It's one week until I leave Korea.
Because of that and some other things going on in my life at the moment, my feelings are on a rollercoaster.
And at the same time I'm panicing because I feel like I haven't done, felt or experienced enough. I feel like I have too much to do and because of that I can't do anything. I'm just paralyzed.
I know, that I shouldn't let the stuff just hang and stress me. On Friday I'm gonna be done with exams. I hope I can stop stressing and just relax then. Because that's how I wanna spend my last times here: just relaxing and doing what I like the best.
I am positively surprised how my mind has already gotten quite ready for leaving though. My love story with Korea has come to a point where we have to go our own seperate ways. We have had some great, great times, but I know I gotta let go. It's no good feeling bad, you have to move on.
Mari jokes about when it's time to leave. When you start to like kimchi and when Korean men start to look gorgeous, it's time to leave Korea. :)
Today we ate dog. Koreans do that. And it's not pet dog that youre eating. Anyway we wanted to try that out and ordered some dishes of dog meat. It tasted like any other meat. It was just the uneasy atmosphere while eating that made it different.
But on the way to the restaurant we saw an odd thing. You know, I've written about demonstrations. But this was quite a one.
The demonstators were disabled people. That was not odd. What was odd was when the demonstration broke out to be violent.
Here you can see a shield of riot police (which was totally rediculous). And demonstrators trying to brake the wall. Imagine the situation: disabled people in their wheelchairs with motors trying to drive and push the wall of riot police. Dzzzzt, dzzzzt, as they drove their wheelchairs 2 km/h to the shield. I don't wanna make fun on anyone, but you have to admit that that kind of a situation is quite absurd.
There was one even fighting. He was kicking the shields.
Again bravo, Seoul. If there were no riot police provocating the demonstrators these violent incidents wouldn't happen. You could see that the demonstrators were feeling bad and just taking out their anger to the police.
In this case the police had problems too though. They couldn't use physical power against disabled people. So they couldn't really do anything. At one point some demonstrators got through the wall and all the police could do was to withdraw. Go wheelchairs! :)
17 June 2009
Rollercoaster
Posted by Greete at 9:52 PM 0 comments
Labels: demonstration, Hyehwa, Korea, Seoul
01 June 2009
Hi Seoul Festival: Night time
In Seoul they organize an annual ’Hi Seoul’ festival to promote the city (you might have heard the slogan: Hi Seoul, Soul of Asia). The festival was awesome, I mean there was really a lot going on in the city center during that week. There were music, dance, actors, art, food and so on and so on.
The festival started with an opening event in front of the city hall in the evening. The square in front of city hall is a common place to arrange events, or demonstrations. Basically stuff where lots of people gather together.
We wanted to go to see the event, but it definitely wasn’t easy to get there. Since the event was on a date that was a one-year anniversary for the major demonstrations against imported beef from USA, the police had sealed a huge part of the city center off. There were riot police everywhere. It was just ridiculous, don’t they get that they cause more bad than good by having thousands of riot police around. You could just sense the surrounding unease and alertness among the regular people walking on the street when a squad starts quickly moving to another place.
I could sort of compare the atmosphere to what caged animals feel when they are transported to the place they’re put to death. I'm talking about the not knowing what’s going on. We were surrounded by riot police that was on the move. You know something is going on but have no idea about what’s gonna happen next. Someone told us that you can’t get through there, another one said that the event is cancelled because of demonstrations. The rumors spread like wind.
Some riot police.
A word to the police: don’t create fear on the streets, especially when there is no need for actions in that scale. When the crowds are alert and in unease, violent incidents are much more likely to erupt.
Well, we walked a few blocks to the side and around the police, and got to the event. It was so ridiculous again… The event was for promoting Seoul, but because of the damn police shields it was almost insuperably difficult to even get to the area. Hello, is the kind of picture you want to give about Seoul? Police blocking all the ways even though there is no aggression to be seen anywhere.
In the other hand maybe the police blocked the ways to save people from the horrible show that they had in the event. It was this song playing over and over and over again and these people dancing to it on the stage. I don’t know who it was for…
What concerns me is that the riot police here are not real police with proper training or experience. They are 20-year-old punks doing their military service. The usual duties for them are sitting or standing in lines in the city center or where ever there might be something happening. But when it comes to real action, they are very poorly skilled in using power. The wrong usage of water cannon, or physical power generally, can sometimes have severe consequences.
When the police arrested someone, emphasis on the word one, they had like 30 people moving the arrested person. This describes the power relation in general too. A reporter told us that there were 5 000 police. That is more than the people attending the event. And many many times more than the people demonstrating.
I guess the officials are afraid of the power of the people. So they cut off all the expressions of dissatisfaction instantly. If the French would march and demonstrate their opinion, it would have an effect. But a year ago in Seoul millions of people stood in the city center for months holding candles in their hands making no fucking difference what so ever.
The riot police emptied the area pretty quickly. Even the people peacefully playing guitar were recklessly carried into buses. I have to admit that the squads were excellently organized though. Even after there was no soul left on the field without a uniform, they kept moving from one shape into another.
General atmosphere after the actual action. Police moving around, surrounding us, whatever...
But a few words about the demonstrations in Korea generally. It seems to be part of Korean mentality to oppose and demonstrate. Most demonstrations are poorly organized without a clear message. People feel bad and just whine about stuff. I think one reason for this is that they don’t have a channel to get their message through. And if there’s no way to be heard they just stop trying to do it sensibly.
Posted by Greete at 8:01 PM 0 comments
Labels: demonstration, Korea, Seoul
