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----- Original Message ----- 
From: Downwithcapitalism <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, June 16, 2001 3:31 PM
Subject: [downwithcapitalism] Demo, clashes in Seoul



Associated Press. 16 June 2001. Seoul Activists Burn U.S. Flag.


SEOUL -- Activists burned an American flag and the effigy of a U.S.
missile Saturday to protest Washington's plan to build a missile defense
system, which they say is hurting stability on the divided Korean
peninsula.

Dozens of students later hurled garbage and brandished wooden sticks at
riot police in sporadic street clashes. Police fought back with plastic
shields and batons.

A mob of demonstrators stomped on a policeman. But no serious injuries
were reported. At least one student was hauled off by police for
questioning. Traffic was blocked for hours.

About 2,000 students, labor activists and civic group members marched in
downtown Seoul, demanding a better social welfare system and protesting
layoffs amid government-pushed corporate restructuring.

"We oppose (President) Kim Dae-jung, who is ruining the lives of
workers," they chanted.

Shoving matches first erupted when police confiscated an effigy of
President Kim that workers had intended to burn.

The protesters included activists who oppose the Bush administration's
missile defense program, saying it was jeopardizing reconciliation on
the divided Korean peninsula.

The communist North, along with Russia and China, vehemently opposes the
U.S. missile shield project.

"Let's repel the MD (missile defense) and advance national
reunification," the protesters chanted.

They set fire to a large U.S. flag and a tall effigy of an American
missile, together with a photograph of President Bush, who arrived in
Slovenia on Saturday for a first-time meeting with Russian President
Vladimir Putin.

Also Saturday, the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions vowed to step up
its struggle to win wage increases and fight the government's corporate
restructuring that it says is causing mass layoffs.

The threat came after the government decided Friday to arrest the
confederation's leadership, accusing them of organizing illegal strikes
at the nation's metal, chemical, aviation and hospital industries.

Operations at Asiana Airlines, South Korea's second-largest airline,
remained crippled for a fifth straight day as union members continued
their strike Saturday.

After overnight talks failed to resolve wage disputes with the union,
the airline canceled 34 of its 69 scheduled international flights and
173 of 217 domestic flights on Saturday.


















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