ID :
103122
Thu, 01/28/2010 - 11:28
Auther :

(EDITORIAL from the Korea Times on Jan. 28)

dailies-editorials (2)



Public Workers' Union
Don???t Confuse Political Neutrality With Restriction on Rights

Most countries, including Korea, demand their public servants to maintain
political neutrality to ensure their unbiased services to all taxpayers. In this
regard, the prosecution's announcement Tuesday that some members of public
workers' unions, including schoolteachers, are suspected of joining the
Democratic Labor Party (DLP) or providing financial help to it requires close
attention.
If the prosecutors' allegations prove to be true, the union members involved in
these illegal activities will likely face stern punishment. There are some
doubtful points, however, with respect to the timing of the law enforcement
authorities' launch of investigations, as it came right after a court ruling that
acquitted five unionists from charges of breaching the National Security Law by
issuing an antigovernment statement in July.
The union leaders refute that they have never encouraged members to join the DLP
or donate to it, while accusing the prosecution of trying to reverse the
not-guilty verdict at higher courts by proving the statement had been
masterminded by the progressive party. The organized labor's suspicions deserve
some credibility, but what matters most in this case is not the prosecutors'
motivation behind the hardly coincidental probe but whether the unionists have
violated the law or not, either collectively or individually.
Aside from the purely legal aspect of this episode, however, it is regrettable
that law enforcement officers appear set to crack down on the two public workers'
unions of teachers and other government employees using whatever means available.

It is one thing that the public servants should remain neutral politically, but
it is another that the government is trying to restrict even their basic
political freedom and labor rights. Korea is probably the only country in the
world to have sacked 1,600 teachers and disciplined 3,000 government employees
for no other reason than trying to form their labor unions. A case in point is
the statement in question, which called for the Lee Myung-bak administration to
correct its self-righteous conduct of national affairs, saying it is also
anti-peace and non-environmental. One can hardly understand why this criticism of
the incumbent government should be regarded as hurting national security, as the
prosecutors have charged.
True, government employees here, like their counterparts elsewhere, have been
criticized for their inefficiency and corruption, summed up as sticking to an
``iron bowl" mentality. Of course, this evaluation runs the risk of generalizing
the whole officialdom by a partial phenomenon, but even if true as a whole, that
should not prohibit these public workers from expressing their political opinions
freely and calling for a more democratic, peaceful and environment-friendly state
administration.
Critics of the unions may have every right to call for public workers to pay
attention first to enhancing work efficiency and driving out corruption. However,
this smacks of allowing the status quo in exchange for remaining silent on social
issues. Instead, they should call for the self-reform of public officialdom by
guaranteeing their basic rights. The Lee administration and governing Grand
National Party should heed whispers among political analysts that all this has
something to do with the local elections in June in the medium term, and
eliminating room for further expansion of progressive political forces in the
longer term.
Korea should no longer let its tortuous modern history ??? marked by
colonization, national division, fratricidal war over ideological differences and
military dictatorship ??? make it an ideological one-eyed country.
(END)

Delete & Prev | Delete & Next

X