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| Organisers said a record 70,000 people joined Saturday's march |
Tens of thousands of South Korean women staged a mass rally in Seoul Saturday to protest against spycam porn, urging tougher punishments for peeping Toms as anger over the growing scourge boils over.
Since May,
the monthly demonstration in Seoul has shattered records to become the
biggest-ever women's protest in South Korea where the global #MeToo movement
has unleashed an unprecedented wave of female-led activism.
The primary
cause of the protests are so-called spycam videos in a tech-savvy country where
news of men caught secretly filming women in schools, offices, trains, or even
toilets have made headlines on a daily basis.
Organisers
said Saturday's event drew 70,000 participants, ten thousand more than the
previous month's rally, despite an unprecedented summer heatwave that has
pushed the mercury above 37 degrees.
"Women's
toilets in this country are infested with spycams! Please please crack down on
the crimes," the women chanted in unison at the city's Gwanghwamun Plaza
which routinely hosts mass rallies.
Some waved
banners with slogans such as: "We can't live like this anymore" and
"South Korea: the nation of spycams."
Asia's
fourth-largest economy takes pride in its tech prowess, from ultra-fast
Internet to cutting-edge smartphones.
But these
advances have also given rise to an army of tech-savvy perverts, with videos
widely shared in internet chatrooms and on file-sharing sites, or used as
adverts for websites promoting prostitution or gambling.
The number
of such spycam crimes reported to police has surged from around 1,100 in 2010
to more than 6,500 last year, with the offenders ranging from school teachers
and college professors to church pastors and even a court judge.
The
protestors are demanding that the government toughen punishments for offenders
-- most of whom are fined or receive suspended jail terms -- and shutter
websites hosting the footage.
Most
participants at Saturday's rally hid their faces with hats, sunglasses or
surgical facial masks. Some South Koreans who have previously joined protests
in support of women's rights have faced online bullying and harassment.
The South
remains deeply conservative and patriarchal despite economic and technological
advances.
The crimes
have become so prevalent that the South's female police officers inspect
women's toilets in public venues including subway stations on a regular basis
with special detectors for spycam videos that may be hidden inside stalls.
Although
all manufacturers of smartphones sold in the South are required to ensure their
devices make a loud shutter noise when taking photos -- a move designed to curb
covert filming -- many offenders use special apps that mute the sound, or turn
to high-tech spy cameras hidden inside eye glasses, lighters, watches, car keys
and even neckties.

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