Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Book: Migrant Workers in Pacific Asia (Debrah A. Yaw)

This book a marvelous read on the situation of migant workers in the region.
It can be found on Google books with restricted copyright view.
A great read and read here : Migrant Workers in Pacific Asia (Debrah A. Yaw, 2002).

Labor Market Reforms in Korea: Policy Option for the Future

The report can be read in details here.

Research Paper by the Korea Labor Institute can be found here at website.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Athukorala, Prem-chandra (East Asia)

Paper and publication by Professor Athukorala are here and here.

Dr. Shahid Yusuf: Developmental Economics

Shahid Yusuf, Economic Adviser, Development Economics Research Group, The World Bank, holds a Ph.D. in Economics from Harvard University, and a BA in Economics from Cambridge University. Dr. Yusuf is the team leader for the World Bank-Japan project on East Asia’s Future Economy. He was the Director of the World Development Report 1999/2000, Entering the 21st Century. Prior to that, he was Economic Adviser to the Senior Vice President and Chief Economist (1997-98), Lead Economist for the East Africa Department (1995-97) and Lead Economist for the China and Mongolia Department (1989-1993). Dr. Yusuf has also served the World Bank in several other capacities since he first joined the Young Professionals Program in 1974.

Dr. Yusuf has written extensively on development issues, with a special focus on East Asia. His publications include:
  1. China's Rural Development, co-authored with Dwight H. Perkins (John Hopkins Press);
  2. The Dynamics of Urban Growth in Three Chinese Cities, with Weiping Wu (Oxford University Press 1997); Rethinking the East Asian Miracle, with co-editor Joseph Stiglitz (Oxford University Press 2001);
  3. Facets of Globalization: International and Local Dimensions of Development; and
  4. Localization in an Era of Globalization, both co-edited with Weiping Wu and Simon Evenett (Oxford University Press 2000);
  5. Can East Asia Compete? Innovation for Global Markets with Simon Evenett (Oxford University Press 2002);
  6. Shahid Yusuf et al., Innovative East Asia: The Future of Growth (Oxford University Press 2003);
  7. Global Production Networking and Technological Change in East Asia and Global Change and East Asian Policy Initiatives, both co-edited with M. Anjum Altaf and Kaoru Nabeshima (Oxford University Press 2004);
  8. Under New Ownership, co-authored with Kaoru Nabeshima and Dwight H. Perkins (Stanford University Press 2005); and
  9. China’s Development Challenges, co-authored with Kaoru Nabeshima (World Bank forthcoming 2006).

He has also published widely in various academic journals.
 
 

Monday, March 28, 2011

Korea: More Illegal than Legal Workers (2003)

On this page there a some very intersting comments including that of Professor Timothy C. Lim, during his research at Korea University.

Illegal Workers

'Illegal Worker's Life'
Read the article at Hankyureh!

Balancing the Benefits and Costs of Skilled Migration in the Asia-Pacific Region (Original)

Saturday, March 26, 2011

LabourStart

Recent News on Labour Related issues @ Labourstart

Immigration Quarterly Magazine

E Magazine in English/ Korean can be read here.

Constitution of the Republic of Korea

Korean Law Sources

 

Some other websites:

Government Sites

Thursday, March 24, 2011

“Silence on the Streets Does Not Mean Peace” Amnesty International on ROK


On May 27th, Amnesty International (AI) released their annual 2010 report revealing situations of human rights abuses in 159 countries, including serious problems of human rights violations prevalent in South Korea throughout 2009.
Amnesty International in South Korea (AI Korea) held a conference at the Korea Press Center in Seoul to discuss the 2010 International Report and the organization’s official stance on several controversial events in Korea today.
In specific, the South Korean government was criticized for violating freedom of expression in an attempt to control the media and use fear in politics with regards to the deadly sinking of Cheonan, a South Korean naval ship believed to be an act of a North Korean torpedo.
Regarding the teachers of Korean Teachers and Education Workers’ Union facing mass dismissal for joining the Democratic Labor Party (DLP), an opposing political party, AI said that the government is excessively violating the freedom of political participation, assembly, and expression.  The ministry has decided to dismiss a total of 134 public school teachers for having paid membership fees to DLP.  With the G-20 Summit scheduled to be held in Seoul this coming November, the government seems to be restricting rights and freedoms even more by passing the G-20 martial law.
Nam Young-jin, the chairman of AI Korea, wrote in the chair’s report, “Some words that were often used back in the 1980s such as ‘freedom of the press,’ ‘freedom of expression,’ ‘dictatorship and democracy,’ and ‘national security and military on alert at the border’ are being used again in South Korea today.”  Nam clearly pointed out that South Korea’s human rights situation has gone backwards.
The report is in accord with the criticisms made by Frank La Rue, the UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Expression who visited South Korea on May 14 to investigate human rights conditions.  AI Korea warns the government, stating that “silence on the streets does not mean peace.”  ■
Specific problems in South Korea mentioned in the Report
  • Foreign migrant workers who are vulnerable to unfair treatment, discrimination, sexual harassment, and abuse as a result of the current Employment Permit System (EPS)
  • Blogger Park Dae-sung or “Minerva” arrested and accused of spreading malicious rumors to destabilize the economy
  • Four producers and a writer at Munhwa Broadcasting Corporation (MBC) accused of distorting facts regarding the dangers of US beef in the television program PD Notebook and thus stimulating the candlelight protests against US beef imports
  • Arbitrary arrests and detentions under the National Security Law (NSL)
  • The death penalty
  • The downsized National Human Rights Commission of Korea (NHRCK)
  • Low recognition of state recognition of refugees and asylum-seekers

Credits @ Ji-Su Park (HRM- Korea)

Human Rights Monitor-Korea (HRM-Korea)

