![]() |
| Seo Ji-hyun, the woman who started South Korea's #MeToo movement has a slight build and a shy demeanour but has spoken volumes for her countrywomen (AFP Photo/Jung Yeon-je) |
Seoul (AFP) - The woman who started South Korea's #MeToo movement has a shy demeanour and a whispery voice, but Seo Ji-hyun's actions have had a resounding impact on the lives of her countrywomen.
A
prosecutor in Seoul, Seo was repeatedly groped by a senior colleague at the
funeral of another co-worker's father. After she complained, she suffered years
of career setbacks in an institution that is traditionalist even by the South's
conservative standards.
Finally she
went public with a tearful live television interview in January, her voice
trembling as she defied convention to detail her experiences.
An
unprecedented move in a society where patriarchal values remain deeply
ingrained despite economic and technological advances, Seo's courage opened the
floodgates.
Countless
South Korean women have since come forward to accuse powerful figures in the
arts, education, politics and religion of rape and other sexual misconduct.
The
disgraced figures include a former presidential contender, a top film director
who has swept awards worldwide, actors well known across Asia and a widely
respected poet regularly nominated for the Nobel Prize for literature.
Her
professional role had made her situation even more humiliating, Seo, 45, told
AFP in a rare foreign media interview.
"It
felt so shameful that as a prosecutor whose job is to seek justice, I could not
even speak out about this criminal act", she said.
"I
couldn't bear it any more. When I decided to speak out on TV -- which amounts
to social suicide -- I was ready to resign and become a recluse for the rest of
my life."
'Society's fault'
Seo's story
exemplifies the plight of many South Korean women -- well-educated and
hard-working yet discriminated against and mistreated by their employers -- as
well as their frustration at the slow pace of social change.
Even though
South Korean women generally outscore men at school and in the entry-level job
market, the country consistently ranks at the bottom of OECD surveys on gender
pay gaps or female presence in senior positions.
Many women
have experienced workplace sexual harassment, but those who speak out are often
castigated for "causing a stir", marginalised, and sometimes fired.
Seo's case
showed that even an elite prosecutor was no exception.
She
regularly faced verbal or physical harassment by bosses or male colleagues
after joining the prosecution agency in 2004, she said.
After the
groping at the funeral, Seo consulted senior prosecutors who promised to
persuade the man she accused, Ahn Tae-geun, to apologise personally.
The apology
never came. Instead, Seo was reprimanded and reassigned to a relatively junior
position in distant Tongyeong, a small town on the country's south coast,
despite having previously received ministerial awards for her performance.
Suspecting
Ahn might be behind the move, she lodged a series of formal complaints, only to
be scolded for rattling the agency, a deeply hierarchical organisation where
loyalty is highly valued.
Women
account for 30 percent of prosecutors but occupy only eight percent of senior
positions at the agency, and a government survey this year showed 70 percent of
female prosecutors had reported experiencing sexual harassment or abuse.
Most stayed
silent because they feared professional setbacks.
More
widely, a survey by the Korea Women Workers' Association showed nearly 65
percent of women who complained about workplace harassment suffered damage to
their careers.
It took Seo
-- who is married with one son -- eight years to muster the bravery to go
public.
Afterwards,
she said, "many women thanked me, saying they took courage from my move
because my case made them realise that it was not their fault that they could
not dare to speak out after being abused -- it was society's fault."
'Hefty
price'
Seo's
television interview triggered an outpouring of support for her as well as a
deluge of accusations by other women.
Ahn -- who
was separately fired for corruption last year -- could not be charged with sex
abuse because the one-year statute of limitations had expired. However he was
indicted for abuse of power, accused of using his position to pressure senior
prosecutors to reassign Seo to a junior position in revenge.
He denies
the sexual abuse accusations, maintaining he was too drunk to remember what
happened at the 2010 funeral, and a verdict in his closely watched trial is
expected later this year.
But some of
those who followed in Seo's wake have faced a legal backlash, their alleged
abusers countering with lawsuits in a country where libel is a criminal offence
and the truth not necessarily a defence.
In other
cases, victims have been shamed for coming forward and subjected to vicious
personal attacks.
Former
presidential contender Ahn Hee-jung was acquitted last month of repeatedly
raping a female aide with the court saying she had not shown
"victim-like" behaviour because she had not quit the job.
One of the
politician's male aides was recently caught posting more than 1,000 anonymous
online diatribes against the woman.
Seo has not
been exempt from paying what she describes as "a hefty price for speaking
out".
She has
been on sick leave since the television interview and does not expect ever to
return to the prosecutor's office.
"But I
don't regret what I did," she said. "The long history of blaming,
shaming and muzzling victims of sex abuse -- instead of perpetrators -- should
stop here, now."
VIDEO: The woman who started South Korea's #MeToo movement has a shy demeanour and a whispery voice, but Seo Ji-hyun's actions have had a resounding impact on the lives of her countrywomen https://t.co/Tj5Qfd03MN pic.twitter.com/L7Ec6pOA1G— AFP news agency (@AFP) September 27, 2018


No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.