Gwangju massacre deniers still seek comfort in North plot

Posted By : Telegraf
13 Min Read

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More than a week before elite South Korean troops – sent to put down pro-democracy protests in the southwestern city of Gwangju – sparked an uprising with their brutal treatment of citizens, would-be military rulers and their civilian enablers were seeking to shift blame to North Korea for the troubles the coup plotters were causing.

Then-prime minister Shin Hyon-hwack on May 10, 1980, told South Korean journalists a “close ally” had informed the government that North Korea’s infiltration-trained Eight Army Corps had been out of sight of intelligence surveillance for some time.

The unit might surface in South Korea, perhaps between May 15 and May 20, he suggested. I established that Shin’s claim was a lie and reported that finding in my paper, the Baltimore Sun, the next morning under the sarcastic headline, “Where is the Large North Korean Army Unit?”

Forty-one years later, the effort on the right continues – indeed, has accelerated, with the emergence in the last several years of new conspiracy theories to tie North Korean infiltrators to the most horrific examples of brutality during the 10 days (May 18-27) that shook Gwangju.

(I’ve been exposed to this more than most other foreigners because, as one of the handful of reporters who covered Gwangju, I’m in demand every May to comment on what happened there and what it means today.)

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