Korea’s High Rejection Rate to Refugee Status brings Legal Fights
In March of 2010, the first naturalized South Korean citizenship was granted to a 38-year-old Ethiopian man who fled Ethiopia in 2001. However, this milestone event granting citizenship seems to not be an extension to other refugees seeking asylum status in South Korea. As such, these desperate people have filed law suits against the Ministry of Justice in Korea.
Since 1992, when South Korea adopted the 1951 Refugee Convention, the Korea government has received asylum status claims beginning in 1994 and the first refugee entered South Korea in 2001. Overall, between 1994 and 2009, the South Korean government received total 2,492 applications, mostly from North Korea.
However, the Korea Justice Department has rejected 994 refugees in 2009 which has been deemed sudden and unusual. A number of refugees who seek legal resolutions are dramatically increasing; 121 cases have been filed to the Seoul Administrative Court from January to May of 2010 compared to 15 cases in 2008.
These decisions were made to maintain strong national security, particularly due to North Korean defectors being revealed as espionage agents. Of the recent defectors turned spy, Kim, a 36 year-old female North Korean defector, is under custody. According to Yonhap News, she reportedly passed herself off as a refugee from the closed communist state, then began a relationship with a former subway employee, who handed her classified information including emergency contacts for Seoul’s subway system. South Korean authorities fear the information could be used by the north for terrorist attacks.
As a result of the policies, the South Korean Justice Department has rejected hundreds of asylum status applications from refugees. Desperate people have come to the Seoul Administrative Court, but because of time and money constraints it “has a limit to solve the entire problem,” said one court official close to the matter.
Since most refugees do not receive legal status in Korea, they cannot be employed and earn money. As such, receiving aids from non-profit organizations is the only way for most to survive in Korea. A high NGO official stated that “refugee applicants hope for increased services” to protect more refugees in Korea help restart their lives.

This story is from the Human Rights Monitor-Korea (HRM-Korea) is an online information portal managed by Korea Human Rights Foundation.They have a very informative blog here: http://khrfseoul.wordpress.com/2011/01/

They can be reached at this Office Address:
4F Seomoon Bldg, 368-22, Seogyo-dong, Mapo-gu,
Seoul, Korea (121-838)
Tel: 82-2-363-0002    Fax: 82-2-363-0209
 www. Humanrights.or.kr

Migrant workers struggle for overdue wages..

A tranquil afternoon at an industrial district in Anyang, a satellite city on the outskirts of Seoul, was shattered last Monday by a group of protesters demanding the payment of overdue wages for a Bangladeshi worker.

"Pay outstanding wages," the protesters yelled in front of a paper-coating factory where the Bangladeshi, surnamed Hussein, worked until recently. Hussein has overstayed his visa so he could be deported if caught by immigration officials.

Despite the risk, the 32-year-old held the rally to receive 4.5 million won ($3,650) in overdue wages, his pay for August to December 2008.

"The employer transferred ownership of the company to his son-in-law and claimed he had no money to pay the unpaid salary," said Chung Yong-sup, a protester and spokesman for the Migrants' Trade Union.

In April last year, the employer promised to pay the wages by September as ordered by the Ministry of Labor but it was an empty promise, Chung said.

Pressured by the rally and mounting criticism in the neighborhood, the new owner, the son-in-law, promised to settle the problem by November. "We will keep watching how the owner deals with this issue," the activist said.

It was the second rally of this kind by the union this month alone - the first rally held last Saturday in Paju, a city near North Korea where scores of small and mid-sized factories are located.

As the number of migrant laborers has rapidly increased in recent years, so has the number of those struggling with unpaid wages.

There are approximately 500,000 migrant workers here who mostly work in the manufacturing, construction and agriculture industries. Nearly 10 percent of them overstay their visa, thus their presence here is illegal.

Foreign envoys and the international community have urged the Korean government to take tougher action against employers "maliciously" delaying salary payments.

Vulnerable to exploitation

Yet, no significant improvement has been made. In 2008 alone, 6,849 migrant workers filed complaints with the labor ministry over delayed wage payments for unclear reasons, up from 2,249 cases in 2007, statistics show.

By June last year, 4,659 complaints of this kind had been lodged ― from the latest data available ― indicating a worsening situation.

The amount of unpaid salaries has soared - 4.4 billion won in 2006, 17.3 billion in 2008 and 12.1 billion won for the first six months of last year. The vast majority of affected workers are Chinese, followed by Vietnamese and Filipinos, statistics show.

"Migrant workers overstaying visa are particularly vulnerable to this issue because of their illegal status here," said Rep. Park Dae-hae of the ruling Grand National Party, who made public the statistics. "It's urgent to establish an independent body to deal with the issue regardless of the residential status of the affected workers."

With regard to the growing problem, human rights watchdog Amnesty International issued a report last October elaborating working conditions facing migrant workers here, and called on the Seoul government to protect and promote the rights of migrant workers through rigorous labor inspections. In February, envoys from major manpower exporting states to South Korea called for tougher state action for the advancement of the human rights of their citizens here.

Labor officials say they make their utmost efforts to contain the problem, but admitted putting all problematic firms on its watch-list is all but impossible.

"Those delaying wage payments in order to avoid it in the end will face criminal punishment," said Shin Dong-jin, a labor ministry official covering migrant worker-related issues.

The government runs two insurance policies - one by the state and the other by a private insurance firm, Seoul Guarantee Insurance Company - to help migrant workers get full payment before they leave the country. But critics say the compensation guaranteed by the policies is "too small to cover unpaid salary" on average.

The state insurance covers up to 7 million won, while the private one guarantees only 2 million won. In most cases, critics claim, the amount of unpaid salary for each worker is over 10 million won on average


For more on the story by Park Si-soo (Staff reporter) follow this link below: http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2010/06/113_67620.html

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Government tries for foreign talent - INSIDE Korea JoongAng Daily

The government is hoping to expand the foreign population even further by amending the nationality law to allow dual citizenship to bring “talented people” to Korea. But with guidelines that are vague at best, it remains to be seen whether these efforts will succeed. According to the government, the measure is geared toward attracting professionals with a proven track record in their respective fields. (Hint: Having a Nobel Prize would certainly help, for example.) But unlike the country’s permanent residency system - for which people qualify by meeting specific conditions such as employment, business ownership or marriage to a Korean citizen - it has not yet provided details on what will distinguish someone who is a “professional” from someone who is not.
Chu Kyu-ho, head of the Korea Immigration Service, hopes that the Justice Ministry will submit to the National Assembly a bill to revise the nationality law next month, after a consultative meeting between the government and ruling Grand National Party.

Recent studies have suggested that the country needs a population influx of between 1 million to 3 million people per year for the next several decades to maintain a workforce capable of supporting the economy.
“We are late in the game when it comes to attracting foreigners to the country,” said Jeon Gwang-hui, a professor of sociology at Chungnam National University. “On top of that, Korean society is very closed, which makes it harder for outsiders to get accepted.” He attributes prevailing attitudes against the foreign population to the country’s history of invasion.

“This country was invaded many times in the past and it is surrounded by large countries even today, so there is always this feeling that Koreans have to close ranks,” the professor said.

