06-09-2023
SEOL: About 50,000 South Korean teachers rallied in Seoul on Monday to demand better protection of their rights and spotlight after a young teacher was found dead in an apparent suicide over harassment by a student’s parents.
Complaints by public school teachers have grown sharply over mistreatment by parents and students, such as accusations of child abuse for disciplining pupils.
“To inquire is to mourn,” read some of the banners displayed at the protest, which was peaceful.
Legal measures had been inadequate and government officials passive when it came to protecting teachers against problems, said one teacher who participated in the rally, but gave only her surname, Lee, so as to protect her anonymity.
“On top of classes, there have been unnecessarily heavy workloads and excessive complaints from students and parents,” she added. “They have been a comprehensive problem, which I experienced throughout my 15 years of teaching.”
During the six years to June, about 100 public school teachers have committed suicide in South Korea. Fifty-seven taught at elementary schools, government data showed.
President Yoon Suk Yeol ordered officials to listen to the teachers’ demands and work to protect their rights, his office said.
Scores of teachers had vowed to take a leave of absence in protest on Monday, as government and school board officials scrambled to avert major disruptions of classes and promised legal steps to boost protection.
Apart from the Seoul protest, about 60,000 to 70,000 teachers held rallies elsewhere, organizers estimated.
Authorities warned that collective action by teachers to disrupt classes was illegal and threatened disciplinary steps.
The South Korean teachers’ union was not involved in Monday’s demonstrations, however, said the group leading the protests, Everyone Together As One.
“We will protect them (the teachers) and make changes so that not one more teacher chooses to take their life,” protest organizers said in a statement.
In July, an elementary school teacher was found dead at school after reportedly expressing anxiety over complaints by a parent regarding a dispute among students.
Among the visitors to the memorial for the teacher set up at an elementary school in Seoul was Jung Chai-jin, 67. (Int’l Monitoring Desk)