
Outrage over migrant worker abuse
'After watching the video, I couldn't believe my eyes,' President Lee Jae-myung wrote on Thursday in a Facebook post.
'That was an intolerable violation and clear human rights abuses of a minority person.'
In a Cabinet Council meeting later, Lee again condemned the abuse and raised concerns about South Korea's international image.
He ordered government ministries to determine the status of human rights violations facing migrant workers and other minorities in South Korea and find realistic steps to prevent such abuses.
South Korean human rights activists on Wednesday released the video filmed at a brick factory in the southwestern city of Naju in late February. They said it was filmed and provided by a fellow Sri Lankan worker.
The video shows a forklift driver, who has been identified as a South Korean, lifting another worker who is bound with plastic wraps and tied to bricks.
The driver moves him around the factory yard in the vehicle while the sound of laughter from another person can be heard.
The 31-year-old victim, who came to South Korea in November, suffered the abuse for about five minutes as a punishment imposed by the South Korean forklift driver who wasn't happy with his brick wrapping skills, according to Mun Gil-ju, one of the local activists involved in the video's release.
Naju city officials said the head of the factory told them he had been informed the event was organised as a prank. But Mun said 'bounding a person with plastic wraps' cannot be dismissed as a prank.
The company has about 24 workers, including seven from Timor-Leste and Sri Lanka along with South Koreans.
The Sri Lankan victim still works for the factory, according to Naju officials.
The Labour Ministry said in a statement it will launch an investigation of the factory and inspect whether foreign workers there have experienced beating, bullying and overdue wages.
Hundreds of thousands of migrants, mostly from South-East Asia and China, take low-paying or dangerous work at factories, farms and other sites where activists say many experience discrimination and abuses. — AP

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
2 hours ago
- The Star
Woman caught live-streaming while drink-driving in South Korea
The suspect live-streamed while driving more than 90km on the expressway, openly admitting she had been drinking. -- PHOTO: THE KOREA HERALD/ASIA NEWS NETWORK SEOUL (The Korea Herald/ANN): A woman in her 40s was caught driving under the influence on July 25 while live-streaming on a highway, police said on July 28. After receiving a report from one of her viewers, the highway patrol tuned into her live broadcast to track her exact location and intercept her. According to the Busan Metropolitan Police, the livestreamer is currently under investigation for drunk driving but has not been detained. Her blood alcohol concentration at the time was within the range of 0.03 to 0.08 per cent, a range that warrants a licence suspension under South Korean law, police said. It was reported that the suspect drank two bottles of soju alone in Daegu until early in the morning of July 25. After a few hours of rest at home, she began driving to Taejongdae in Busan's Yeongdo-gu to see an acquaintance. While still under the influence, she livestreamed herself driving more than 90km on the expressway, openly admitting she had been drinking. She was apprehended by police on a section of the Namhae Expressway near the Daejeo Interchange. She did not attempt to flee or refuse a breathalyser test at the time of the arrest, officials said. 'It appears that she conducted the livestream while drunk driving to attract more viewers. Drunk driving is a criminal act that can cause serious harm not only to the driver but to others as well. 'We will respond firmly to this case to reinforce the message that driving under the influence will not go unpunished,' a police official said. -- THE KOREA HERALD/ASIA NEWS NETWORK


The Star
5 hours ago
- The Star
Migrant worker in S. Korea tied to forklift for ‘giggling', says suspect
The Sri Lankan migrant worker initially hesitated to report the abuse out of fear he wouldn't be able to find another job. - The Korea Herald/ANN SEOUL: A Korean man who tied a Sri Lankan migrant worker to a forklift at a brick factory in Naju, South Jeolla Province, told police he did so because the worker 'let out a giggle', according to a human rights group on Monday (July 28). A migrant worker's human rights network based in South Jeolla Province said the Korean suspect told investigators: 'I told him to teach his colleague well, but he let out a giggle, so I did that.' The victim, however, said he neither laughed nor understood what the supervisor was saying at the time. 'I didn't know what I did wrong. I was very scared (when I was tied to the forklift),' he was quoted as saying by the group. The migrant worker, who has been employed at the factory since arriving in Korea under the work permit system last December, initially hesitated to report the abuse out of fear he wouldn't be able to find another job. He is currently staying at a religious facility with support from civic groups. South Jeolla Province Governor Kim Yung-rok said July 26 that a company with a good working environment has expressed interest in hiring the man. 'We will visit the company on Monday to finalise the recruitment,' Kim said. Following the incident, which sparked national outrage, President Lee Jae Myung condemned the perpetrators and called for a thorough investigation. Local police have booked the Korean suspect without detention on potential charges, including special confinement and special assault. - The Korea Herald/ANN


Sinar Daily
6 hours ago
- Sinar Daily
Ex-South Korean lawmaker found dead in Yoon ties probe
Choi Ho was found dead on a hill in Pyeongtaek, 75 kilometres south of Seoul, at around 3am, about an hour after his family reported him missing. 28 Jul 2025 02:38pm Supporters of impeached South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol hold placards during a rally on a street in Seoul on April 2, 2025. - (Photo by PEDRO PARDO / AFP) PYEONGTAEK - A former member of the Gyeonggi provincial assembly was found dead on Monday amid an investigation into his alleged ties to former President Yoon Suk Yeol, police said. According to Yonhap News Agency, Choi Ho was found dead on a hill in Pyeongtaek, 75 kilometres south of Seoul, at around 3am, about an hour after his family reported him missing. Police said they believe he left his home around 5pm on Sunday and took his own life. No suicide note was found. Choi won the nomination of the then ruling People Power Party to run for mayor of Pyeongtaek in the June 2022 local elections. Prosecutors have been investigating suspicions then President Yoon and his wife, Kim Keon Hee, pushed for his nomination. - BERNAMA