Few Achievements of the government in recent years include:
  1. The Seoul Global Center was established in January 2008, to provide services such as help with housing, medical and legal issues. Other city districts and provinces have recently followed suit;
  2. In May 2007, the government established a basic law regarding the treatment of foreigners;
  3. May 20 is celebrated as “Together Day,” the centerpiece of which is a ceremony honoring foreigners;
  4. All Korean English teachers will hold classes wholly in English by 2012, provided that a scheme announced by the Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education is implemented successfully. Under the government plan, more classroom time will be devoted to English education and more native-speaker teachers will be placed into the education system.
Problem to address are:
  1. 20,000 children from multiracial families in the country’s educational system from elementary to high school have not integrated into the country’s education system;
  2. Lee Cham, a naturalized Korean of German descent who became a Korean citizen 31 years ago, says Korean society still has a long way to go before it will accept Koreans who don’t look physically Korean.

Read this in detail (pulished in June,2009) here: Government tries for foreign talent - INSIDE Korea JoongAng Daily

Monday, March 21, 2011

HDR

 Human Development Report.\

http://bcove.me/542fswmo

Rising labour migration within Asia Pacific - Analyst Insight from Euromonitor International

Intra-regional labour migration within Asia Pacific has increased since the late 1990s, driven by globalisation and disparities in labour demand and wage opportunities in the region. Rising labour mobility will have positive impacts on employment, consumer spending and economic growth as migrant workers enhance the flow of remittances, trade and investment in the region. However, it can also be a source of social tensions.
....Japan and South Korea, however, remain strict on migration due to their emphasis on the importance of maintaining ethnic homogeneity. Foreign citizens accounted for 1.8% and 1.7% of Japan's and South Korea's population in 2009 respectively; ..
...for detail...click below:
Rising labour migration within Asia Pacific - Analyst Insight from Euromonitor International

Amendment to Immigration Control Act Proposed to Korean National Assembly


On December 30, 2008, a bill was introduced to the Korean National Assembly proposing an amendment of the Immigration Control Act. The bill seeks to establish the “legal basis to require foreigners applying for an employment visa to submit a criminal background check and health certificate” [1].
A complete translation of the reasons (제안이유) for the bill’s introduction is as follows: “Nowadays, the number of foreigners working in Korea is increasing, but a good many [Korean: 상당수] have previous convictions for drug and sexual crimes or carry infectious diseases. As we require measures to deal with the threat they pose to our society’s public order and our people’s health, we herein prepare the legal basis to require that foreigners applying for an employment visa submit a criminal background check and a health certificate.” [1]
E-2 visa holders are already required by the Korea Immigration Service to submit to drug checks, medical checks including an HIV test, and criminal background checks, however, the proposed bill states the revision would apply to “foreigners applying for an employment visa”. This is a markedly larger group of foreigners than just E-2 visa holders. Further, by becoming an Act of the National Assembly, it becomes much more difficult to challenge.
An identical bill was introduced to the National Assembly on October 24, 2007 (5 days after the arrest of Christopher Paul Neil on October 19, 2007), but consideration was delayed due to the BBK controversy, and it expired with the adjournment of the 17th session of the National Assembly.
The October 2007 bill was introduced by twelve Members of the National Assembly. The December 2008 bill was introduced by 18 Members and is said to represent a broad political consensus. It is scheduled for vote within the next two months. The bill (in Korean) is available in PDF from the Association for Teachers of English in Korea (ATEK). See below for contact information.
The Association for Teachers of English in Korea (ATEK) calls on the author(s) of this bill to provide their evidence that “a good many” (상당수) foreigners working in Korea have previous convictions for drug and sexual crimes or carry infectious diseases. Obviously, with the stringent checks being done on E-2 visa holders, they are not part of the “good many” foreigners mentioned. How many E-1, E-6, E-7, and/or C-4 visa holders have been discovered to have criminal convictions or infectious diseases? This evidence cannot be produced because it does not exist.
Names of the 18 Members introducing the December 2008 bill:
신학용 - 박기춘구본철송영선 - 안민석 - 김희철박종희 - 김우남 - 양정례
김종률 - 강성종 - 김충환심재철 - 박상돈 - 진성호원혜영 - 김성곤 - 강창일
Names of the 12 Members introducing the October 2007 bill:
신학용 - 강창일 - 박상돈 - 김태년 - 김영주 - 정봉주이계안 - 한광원 - 송영길김교흥 - 김부겸 - 홍미영

source: http://www.atek.or.kr/


Saturday, March 19, 2011

Recycling @ AKS

Recycle….of course we do it!
In our modern, green, eco-friendly, low impact society EVERYONE recycles and it’s about time to walk the walk and here I mean at the Academy of Korean Studies (AKS).

AKS is renovating and that means a lot of stuff will be trashed. We are already witnessing hundreds of (old/used) chairs, desks, bookshelves, computers, and stuff that would otherwise be sitting comfortably and being enjoyed at someone’s house. This mountain of furniture can be found at the back of the Graduate School of Korean Studies (GSKS) in Bundang.

It would be great if we REDUCE, REUSE and RECYCLE but at the same time RESPECT the cause (recycling) and it's importance. It is indeed a high time to allow people to come pick up this (old) furniture – that deserves recycling, for sure!

If people can make a good use of it - will indeed be a good news and a [k]novel cause. It is only about taking the initiative and thinking smart!

I hope that people (outsiders: waikukins/or who so ever interested) be allowed during the weekends to get what they want from this FM 101 (FM: furniture mountain / 가구 산).

I have to admit that A LOT of recycling projects are underway on a national, regional, local and individual level. We all have noticed how stores, restaurants and food courts all sort out their garbage such as plastic cups, lids, straws, liquids, paper and tin cans etc. At homes, we seperate food 쓰레기from the rest. Korean universities have also done a great job in this regard and one of them is Kookmin University that has a modest and fun recycling project in association with 'The Beautiful Stores' a famous NGO, that runs small stores filled with recycled things - in Seoul and greater Seoul region in particular (http://www.beautifulstore.org/Eng/). Even at AKS, we have these 'brand new' recycling bins for all the different types of 쓰레기 or trash. Needless to say, they also have a tradition of recycling for long - so hopefully, this stuff be recycled too.

One of the biggest government recycling centers that collects recyclable stuff are luckily located in Seongnam but they will come and pick it only on the condition that furniture should NOT be more than 2 years old, voila!

I'd highly appreciate if we ask our friends or NGOs etc. to come and do some sorting!

