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Discrimination against people affected by leprosy (Hansen

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Title: Discrimination against people affected by leprosy (Hansen


1
Discrimination against people affected by leprosy
(Hansens Disease) in Korea
  • SANG KWON JUNG, IDEA KOREA

2
  • STATE OF HANSENS DISEASE (HD) IN KOREA
  • HISTORY OF HD IN KOREA
  • WHAT WE ARE DOING TO HELP

3
THE STATE OF HD IN KOREA
4
  • Medical Aspect
  • 12 New patients (Jan 2008present) the disease
    itself does not pose a contagious risk

5
  • Economic Aspect
  • People once affected by Hansens Diseases are
    achieving economic independence through farming
    activities

6
  • Social Aspect
  • Discrimination from society is continuing
  • According to the 2005 report titled The Report
    of the state of Human Rights of people affected
    by Hansens Disease, it is evident that
    prejudice exists

7
  • Would you use facilities such as public bath
    houses and hairdressers if they were also used by
    people affected by Hansens Disease?
  • 19.6 I would use it
  • 50.8 I wouldnt want to use it very much
  • 28.1 I would never use it

8
  • If a family member were to marry a person
    affected by HD, what would you do?
  • 7.1 I would accept them
  • 86.7 I would disagree with it
  • 6.2 I dont know / No response

9
THE HISTORY OF HD IN KOREA
10
The Forced Isolation Era (19131963)
  • 13921897
  • Discrimination against people with HD has been
    recorded since the Joeson Dynasty
  • 19101945
  • During the Japanese occupation of Korea, medical
    reasons were used to spread institutional
    discrimination and exclusion nationwide

11
The Forced Isolation Era (19131963)
  • 1913
  • Forced isolation was initiated, but the goal of
    isolation was not for medical treatment but to
    limit infection
  • Patients did not receive appropriate treatment
    and were forced into labor, and the mortality of
    patients was very high as a result

12
The Forced Isolation Era (19131963)
  • In addition, social prejudice about the disease
    became more widespread and gained legitimacy
    through medical authorities

13
  • It can be reasoned that these policies were
    substantial in influencing the mass murder of HD
    patients throughout Korea by civilians in the
    1950s

14
MASS MURDER OF HD PATIENTS
15
  • Between 1945 and 1957, over 300 HD patients were
    murdered by hospital workers, police, army and
    civilians over 11 incidents

16
  • Aug, 1945
  • Sorok Island Hospital Incident
  • Workers of the hospital feared losing control to
    HD patients, and 84 patients were murdered as a
    result

17
  • The Memorial Monument for 84 people who were
    murdered
  • at Sorok Island

18
  • June, 1947
  • An-dong Child Abduction Suspect Incident
  • 3 HD patients suspected of abducting a child were
    murdered by police officers without due process

19
  • Sep, 1949
  • Mu-an Incident
  • While attempting to quell violence after a prison
    escape, 40 people affected by HD living nearby
    were murdered

20
  • 19501953
  • Incidents during the Korean War
  • The South and North Korean army, police, and due
    to communism, around 150 HD patients were
    murdered over 7 incidents

21
  • Aug, 1957
  • Sa-chon Bi-to-ri Incident
  • To preserve food supplies, residents of an island
    ambushed and attacked HD patients living on the
    island, resulting in 30 deaths and tens of injured

22
Relative Isolation Era (1963-present)
  • Enactment of resettlement village policies
  • Korea abolished forced isolation policies, and
    made it possible for people affected by HD to
    become economically independent in resettlement
    villages, called the Resettlement Village Policy

23
Relative Isolation Era (1963-present)
  • It is recognized that HD is not highly contagious
    but the isolation policy was also a product of
    the fact that the Korean Government did not have
    resources to accommodate people in appropriate
    facilities

24
Relative Isolation Era (1963-present)
  • Also, it was hoped that if they achieved economic
    independence, prejudice about them would
    decrease, so they achieved economic independence
    through farming activities

