Dubai Telegraph - 'Overwhelming': S. Korean families' grief compounded by online abuse

EUR -
AED 4.232444
AFN 72.605448
ALL 95.305037
AMD 434.318815
ANG 2.063018
AOA 1056.815664
ARS 1603.971596
AUD 1.677492
AWG 2.077328
AZN 1.954521
BAM 1.943767
BBD 2.321766
BDT 141.80215
BGN 1.969928
BHD 0.435083
BIF 3425.236071
BMD 1.15247
BND 1.478919
BOB 7.965687
BRL 5.947554
BSD 1.152803
BTN 106.996478
BWP 15.678126
BYN 3.428199
BYR 22588.420665
BZD 2.318387
CAD 1.604406
CDF 2644.919915
CHF 0.921659
CLF 0.026647
CLP 1052.159035
CNY 7.919799
CNH 7.952882
COP 4232.920211
CRC 535.961117
CUC 1.15247
CUP 30.540467
CVE 109.588476
CZK 24.534921
DJF 205.278502
DKK 7.472405
DOP 69.35792
DZD 153.36507
EGP 62.608764
ERN 17.287057
ETB 179.99866
FJD 2.597439
FKP 0.864535
GBP 0.873175
GEL 3.099819
GGP 0.864535
GHS 12.681602
GIP 0.864535
GMD 84.707524
GNF 10110.191878
GTQ 8.819554
GYD 241.276339
HKD 9.032072
HNL 30.623094
HRK 7.533583
HTG 151.318642
HUF 383.977841
IDR 19596.607397
ILS 3.624877
IMP 0.864535
INR 107.048026
IQD 1510.073027
IRR 1519964.454681
ISK 144.393096
JEP 0.864535
JMD 182.321815
JOD 0.817121
JPY 184.071466
KES 149.936716
KGS 100.78362
KHR 4612.306683
KMF 491.816388
KPW 1037.216993
KRW 1747.018516
KWD 0.35647
KYD 0.960703
KZT 548.038744
LAK 25405.181953
LBP 103230.162317
LKR 363.412889
LRD 211.544073
LSL 19.361332
LTL 3.402946
LVL 0.697118
LYD 7.353097
MAD 10.769231
MDL 20.306234
MGA 4877.550784
MKD 61.642617
MMK 2419.751212
MNT 4116.986977
MOP 9.307496
MRU 45.991288
MUR 54.108641
MVR 17.805932
MWK 1998.921281
MXN 20.671718
MYR 4.654877
MZN 73.712163
NAD 19.361332
NGN 1592.597233
NIO 42.426615
NOK 11.237394
NPR 171.18457
NZD 2.018137
OMR 0.443113
PAB 1.152863
PEN 4.011168
PGK 4.985982
PHP 69.887533
PKR 321.650524
PLN 4.288676
PYG 7487.129963
QAR 4.20355
RON 5.097835
RSD 117.409066
RUB 92.633417
RWF 1687.068095
SAR 4.326619
SBD 9.231259
SCR 15.67853
SDG 692.634599
SEK 10.956277
SGD 1.483673
SHP 0.864651
SLE 28.351163
SLL 24166.741411
SOS 658.787371
SRD 43.060947
STD 23853.811323
STN 24.348527
SVC 10.087029
SYP 127.404364
SZL 19.354177
THB 37.743668
TJS 11.024045
TMT 4.033647
TND 3.384308
TOP 2.774872
TRY 51.28436
TTD 7.82419
TWD 36.851435
TZS 2996.422996
UAH 50.446079
UGX 4294.414719
USD 1.15247
UYU 46.860714
UZS 14004.06252
VES 545.493306
VND 30348.580387
VUV 138.44917
WST 3.193352
XAF 651.887445
XAG 0.016192
XAU 0.000249
XCD 3.114609
XCG 2.077531
XDR 0.810739
XOF 651.887445
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.008249
ZAR 19.569006
ZMK 10373.603688
ZMW 22.218908
ZWL 371.095012
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    0.0900