Website on recycling in Korea
http://www.recycle.re.kr/ (this site needs recycling)

NOTE: It is important to note that people who do not belong to AKS (faculty, staff, students) can visit it on weekends only.

TOPIK

People lined up in thousands in Khatmandu, the capital city of Nepal, to take TOPIK (Test of Proficiency in Korean), to get jobs in Korea. All over Nepal, about 37 thousand people appeared for TOPIK, in August 2010 only.The report says that there were 27,618 applicants registered in Sri Lanka for next month’s test, while 29,583 people have applied to take the test in Vietnam. There were 2,426 applicants in Indonesia for this month’s test, which was a higher number than expected given that the test was administered during Ramadan.

In Pakistan, 98 percent of registered applicants took the test in December 2007, even though it was held the day Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto was assassinated. In Phnom Penh, Cambodia, about 30,000 people participated in an orientation session for the TOPIK in March 2010.

“I think the international status of Korean, which was selected as the ninth most influential language in the world by the World Intellectual Property Organization in 2007, has grown,” said Jeong Eun-hee, an official for the Human Resource Development Services of Korea.

Read the original story here .

In the wake of having have huge numbers appearing for exam the government has taken decision to make the tests "more" difficult. For more details read here.

This may happen to foreign students as well IF the numbers increase, by the way, the numbers have already increased dramatically since 2002 from 7000 to 70,000 in 2009. According to a report, Korea has doubled the number of scholarships to hit a target 100,000 foreign students by the year 2013. Korea has the lowest number of international students among the OECD countries. According to another report, a separate job portal and immigration related website especially targeting the international students will be operational soon.For more  Read here. By the way, foreign students make up only 1% of the student body in Korean universities. Moreover, about 220,000 or more Korean students leave for foreign countries every year, out of which 30% opt for the US and only 35-40% return to Korea.

Back to migrants, in an another article of the The Himalayan (Nepali Newspaper), it says that:

".......Nepal government will send only 9.49 per cent of all the applicants to South Korea for work. In effect, 90 per cent of those who completed the formalities for recently-concluded Korean Language Test (KLT) will see their investments and endeavours bearing no fruit and going to drain..."

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

                                                                 Japanese Restaurant

Friday, March 11, 2011

Asia Human Rights Report

East Asia Forum

Minod Moktan's (aka Minu) Deportation to Nepal

the right residency papers. In six months, 17,000 migrants lost their job and were deported.

Seoul (AsiaNews) – “Free Minu! Stop Crackdown!” shouted members of a coalition of 23 groups, including the Migrant Workers Trade Union in front of the Hwaseong Immigration Detention Centre in Gyeonggi Province last Friday. They were demanding the release of Minod Moktan (AKA Minu), a 33-year-old Nepali musician and cultural activist who, like other migrant workers, is undocumented and has been the target for a government expulsion order.
Some labour analysts and human rights observers are saying that the government must re-evaluate its positions on issues facing undocumented migrant workers, as they have integrated into Korean society.
In Minu’s case, he immigrated to South Korea in 1992 and went to work in restaurants and garment factories in the Uijeongbu area.
During this time, he campaigned actively on social issues, produced a documentary on migrant worker human rights and served as head of the executive committee for the Migrant Worker Film Festival. He has also been the recipient of a number of awards, but now he could be deported.
Prior to this recent target crackdown, the Korea Immigration Service had arrested and deported undocumented migrant workers , in 2007 and 2008, who had served as leaders of the Migrants Trade Union, a union founded for and by migrants.
Minu, who is engaged in human rights activism, became a target after a recent election of documented migrant workers to positions of leadership.
Target crackdowns are the consequence of President Lee Myung-bak’s ‘zero tolerance’ policy.
Last March he said, “illegal residents should not be allowed to just strut around”, a view widely condemned by human rights and labour organisations around the world.
Critics also note that the situation of migrant workers in South Korea has induced the UN Special Rapporteur on the Situation of Human Rights Defenders to speak out on the issue.
The number of migrant workers deported has gone from around 20,000 a year during the Roh Moo-hyun administration to 32,000 last year under the Lee administration.
As of late July 2009, some 17,000 have lost their jobs and have been deported.
In addition, reports of serious human rights violations during the Justice Ministry’s crackdowns are surfacing; they include a steady number of cases of undocumented migrant workers suffering from injuries, dying, and committing suicide whilst in custody.

credits@Theresa Kim Hwa-young of Asia News dot it.

Migrant Workers Quota for 2011


It is decided that 48,000 foreign workers will be permitted
to get employed in Korea through the employment
permit system (EPS) in 2011 with the annual quota for
foreign workers increasing by 14,000 from last year.
The government convened the Foreign Workforce
Policy Committee (chaired by the Minister for Prime
Minister’s Office) and adopted the ‘2011 Foreign
Workforce Introduction Plan’.
According to the plan, 48,000 foreign workers will be
newly added to the labor market of Korea this year and
this is an increase by 14,000 from 34,000 in 2010. This
number reflects the substitute demand (48,000) derived
from the number of foreign workers whose sojourn period
end last year and that of the undocumented workers
leaving Korea after crackdowns, while taking into account
the economic prospects and domestic job situation,
etc. for this year. Being flexible on the number of foreign
workers to be introduced in 2011, the government will
monitor future supply and demand of workforce, flow of
undocumented workers, etc. to make an additional adjustment
for the annual quota.
The quota of 48,000 for this year is all
for general foreign workers holding an
E-9 visa and ethnic Koreans with foreign
nationalities having an H-2 visa, whose
total number is being controlled, will remain
at the level of 303,000 in total as
2010.
40,000-strong workers are allocated
for manufacturing, which is being followed
by agro-livestock industry and
fisheries industry.
In particular, construction-related


Link

Support the Right of the Migrants to Freedom of Association

http://www.iacenter.org/korea/korea_migrant071408//

Thursday, March 10, 2011

AI: Press Briefing during G-20

For details read here.

KOREA YEARBOOKS

The Korea: Politics, Economy and Society series is the source for up-to-date concise information on what is happening on the Korean peninsula. It features refereed articles on political, economic and social aspects of both South and North Korea, while its survey articles provide easy overviews of politics, the economy, and foreign relations of both Koreas, as well as inter-Korean relations. A true must for everybody interested in modern East Asia in general, and Korea in particular.

More details on the Korea: Politics, Economy and Society series can be found here.

