely recovered from the sharp falls inflicted
by employers during 1998. Official unemployment stands at over
one million, or 4.8 percent, and is set to rise. The slowdown
in the US will see thousands of jobs shed by Korean export companies,
particularly in the hi-tech sector. Core companies like Hyundai
Electronics and Hyundai Engineering are restructuring and have
announced 10,000 layoffs between them.
The government has only been able to carry through its economic
agenda with the assistance of the unions. At every point when
Korean workers have come forward to resist the restructuring,
the unions have isolated or called off strikes on the grounds
that negotiations could win compromises from the government or
that further action would disrupt the economy. Only last December,
the KCTU called off a threatened national strike over the Daewoo
sackings.
Where the unions have not been able to prevent protests and
strikes, the government has broken them with riot police and mass
arrests, confident that the union federations would block any
organised retaliation from the working class.
Concerns are now being expressed in ruling circles that, with
the attack on Daewoo workers, Kim Dae-jung may have gone too far
and provoked a situation which the unions will have difficulty
controlling. Members of the Korean Federation of Industries, a
key employer group, warned on April 17 that labour peace
was an essential part of attracting foreign investment and
expediting the restructuring process.
Already there are signs of growing tensions. The number of
official labour disputes rose from 129 in 1998 to 250 last year.
Both the major union organisations, the KCTU and the Korean Federation
of Trade Unions (KFTU), are warning that they are under intense
pressure to launch a national general strike at the end of May
if demands for a 12 percent wage increase are not granted. Employers
have offered 3.5 percent.
In an editorial on April 18, the Korean Times commented:
The violent crackdown on the defiant Daewoo Motor unionists
in Incheon is developing into a grave socio-political bone of
contention, with the possibility of having a far-reaching impact
on the political, economic and labor sectors... The government
may have to come up with rather prompt actions to address the
violent case in order to neutralise the worsening confrontation
between the government and the labour sector.
But this only points to the central problem that the government
confronts: how to contain the growing anger of workers while continuing
to implement policies of restructuring, privatisation and downsizingand
under conditions where its support is rapidly being exhausted.
See Also:
South Korean president boasts
to US investors of crackdown on Daewoo workers
[17 March 2001]
South Korean government orders
massive police assault on Daewoo workers
[24 February 2001]
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