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China-Japan-Koreas
Horrors of South Korea's mass executions emerge
2008-05-19
BY: Charles J. Hanley and Jae-Soon Chang, Associated Press
05/19/2008


DAEJEON, SOUTH KOREA — Grave by mass grave, South Korea is unearthing the skeletons and buried truths of a cold-blooded slaughter from early in the Korean War, when this nation's U.S.-backed regime killed untold thousands of leftists and hapless peasants in a summer of terror in 1950.

With U.S. military officers sometimes present, and as North Korean invaders pushed down the peninsula, the southern army and police emptied South Korean prisons, lined up detainees and shot them in the head, dumping the bodies into hastily dug trenches. Others were thrown into abandoned mines or into the sea. Women and children were among those killed. Many victims never faced charges or trial.

The mass executions — intended to keep possible southern leftists from reinforcing the northerners — were carried out over mere weeks and were largely hidden for a half-century. They were "the most tragic and brutal chapter of the Korean War," said historian Kim Dong-choon, a member of a government commission investigating the killings.

'Very conservative' figures

Hundreds of sets of remains have been uncovered so far, but researchers say they are only a tiny fraction of the deaths. The commission estimates at least 100,000 people were executed, in a South Korean population of 20 million.

That estimate is based on projections from local surveys and is "very conservative," said Kim. The true toll may be twice that or more, he said.

In addition, thousands of South Koreans who allegedly collaborated with the communist occupation were slain by southern forces later in 1950, and the invaders staged their own executions of rightists.

Through the postwar decades of South Korean right-wing dictatorships, victims' fearful families kept silent about that blood-soaked summer. American military reports of the slaughter were stamped "secret." Communist accounts were dismissed as lies.

Declassified documents

Only since the 1990s, and South Korea's democratization, has the truth begun to seep out.

In 2002, a typhoon's fury uncovered one mass grave. Another was found by a television news team that broke into a sealed mine. Further corroboration comes from a trickle of declassified U.S. military documents, including photographs of a mass killing outside this central South Korean city.

Now Kim's Truth and Reconciliation Commission has added government authority to the work of scattered researchers, family members and journalists trying to peel away the long-running cover-up. The commissioners have the help of a handful of remorseful men.

"Even now, I feel guilty that I pulled the trigger," said Lee Joon-young, 83, one of the executioners in a secluded valley near Daejeon in early July 1950.

The retired prison guard said he knew that many of those shot and buried en masse were ordinary convicts or illiterate peasants wrongly ensnared in roundups of supposed communist sympathizers.

The 17 investigators of the commission's subcommittee on "mass civilian sacrifice," led by Kim, have been dealing with petitions from more than 7,000 South Koreans, involving some 1,200 alleged incidents — not just mass planned executions, but also 215 cases in which the U.S. military is accused of the indiscriminate killing of South Korean civilians in 1950-51, usually in air attacks.

The commission last year excavated sites at four of an estimated 150 mass graves around the country, recovering the remains of more than 400 people. It has officially confirmed two large-scale executions — at a warehouse in the South Korean county of Cheongwon and at Ulsan on the southeast coast.

In January, then-President Roh Moo-hyun apologized for the more than 870 deaths at Ulsan.

smells like b.s.
Posted by:Snash Oppressor of the Mohammatans aka Broadhead6

#2  Huh. Both sides, ROK and NKPA killed large numbers of prisoners they captured. The NKPA started as soon as their troops reached Seoul and the 'people's committees' started ruthlessly weeding out the merchant middle class. The NKPA had no problem killing Americans captured either [just another in the long list of those who don't play the 'rules' imposed upon the US]. The Chinese had no problem killing ROK prisoners either.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2008-05-19 21:16  

#1  The 100,000 number would probably qualify them to write for The Lancet.
Posted by: Darrell   2008-05-19 20:51  

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