Reviews:
"Korea Yearbook will be an indispensable resource for anyone interested in this most fascinating of countries. An international team of top-flight experts not only cover the year's key political and economic developments in both North and South - and the growing relationship between them - but also focus in on an unusually wide range of more specific themes: from foreign investment and the Lone Star affair, via online journalism and new urban landscapes, to North Korean refugees in China. Much more than a compendium, this is an exhilarating tour of Korean
economy, politics and society on both sides of the DMZ. Bravo!
"
Aidan Foster-Carter, Honorary Senior Research Fellow in Sociology & Modern Korea, Leeds University

'This volume is the most comprehensive and important summary of political and economic events published on contemporary Korea. In addition, it has a number of excellent essays on both the North and the South and their interrelations, and a variety of chapters on aspects of the political-cultural Korean scene. This annual work will be an essential companion to any researcher on modern Korea, and one that every library on foreign affairs will need. We look forward to the annual production of volumes of equal caliber.'
David I. Steinberg, School of Foreign Service,
Georgetown University

"The 2007 Korea Yearbook provides fascinating and timely analysis on contemporary Korea, both North and South, by some of Europe and North America's most authoritative specialists. Encompassing a broad range of themes, including foreign relations, domestic politics, geography, archaeology, and popular culture, the volume, which includes a particularly helpful chronology of events in 2006, will, I have no doubt, prove indispensable to students, journalists, researchers and specialists working on East Asian affairs. Filling a critical vacuum in the field, the Korea Yearbook will rapidly become the definitive annual publication on modern Korean affairs."
Dr. John Swenson-Wright, Lecturer in Japanese Politics and International Relations, East Asia Institute, University of Cambridge

"A tremendously thorough, insightful and penetrating analysis, rich with information indispensable to the experts and useful to anyone interested in understanding the political, economic and diplomatic dynamics in both halves of the dynamic Korean Peninsula."
Mark Fitzpatrick, Senior Fellow for Non-Proliferation, International Institute for Strategic Studies, Arundel House, London

Korea Yearbook 2009 can be read here at google

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Pure Korean blood.. ..a Myth now?

Myth of Pure-Blood Nationalism Blocks Multi-Ethnic Society

This is the fifth in a series of articles on the repercussions of rising nationalism in Korea and East Asia.

By Park Chung-a
Staff Reporter

When Korean-born American Super Bowl Most Valuable Player Hines Ward visited South Korea in April, people’s attention to mixed-race people in the country increased enormously. Even leading officials and educators stepped up their efforts to embrace multicultural families in local communities, something rarely seen before.

However, while Koreans are fascinated by the biracial football hero, the majority of ordinary mixed-race people and migrant workers face various forms of discrimination and prejudice here.


According to the Korean Migrant Workers Human Rights Center, mixed-race people and migrant workers find it hard to have decent jobs and there is a vicious cycle of poverty among them.

A survey conducted by the Korea Youth Counseling Institute showed that the majority of mixed-race teenagers suffer from ostracism by their colleagues and expressed a willingness to emigrate to other countries in the future.

Experts say that although a multi-ethnic society is an irreversible trend in a global era, the myth of pure-blood nationalism is the major factor that hinders the nation from swiftly adapting to changes.

“Korea is so accustomed to a belief in pure-blood nationalism and a homogenous nation that its people don’t seem to be prepared to accept or understand a multi-ethnic and multicultural society,” said Lee Kwang-gyu, chairman of the Overseas Koreans Foundation.

``South Koreans should be aware of the fact that they are already living in a hybrid or multi-ethnic society. The number of migrant workers has surpassed 400,000 and international marriages last year accounted for more than 13 percent of total marriages in the country. With the low-birth rate and the lack of a domestic labor force for the so-called 3D jobs _ difficult, dirty and dangerous _ which refers to the most-avoided, the inflow of migrant workers will continue,’’ he said.

Seol Dong-hoon, a sociology professor at Chonbuk University, said that it is absurd to continue to insist that South Korea is a pure blooded nation.

“Between a person who is of Korean nationality but feels more attached to foreign culture than Korean culture due to their staying in foreign countries for a long time, and the child of a South-East Asian migrant worker who was born in Korea and speaks Korean fluently, who is more Korean? And is it really worthwhile to distinguish one from the other based on their nationality?” he said.

Seol went on to say that the Korean government should begin a long-term project to redefine the meaning of being Korean and the meaning of the nation as well as educating people on cultural relativism.

``The fantasy regarding a homogenous nation should be scrapped in order to allow a multi-ethnic society to flourish. Specific policies should be set up to integrate not only naturalized migrants but also other migrants who reside in Korea,’’ he said. ``Pride on one’s culture and nation often becomes a sense of superiority, thus leading to the neglect of people from other countries and their culture. Hence, there should be education on cultural relativism that teaches others’ cultures are just as important as ours.’’

Han Kon-soo, an anthropology professor at Kangwon University, also pointed out problems regarding the newly-coined term Kosian, which indicates biracial children from a Korean and South East Asian couple. ``People should stop using the word Kosian as it emphasizes the fact that they are mixed-race, hence perpetuating discrimination against them. It perpetuates an intention not to incorporate mixed-race people into the Korean community.’’

Experts say that the fantasy of pure-blooded nationalism in Korea began to spread from the late 19th century or early 20th century with an increasing number of foreign invasions. They say that if it were not for numerous invasions from powerful countries, Koreans would have become more open to foreigners and such ``defensive nationalism’’ would have been less strong.

``Pure blooded nationalism served as a useful tool for the South Korean government when the country was embroiled in ideological turmoil. It was used as an effective tool to make its people obedient and easy to govern,’’ said Kim Sok-soo, a philosophy professor at Kyungpook National University. He said that especially going through the dictatorial leaderships by former presidents Syngman Rhee and Park Chung-hee, nationalism was incorporated into anti-Communism. So in the name of nationalism, much violence was committed.

``In these times where national boundaries are becoming more and more meaningless, it is wrong to hold on to such a narrow-minded concept of nationalism,’’ said Kim.

Experts say that South Korea’s nationality law is one of the representative examples that show how its obsession on pure-blooded nationalism blocks the flourishing of a multi-ethnic society.

Currently, Korea’s law on nationality is not based on the territorial principle which takes into account the place of birth, but on the nationality principle which only counts the nationality of one’s parents. If this law does not change, children of migrant workers, although they are born in Korea and culturally attached to Korea, can never be recognized as Koreans.

