South Korean Farmers Clash With Police Over Trade Deal

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The New York Sun

SEOUL, South Korea — Tens of thousands of South Korean farmers and workers clashed with riot police yesterday at a massive rally against a free trade agreement with America.

Some protesters fought with riot police wearing helmets and shields, attacking them with the sticks, throwing stones, and trying to turn over police buses set up to block the protest site in central Seoul. Police fired water cannons at the protesters and sprayed fire extinguishers.

The protesters occupied a 16-lane road and chanted slogans against the free trade deal. Police said they arrested some 100 protesters and that more than 10 riot police were hurt. Organizers said some 50 demonstrators were hurt — mostly suffering head injuries. Organizers said about 50,000 people participated in the protest, while police estimated there were 20,000 demonstrators.

“We will thwart [the passage] of the FTA as it would deepen the polarization of our society,” a spokeswoman for the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions, Woo Moon-sook, said. Ms. Woo’s group was one of organizers of the rally near Seoul City Hall.

Trade chiefs from the two countries signed the accord in June, concluding months of tough negotiations to lower or eliminate tariffs and other trade barriers on a wide range of industries and services.

The proposed agreement must be endorsed by legislatures in both capitals before it goes into effect. The South Korean government submitted the proposal to parliament in September for approval.

The deal is the largest for America since the North American Free Trade Agreement more than a decade ago, and the largest ever for South Korea.

Both sides said the accord will boost growth, but certain constituencies, such as farmers in South Korea and labor groups in America, have opposed it.

Although the deal excluded rice — a key Korean crop — farmers are worried that other kinds of American agricultural produce will pour into the country, threatening their livelihoods.

“Farmers would be the biggest victim of the free trade deal,” a farmer who attended the rally, Lee Young-soo, said, adding that the agriculture industry will collapse.


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