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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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To: tejek who wrote (191506)6/23/2004 3:05:26 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) of 1574854
 
Wednesday, June 23, 2004 · Last updated 11:10 a.m. PT

Beheading stirs debate in South Korea

By HANS GREIMEL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER



SEOUL, South Korea - The beheading of a South Korean hostage set off demands, including from the president's own party, for the country to stop sending troops to Iraq.


The stunned nation awoke Wednesday to television images of a blindfolded Kim Sun-il kneeling in an orange jumpsuit before his masked captors and news that he was later decapitated.

President Roh Moo-hyun denounced the killing and stood by his government's plan to send 3,000 additional troops to Iraq beginning in August. But the slaying underlined divisions on the domestic front.

"This incident was shocking and tragic, but it mustn't shake our decision and principle to send troops to Iraq," the country's biggest newspaper, Chosun Ilbo, said in an editorial. "In times like this, the president and the government must focus and not allow the deployment issue to once again divide the public."

But civic groups called for a cancellation of the deployment, and students hung black-and-white mourning banners and built funeral altars on campuses while pledging to step up their campaigns against the troop dispatch.

About 2,000 protesters rallied at a candlelight vigil Wednesday night to mourn Kim and oppose the troop dispatch. Many held placards reading "Bush and Roh killed Kim Sun-il" or "We don't want to die. Korean troops get out."

A group of 50 lawmakers, many from Roh's ruling Uri Party, submitted a resolution to parliament Wednesday urging the government to reconsider the deployment.


"It is impossible to implement the task of peace and reconstruction at a time when not only the troops, but also ordinary civilians, are under threat - as witnessed by the killing of Mr. Kim Sun-il," the resolution said.



The government in Seoul has portrayed the troop dispatch as a way of strengthening ties with the United States and winning its support for a peaceful end to the standoff over North Korea's nuclear programs. But many South Koreans oppose the mission, which was originally scheduled for April and has been repeatedly delayed.

The 3,000 troops are earmarked for the northern city of Irbil, and will be joined by 600 South Korean medics and engineers now in southern Iraq. When complete, South Korea will be the biggest coalition partner after the United States and Britain. Kim's kidnappers had demanded that Seoul scrap the deployment and pull out the 600 medics and engineers.

"The government was irresponsible," said Park Bong-ju, a 28-year-old office worker. "This tragedy happened because of the government's plan to send troops. We must cancel a dispatch plan and withdraw soldiers who are already in Iraq."

For others, the killing seemed to strengthen the backing for the military mission.

"I don't think the government should cancel its troop deployment," said Cho Hang-duk, a 42-year-old office worker. "This is time for the nation to tighten its unity and show to the world we stand together in a difficult time."

Kim's fate has gripped the country since Sunday, when a video released by his captors showed the hostage pleading for the government to end its involvement in Iraq, screaming "I don't want to die."

Kim, 33, was a Christian and once considered doing missionary work in the Arab world.

seattlepi.nwsource.com
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