    21.99

    +0.41%

  • GSK

    0.8000

    55.99

    +1.43%

  • RYCEF

    0.5500

    15.64

    +3.52%

  • BCE

    0.1400

    25.38

    +0.55%

  • AZN

    3.5100

    200.73

    +1.75%

  • BTI

    -0.5800

    57.89

    -1%

  • RIO

    1.5200

    94.81

    +1.6%

  • RELX

    0.0800

    33.23

    +0.24%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    15.13

    +0.73%

  • NGG

    2.2400

    86.84

    +2.58%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    22.15

    +0.23%

  • BCC

    -0.7700

    75.08

    -1.03%

  • JRI

    0.2200

    12.52

    +1.76%

  • BP

    -0.8300

    46.17

    -1.8%

'Overwhelming': S. Korean families' grief compounded by online abuse
'Overwhelming': S. Korean families' grief compounded by online abuse / Photo: Anthony WALLACE - AFP

'Overwhelming': S. Korean families' grief compounded by online abuse

First, he lost his child in Seoul's Halloween crowd crush. Then came a torrent of online abuse, upending his family's once-private life and making him an internet-wide figure of mockery.

Text size:

In October, Lee Jong-chul's 24-year-old son was among more than 150 people killed in the disaster in the city's popular Itaewon district. Grief-stricken, he spoke to media, pleading with South Korean politicians to take action.

Then, as has happened after incidents from the Sandy Hook mass shooting to the disappearance of British woman Nicola Bulley, an internet mob formed: Lee and his family's personal tragedy was mocked, belittled and misrepresented online.

From photos doctored to show Lee laughing after being offered compensation to attempts to link him to North Korea -- two viral posts debunked by AFP digital verification reporters -- he and his family have become a virtual punching bag on Korean-language forums.

"It's unspeakable what some of these comments say," said Lee's daughter Ga-young, adding that the sheer volume of abuse was "overwhelming", with any news report on them attracting hundreds of comments, almost exclusively negative, in minutes.

At their apartment in Goyang city just outside Seoul, the family's late son Lee Ji-han's bedroom has not been touched since he last walked out on October 29, 2022. His clothes still hang on the door where he left them, the book he was reading lies on his bed.

"That day changed our lives forever," his mother Cho Mi-eun told AFP, saying she still listens to old voicemail messages just to hear her son's voice.

"Every night Ji-han's father goes out to wait for him, for hours sometimes. He says he's going out to smoke, but we know he's waiting for Ji-han," she said, adding that her husband had made multiple suicide attempts since the disaster and the online attacks.

- Politics of disaster -

The families of the Itaewon victims want answers about why authorities failed to prevent the catastrophe despite clear warning signs, Lee Jung-min, who lost his 29-year-old daughter, told AFP.

Some of the victims' families formed a group "to understand what really happened and to hold those officials responsible", said the bereaved father, who was visibly tired and unshaven.

But the internet interpreted their efforts to organise as an attack on the government, with right-wing trolls launching a coordinated counter-attack, accusing the families of being profiteers out for compensation, or anti-government forces.

Experts say the government is worried the disaster could hurt the administration. Seoul's last conservative government lost power in part due to its mishandling of the 2014 Sewol ferry disaster, which killed more than 300.

As a result, some ruling-party lawmakers criticised the victims' families during parliamentary sessions, which created "open season on us" online, Lee said.

Lawmakers promoted outlandish conspiracies: one claimed the crowd crush was caused by vegetable oil poured on the ground by opposition-linked labour union operatives, while another insinuated the deaths were due to illegal drugs.

An official police investigation found no evidence for either claim.

But South Korea's highly polarised political environment allows such misinformation to thrive, said Seo Soo-min, a communications professor at Sogang University.

- No support -

Two days after the disaster, Prime Minister Han Duk-soo publicly urged people not to "make hateful comments, spread fabricated information or share graphic images of the accident".

But the government has done almost nothing to stop the attacks, despite repeated pleas from victims' families for help, said Kim Yu-jin, who lost her 24-year-old sister in the disaster.

A 16-year-old Itaewon survivor committed suicide in December, in part due to shock at the online abuse, the victims' families said.

Prime Minister Han said the government bore no responsibility, blaming the victim for not being "strong minded" enough.

Even a public mourning altar set up to commemorate the victims has become a flashpoint after authorities threatened it with removal, and far-right YouTubers picketed it with abuse while live-streaming.

The victims' families must now not only grieve their lost loved ones, but do battle for their memories online, said Kim.

Every day, she reads the fresh deluge of hateful comments about her sister and reaches out to individual media outlets to request they be removed.

"I know it's a hopeless task, there are countless comments," she said, adding: "But I have to carry on, who else will fight for my sister?"

A.Al-Mehrazi--DT