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Disabled Koreans Face Official Neglect, Abuse

Asia: A string of unsettling cases in recent years has brought out allegations of embezzlement, sexual mistreatment and forced sterilization of the handicapped.

January 16, 2000|KYONG-HWA SEOK, ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEOUL, South Korea — The body of a 9-year-old disabled girl was found near a stream south of Seoul. An accidental drowning, the coroner said. But investigators also learned that lax caretakers at a state institution had not reported her missing for three days.

In another incident, seven employees at Yangji, a shelter for alcoholics and the homeless in central South Korea, were convicted of embezzlement. Shelter residents alleged workers had also raped several patients, but police said there was no evidence.


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These are among a string of cases in recent years that revealed neglect and graft at state shelters and brought out allegations of forcible sterilization and sexual assault. Advocates for the disabled say complaints about shoddy treatment from the state are largely ignored.

Many with disabilities suffer ostracism in South Korea, where Confucian influence teaches reverence for bloodlines and people are very conscious of what others think of them.

A baby born with physical or mental defects is considered a sign of tainted blood, and people often try to hide the child. Many parents prefer to send such children to shelters rather than care for them at home, and a few abandon ailing kids in front of state institutions.

And there are few concessions for the disabled. Wheelchair ramps are scarce, and the only way to cross many main roads in Seoul, the capital, is down long flights of stairs into underground passageways.

"For most Koreans, having a disabled person in your family is a shame. Many families try to hide them instead of having them properly treated," said Kim Young-wook, a professor of special education at Seoul's Dankook University.

The 1997 case of the drowned girl, Choi Mi-sun, led to a broader probe of Evada, the welfare center for children with speaking and hearing disabilities where she stayed. The director of Evada, in Pyongtaek city, was convicted of embezzlement and given a suspended prison term of 1 1/2 years.

"Many welfare institutions have become safe havens for dishonest people to embezzle funds and do whatever else they like because of a lack of strict government control," said Kim Yong-han, a human rights activist.

The government denies that corruption is widespread, saying provincial authorities adequately monitor state institutions in most cases.

"The central government does not have the manpower to directly control all of the institutions," said Kang Ki-ho at the health and welfare ministry.

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