However, it seems that it will take a long time for the nationality law to recognize territorial principles.

Last December, Joo Seong-young, a lawmaker from the largest opposition Grand National Party, suggested a revision of the current nationality law to allow Korean nationality to people who are born in South Korea regardless of the nationalities of their parents. However due to a strongly unfavorable public opinion, the revision was rejected.



Source: The Korea Times (14/08/06)

Equal Rights for Foreign Resident Workers? (Daniel Bell)

Middle- and upper-class citizens of wealthy, industrialized countries must grapple with the question of who will do the low-status and difficult but socially necessary work that locals are unwilling to do. The answer, usually, is to import foreigners from poorer countries. This often results in two classes of residents with unequal rights and privileges. Is this arrangement morally tolerable?

Liberal democratic theorists typically argue that foreign resident workers should be put on the road to citizenship. There may be a case for differential rights in the short term, but those who live and work within a territory, pay taxes, send children to schools, and participate in neighborhood activities should not be treated as permanent second-class (non)citizens. They belong, and belonging matters morally. As the University of Toronto political theorist Joseph Carens puts it, long-term membership in civil society creates a moral entitlement to all the legal rights of membership, including citizenship itself. After a certain time, say five or ten years, the state should give equal rights to workers in its territory, regardless of their background.

Continue reading here ...

Harsh Reality of Migrant Workers in Korea (Dan Reae)

With the rise of the "tiger economies" of the east, mass immigration and the employment of cheap foreign labor is no longer a purely western phenomenon. With the development of large scale industry and powerful economies, immigrants are seeking employment in the nations of Japan, China, and South Korea. However, as is the case with their counterparts heading west, many of these workers find their new lives to be far from easy.

The Eleventh Largest Economy
South Korea has gained credit for its remarkable ascent from regional backwardness to regional power. Its status as the eleventh largest economy in the world - which has western economists grinning from ear to ear - is widely seen as proof of liberal economic practice. In tandem with such thinking, the western media often portrays the country as a beacon of wealth and democracy in stark contrast to its authoritarian northern neighbor.  However, scratch beneath the surface, and it soon becomes apparent that such an image bears little relevance to the reality facing many Korean workers.

Mass immigration into the Korean peninsula is widely accepted to have picked up after the south's renewed period of capital expansion in 1988. After hosting the Olympics that same year, which granted the nation the much desired attention from the global business community, legislation was introduced to complement the comparatively small native workforce with a prolonged influx of immigrant labor. This found expression in the form of the Overseas Investment Trainee System, which allowed foreign investors to import workers from their overseas holdings to work in Korea itself.

However, this left native small businesses in the lurch. Finding themselves denied access to this new, low cost workforce, they found it even more difficult to remain competitive with their larger rivals. Therefore in 1994 the Korean Federation of Small Businesses (KFSB) pushed forward the Industrial Trainee System. Initially it appeared that the new scheme would be responsible for the employment of trainees in the factories. However, there was a catch.

As trainees instead of full workers, the employees were exempt from many labour laws that might otherwise have protected them. Wages were shockingly low at around 200,000 - 300,000 won per month - which comes out at approximately two to three hundred US dollars. Often working in excess of twelve hours daily, the trainees justifiably began to feel resentment towards their new employers.

Such conditions continued and even increased in their severity. Many migrants continue to endure unjust labor laws that leave them tied by law to a single workplace and unable to seek employment elsewhere. Those that do leave their designated areas forfeit what little legal rights they were entitled too. In the process they become even more vulnerable to the approaches of unscrupulous employers.

The Employee Permit System

But it was inevitable that there would be resistance on the part of those exploited. Beginning in the mid 1990s in the form of strikes, sit ins, and demonstrations, many trade unions and civil rights organizations across the south finally took notice and became involved in a growing activist movement. Eventually, the Joint Committee for Migrant Workers in Korea (JCMK) was created to act as a pressure group and activist organization to fight for migrant's rights in workplaces nation wide.

The JCMK played a leading role in the early development of the Employment Permit System (EPS) in 2003. Initially, it was hoped the EPS would solve many of the problems affecting the growing migrant workforce, such as the frequent abuses in the workplace - ranging from verbal insults to actual physical assaults. It was also hoped that it would lower the number of migrant workers considerably by giving them stable employment and ending their endemic vulnerability.

However, the Federation of Small Businesses, whose members were still making sizeable profits from the current labor laws, opposed the EPS vehemently and successfully thwarted its application for several years. Only when it came to genuine struggle - such as at Myungdong Cathedral where a number of Nepalese workers staged a sit in to demand the end of physical and verbal abuse at the hands of management - was the government put under sufficient pressure to overrule the protests of the KFSB.

But the Federation was still far from powerless. Utilizing their considerable economic and political influence, they succeeded in having workers organizations banned from the legal negotiations surrounding the passing of the EPS. Ultimately, this led to the new system favoring employers more than employees, and actual tore the heart out of what it was originally intended to do - provide secure and sustainable employment and safety from systematic abuse and exploitation

Ongoing Dilemmas

The problem of "undocumented" and therefore illegal workers essentially remains. In 2004 they were estimated to make up over forty percent of foreign workers in South Korea. Over the course of 2007, it is expected that as work permits and visas begin to expire, this figure will increase to sixty percent.

But it's not all bad news. There have been attempts to organize migrants within trade union networks, primarily in the forum of the Migrant Trade Union. However, there are a number of extra difficulties involved in building such organization, stemming from the fact that the migrant population is in a constant state of flux and under constant harassment from the police.

For such people daily life is fraught with insecurity and stress. Treading a precarious existence in the workplace - as they can be dismissed without compensation - they exist in a climate of fear. Many are so intimidated that they even stay away from street demonstrations in support of workers rights. On top of all that, they are also in constant danger of being rounded up and held in special "protection" facilities.

These facilities are in effect little more than prisons. Inside, those detained have little illusion as to their status as illegal workers. Immigration law theoretically allows for migrants to be kept in such facilities indefinitely, and those being held are only allowed thirty minutes exercise time just twice per month. Any movement that takes place outside of their own cells is accompanied with a sturdy set of handcuffs. To further add insult to injury, the guards running such places are often abusive, verbally insulting the inmates and even physically assaulting them.