25
Relative Isolation Era (1963-present)
  • However, the socially embedded prejudice and
    discrimination against people affected by HD
    continued to persist
  • As a result, resettlement villages constructed
    after the abolishment of forced isolation
    policies had the effect of limiting true social
    reintegration

26
DISCRIMINATION RELATED TO HD IN KOREA
27
Institutional Discrimination
  • Sterilization and Abortion
  • Sterilization and abortion practices from the
    Japanese occupation which persisted after
    liberation
  • According to an annual report by the Sorok Island
    Hospital in 1958, 1,191 HD patients received
    sterilization procedures from 1949 to 1958

28
  • The sterilization operation room at Sorok Island

29
Institutional Discrimination
  • Forced separation of children from HD patients
  • Even if HD patients were able to have a child,
    they were not allowed to live together and had to
    be sent to a state institution

30
  • Children separated from their parents

31
Institutional Discrimination
  • Forced Isolation and Relocation
  • The policy of forcibly placing HD patients in
    isolation was carried over from the Japanese
    occupation, and even after liberation, was
    continued by the Korean government until the
    1980s

32
Institutional Discrimination
  • Forced isolation and forced relocation
  • Despite the rehabilitation village system being
    established in 1963, the national policy was to
    force people affected by HD into Sorok Island
  • The policy remained in effect until 2005

33
Discrimination in the Media
  • There have been public messages spreading
    prejudice and fear about HD from the beginning of
    the Japanese occupation
  • This continued even after liberation, and because
    of this people affected by HD face prejudice on a
    regular basis

34
Discrimination in the Media
  • Such messages portrayed the HD community to be a
    dangerous threat to society and favored forced
    isolation of HD patients
  • In the 1990s, a rumor placed the responsibility
    of kidnappings in the city of Daegu on people
    affected by HD, causing great harm to the people
    affected by HD in the community

35
(No Transcript)
36
Discrimination from Society
  • Discrimination in the school system
  • There have been incidents across South Korea
    where parents have refused to have their children
    attend schools with children of people affected
    by HD during the 1970s

37
Discrimination from Society
  • Discrimination in hiring practices
  • If a candidate is known to have HD, it becomes
    extremely difficult to obtain the position

38
Discrimination from Society
  • O-mado land reclamation incident
  • A land reclamation project was started, to enable
    people affected by HD to have self sufficient
    food supplies, but because of protest and action
    from local residents and politicians, the land
    from the project was expropriated

39
  • O-mado land reclamation project

40
Discrimination from Society
  • Difficulties using public facilities
  • Many people affected by HD have the experience of
    being refused entry into public bath houses,
    hairdressers, and restaurants

41
EFFORTS TO COMBAT DISCRIMINATION
42
  • Change of Terminology
  • There has been a continuing effort to alter the
    terminology, and in December 1999, at a general
    meeting of the Korean National Assembly, a matter
    was passed to use the term Hansens Disease
    instead of the term leprosy

43
  • Change of Terminology
  • After this, there was an effort to monitor the
    abasement or the use of false information
    regarding people affected by HD

44
  • Investigation of the human rights of people
    affected by HD
  • National-level investigation of the human rights
    violation of people affected by HD for the first
    time in 2005

45
  • Establishment of the special law for HD patients
  • In 2007, a special law protecting the human
    rights of HD patients was passed through the
    National Assembly of the Republic of Korea

46
  • Coming out
  • People affected by HD who were active in society
    began to express their experience of having the
    disease
  • An example is Mr. Doo Sung Lim who received
    recognition for services to improving the human
    rights of people affected by HD in 2008 and was
    elected as an assembly man of the Republick of
    Korea

47
CONCLUSION
48
  • As a result, there is a need to develop tools to
    uproot the prejudice and discrimination against
    people affected by HD
  • There are continuing efforts to develop an array
    of such tools in Korea to change social
    perceptions

49
  • The medical and institutional issues around HD
    have been largely resolved
  • The prejudice and discrimination in common
    society is deeply rooted
  • Because of this, the true social reintegration of
    people affected by HD is still far off

50
End
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