Detention Area Fire Memorial
Such places are often so badly maintained that when a fire broke out at the Yeosu Foreigners 'Protection' Center last February, the building's aging fire alarms failed to go off. Despite an attempt by the staff to tackle the blaze, it soon spread out of control and swept through the building. As the fire reached the holding areas, the staff refused to let the occupants out, which resulted in ten deaths from smoke inhalation and the hospitalization of many more. When receiving treatment, the guards clearly thought that the detainees were so eager to escape captivity that they handcuffed several of them to the hospital beds. Out of all the prisoners involved in the fire, only seven returned to the Yeosu facility, the rest were transported to other holding areas or forcefully deported from the country.

This is only the most recent example of injustice perpetrated by a government that views the growing migrant worker population as something easily exploitable. The modern phenomena of mass immigration to the industrial heartlands of the world is marred in practice by the ruthless outlook of competing governments, who are perfectly happy to employ such labor as long as the price is right.

Mass deportations of those who have committed the crime of not being native citizens are commonplace, even accepted. The problem of immigration is not an issue of who belongs where, who is legal and who isn't, or has the greater right to employment, but is instead a matter of whether such people are profitable to employ. It's this motive that dominates the entire issue worldwide. Therefore any progressive response to it, such as the unionization of such workers and defense of their rights, has to be international, too.

In practical terms, this means engaging with the progressive labor movement that has already taken steps towards international solidarity. It means working to organize migrant workers in the west as well as east, such as the newly founded European Migrant Workers Union. It means supporting the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions - an organization that has endured nothing but scorn from the government - to further deepen and extend the struggle for migrant rights as a whole. But most important of all, it means issuing a wake up call to the workers movement globally; forcing home the issue that migrant labor is not a threat nor an annoyance, but a reality of life in 21st century capitalism. Those struggling for recognition in Korea right now are aware of this - it's about time the rest of the world followed in their footsteps.

A note from Wol-san Liem
International Solidarity Coordinator, Seoul-Gyeonggi-Incheon Migrants Trade Union

"Migrant workers are important members of Korean society; not only do they
fill difficult, dangerous and low-paying jobs which Korean workers will not take, they are also making Korea a richly diverse and cosmopolitan country. Despite this fact, they are oppressed by a racist system which begins with government policy (the industrial trainee and employer permit systems, the crackdowns and detention in facilities worse than prisons) and is reinforced by the unjust treatment of employers and much of society at large, which labels them "foreigner" and has not learned to accept them as equal human beings.

Despite the overwhelming odds they face, migrant workers have mobilized their collective strength and organized themselves. They have formed community organizations, a labor union and their own television broadcasting station. Through this self-determined activity they have won support from organized labor and legal recognition of their rights as workers.  This collective struggle carried out by and for migrants themselves holds great potential to create a more just society, not only for migrants, but for other marginalized people as well."
Korean Confederation of Trade Unions - www.kctu.org
European Migrant Workers Union - www.migrant-workers-union.org
JSTOR - here .
Professor Timothy C. Lim's article here

Korean Judiciary 2

MTU Welcomes the Seoul Administrative Court’s Injunction against Enforcement of Immigration Measures against MTU President Michel Catuira
 
Seoul-Gyeonggi-Incheon Migrants Trade Union (MTU)

The courts have put the brakes unjust immigration measures taken against MTU Michel Catuira by the Seoul Immigration Service. This victory would not have been possible without the solidarity and support shown by friends and allies in South Korea and abroad.
On Wednesday, March 2, the Seoul 12th Administrative Court issued a ruling in favor of MTU’s application for an injunction against immigration measures enforced by the Seoul Immigration Service against MTU President Michel Catuira, including, the cancellation of his ‘permission for change of workplace’ and ‘permission for extension of stay‘ (visa) and the order to leave the country by March 7. According to the court, suspension of these measures was “urgently necessary to prevent damages difficult to correct” that would be caused to President Catuira should the measures be carried out.

The court’s ruling will only prevent execution of the said immigration measures until a decision in MTU’s suit appealing them is reached. Nonetheless, we welcome it as an unprecedented occurrence. In the past, many MTU leaders were targeted by the immigration authorities, who used their undocumented states as a pretext to arrest them. In these cases, the immigration authorities hurriedly executed deportation orders even before the decisions on applications for injunctions were announced.

Criticism of the Immigration Service’s actions has been strong within and outside of South Korea from the time the aforementioned measures were first initiated in a clear effort to stifle MTU’s union activities. In South Korea, supporters organized a press conference to expose the Immigration Service’s intentions and carried out 1 person protests in downtown Seoul. 1,200 social leaders and other concerned individuals submitted petitions to the court on President Catuira’s behalf. In the international arena, Amnesty International and the Asian Human Rights Commission initiated urgent appeal campaigns and countless organizations and individuals sent protest letters to the South Korean authorities. In Hong Kong, the Asia Pacific Mission for Migrants (APMM) and the Indonesian Migrant Workers Union (IMWU) held a solidarity rally in front of the South Korean Consulate. We are quite sure that the court’s ruling reflects the impact of these actions. We wish to express our sincere gratitude to the many organizations and individuals who have given us their support.
Now, more than ever, it is time for the Ministry of Justice and the Immigration Service to end their worn-out pattern of repression against migrant workers’ organizing and recognize their right to unionize.
 
The Seoul 12th Administrative Court’s ruling is attached below.

Seoul 12th Administrative Court
Ruling
Case 2011ah487 Suspension of Administrative Measures
Applicant: CATUIRA PARALUMAN MICHELYNNE PEDRAGITA (Michel)
Defendant: Chief of the Seoul Immigration Office
 
Order
The defendant will suspend enforcement of the following administrative measures enacted against the applicant on 10 February 2011: cancellation of permission for change of workplace, cancellation of permission for extension of stay, order of departure.
 
Justification
Based on evidence submitted by the applicant, I find that suspension of the aforementioned measures is urgently necessary to prevent damages difficult to correct from incurring to the applicant as a result of their execution, and, on the other hand, that there is no evidence that suggests that the suspension of the execution of the aforementioned measures would have a grave negative impact on the public welfare. I, therefore, rule as ordered above in accordance with Article 23 of the Administrative Litigation Act.
 
Presiding Judge

Original post here!

Detention Centers in Korea

Read here in detail

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Amnesty International on MTU-Seoul-Gyeonggi-Incheon

Amnesty International calls on the Korean government to restore the visa of MTU President Michel Catuira.

For details read here.

UC Davis

Migration News by University of California, Davis (UC Davis) summarizes and analyzes the most important immigration and integration developments of the preceding quarter. Topics are grouped by region: North America, Europe, Asia and Other.

There are two versions of Migration News. The paper edition is about 12,000 words in length, and the email version about 25,000. Distribution is by email. If you wish to subscribe, send an email to mailto:migrationnews-subscribe@primal.ucdavis.edu?subject=subscribe with "subscribe" in the subject line.
Current and back issues may be accessed at http://migration.ucdavis.edu/.


Migration News is produced with the support of the German Marshall Fund of the United States and the University of California-Berkeley Center for German and European Studies.

Monday, March 7, 2011

Park Noja

Park Noja, a  Professor of Korean Studies at Oslo University writes: "Why Does Korea Refuse to Accept Immigrants?" at Hanhyureh......

 In 2005, Spain decided to give 700,000 "illegal aliens" legal status, after they proved they had lived in the country six months or more, had contracts for at least six months, and had no criminal record. A considerable number of the 190,000 foreign workers in Korea with "illegal status" are believed to want to work in the country long-term or live here permanently. If the government were to give them amnesty and legal status with eventual eligibility for naturalization, it would accomplish many things at the same time: contributing to the making of a multiethnic society, reducing the rights violations that stem from being "illegals," and helping an economy in need of workers. If these people were given legal status and allowed to bring their spouses and children, Korea would then be a normal nation in the 21st century, one where diverse ethnicities live together.

Read in full here.

On unpaid wage there is another story here

Controlling immigration: a global perspective

Controlling immigration: a global perspective by Wayne A. Cornelius is available at (google books).


There is a chapeter by Timothy Lim on 'Nexus between Civil Society and Transnational Migrants in
South Korea'


Lims' website is : http://instructional1.calstatela.edu/tclim/Seoul_blog/Seoul_blog.htm

Sulyapinoy


The official forum website of FEWA (Filipino EPS Workers Association) Korea  is here.

Immigration and Citizenship in Japan

Immigration and Citizenship in Japan by Erin Chung is available on google books here or http://catalogue.nla.gov.au/Record/4932061

Erin is Charles D. Miller Assistant Professor of  East Asian Politics at JHU and can be reached at: echung@
jhu.edu.

English Teacher to Ambassadorship


Kathleen Stephens taught English at a middle school in Yesan, South Chungcheong Province from 1975 to 1977. About 30 years after Stephens, the U.S. ambassador to Korea, remembers that life back then with a certain amount of romanticism.

Read the whole article here at Korea Times.

MTU and Solidarity Network

Read here! This informative article is written by Wolsan-leim.

Immigrant Solidarity Netwrk  go here.

http://kctu.org/

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Death of Nur Fuad (Indonesia)

To our colleagues in JCMK and all our migrant friends in Korea,

It is tragic to hear of the death of our migrant brother Mr. Nur Fuad and the senseless loss of his youthful life.  The Korean Immigration Authorities hunted him down as if he was a criminal where in fact the act of criminality lies in the hands of the Korean government's unjust and inhumane Migrant Workers' Policy.  Like thousands of other migrant workers in Korea, Mr. Nur Fuad entered Korea legally, and slaved away toilessly to support his family in Indonesia and the growing economy in Korea.  What thanks does he get from the Korean government?  The loss of his very life.  The Catholic Hope Workers' Center, together with the 330,000 migrant workers in Taiwan, stand in solidarity with you as with one voice we call for an end to the criminalization of migrant workers and the illegal crackdowns undertaken by the Korean immigration authortities, and ask for the regularization of all undocumented workers in Korea.  

Your struggle in Korea gives us inspiration and courage in Taiwan as at this present moment we too are opposing the Taiwan government's criminalization of migrant workers and the illegal crackdowns on undocumented workers.  More power to our struggle to support the human rights of migrant workers.

In solidarity,

Fr. Peter O'Neill
Director Catholic Hope Workers' Center
Chungli City
Taiwan.

MORE ON NUR FAUD HERE.

Masks by the Bangladeshi Workers

Intersting maks by the Bangladeshi workers during a workshop under the auspicies of JCMK. Pictures can be found here at migrant dot nodang dot net

Deduction of charge for board and lodging, a serious threat to migrant workers' right to live

JCMK planning to take tough measures to maintain the minimum wage system
Voices are turning louder that it is tantamount to taking away the right to live from migrant workers to impose the charge for board and lodging on them, who are not allowed to enjoy the whole right to work in many fields like restrictions on workplaces choice and movement. 

Joint Committee with Migrants in Korea (JCMK) criticized in a statement on April 1 that the detailed standard regulation unveiled by Korea Federation of Small and Medium Business (K-biz), which subtracts the charge for board and lodging from their pay, will inflict double pains on migrant workers who eke out a living on the minimum wage.
It will not sit idle and see any policy to deprive migrant workers of the basic right to live and take tough measures to keep the minimum wage system, it added.
Kbiz made up the standard regulation on March 28, which would allow employers to subtract around 20% of migrant workers’ pay if they pay for foreign workers’ board and lodging and provide migrant laborers with a dormitory, a general house or similar facilities.  
That means that if employers pay for laborers’ board and lodging, they can subtract 188,000 won on the basis of this year’s minimum wage and if they pay for only laborers’ lodging, they can deduct 90,400 won, a 10% of their pay.

K-biz said that this new rule will be applied to any migrant workers who are employed from March 30 and renew their labor contract.
JCMK argued that this policy is nothing more than an attempt to impose social costs on migrant workers who are below the vulnerable in South Korea, and to deprive them of their basic right to live by realizing anti-work right.

According to JCMK, migrant workers get the minimum wage regardless of how long they have worked, one year or five years. They work 12 hours a day under the two shift system, only to get the minimum wage.

It also explained that it violates the 1st article in the 2nd clause of executed regulation in a separate sheet and the 4th article in the 6th clause of the minimum wage law, which stipulates that of the pay for an employee, allowance that is not regularly paid or paid as a supplementary measure for an employee’s living must not be included in the minimum wage.

It said it is a blatant example of anti-work right to break down the basic payment principle if the charge for board and lodging is excluded from migrant worker’s minimum pay.

As a result, JCMK stressed that K-biz should take back the regulation to associate minimum wage with the board and lodging cost, and stop its ill-thought-out plan to maximize a sense of social insecurity by pushing vulnerable migrant workers to the absolute poor class.
On top of that, it said it will continue its fight to maintain the minimum wage system, a fundamental means for migrant workers and keep their right to live safe.

Written in Korean by Reporter Kwangrae Kim
Translated by Reporter Heesoo Jung