NEWS1A plane crash in South Korea final December left Park Guen-woo an orphan. The 22-year-old had barely discovered house to mourn his dad and mom when he got here throughout a torrent of on-line abuse, conspiracies and malicious jokes made concerning the victims.
The Jeju Air aircraft, which was coming back from Bangkok, Thailand, crash-landed at Muan Worldwide Airport on 29 December and exploded after slamming right into a concrete barrier on the finish of the runway, killing 179 of the 181 folks on board.
Police investigations have recognized and apprehended eight individuals who have been accused of constructing derogatory and defamatory on-line posts. These included recommendations that households have been “thrilled” to obtain compensation from authorities, or that they have been “faux victims” – to the extent that some felt compelled to show they’d misplaced their family members.
Authorities have taken down a minimum of 427 such posts.
However this isn’t the primary time that bereaved households in South Korea have discovered themselves the targets of on-line abuse. Chatting with the BBC, specialists described a tradition the place financial struggles, monetary envy and social points corresponding to poisonous competitiveness are fuelling hate speech.
Monetary resentment
Following Seoul’s Halloween crowd crush in 2022, victims and bereaved households have been equally smeared. A person who misplaced his son within the incident had his photograph doctored by hate teams – displaying him laughing after receiving compensation.
Individuals whose family members died within the Sewol ferry sinking in 2014 – a maritime catastrophe that noticed 304 folks killed, principally schoolchildren – have additionally for years been the targets of hate speech.
The tragedy noticed the federal government pay out a mean of 420 million gained ($292,840; £231,686) per sufferer – triggering feedback that claimed this determine was unreasonably excessive.
“People who find themselves dwelling daily really feel the compensation is overrated and say the bereaved are getting ‘unfair therapy’ and that they’re making a giant deal when everybody’s life is tough,” Koo Jeong-woo, a sociology professor at Sungkyunkwan College, instructed information web site The Korea Herald.
In later feedback to the BBC, Prof Koo steered that financial stress and a aggressive job market – significantly within the wake of Covid – has left many individuals feeling socially remoted, exacerbating the problem of hate speech.
Many South Koreans, he says, now “view others not as their friends, however as adversaries”, pointing to a widespread tradition of comparability in South Korea.
“We have a tendency to check rather a lot… in the event you put another person down, it is simpler to really feel superior your self,” he instructed the BBC. “That is why there is a little bit of tendency in Korea to interact in hate speech or make derogatory remarks, aiming to decrease others to raise oneself.”
BBC Korean/Jungmin ChoiMr Park says the households of the Jeju Air crash victims have been characterised as “parasites squandering the nation’s cash”.
By means of instance, he refers to a latest article about an emergency aid fund of three million gained ($2,055; £1,632) that was raised for the bereaved by donations. That article was met with a flood of malicious feedback, many referencing the misguided suggestion that taxpayers’ cash was used for the fund.
“It looks like the households of the Muan Airport victims have hit the jackpot. They have to be secretly delighted,” stated one such remark.
Mr Park says these feedback have been “overwhelming”.
“Even when compensation for the accident is available in, how might we probably really feel like recklessly spending it when it’s the worth of our family members’ lives?” he says. “Each single a kind of feedback cuts us deeply. We’re not right here to earn money.”
“Too many individuals, as a substitute of being delicate, construct their leisure on others’ struggling,” he provides. “When one thing like this occurs, they belittle it and spew hateful remarks.”
Joshua Uyheng, a psychology professor within the Philippines who research on-line hate, says that hate is usually “directed in direction of [those] we consider are gaining some benefit at our expense”.
“We really feel hatred once we [think we] are getting the brief finish of the stick.”
‘Making the most of others’ ache’
Within the case of the Jeju Air crash, political dynamics solely made issues worse.
The accident got here amid a interval of political turmoil in South Korea, with the nation reeling from suspended President Yoon Suk Yeol’s shock resolution to enact martial regulation – an incident that politically divided the nation.
Many supporters of President Yoon’s right-wing Individuals Energy Occasion have, with out proof, pinned blame for the crash on the primary opposition Democratic Occasion (DP), pointing to the truth that Muan Airport was initially constructed as a part of a political pledge by the DP.
“The Muan airport tragedy is a man-made catastrophe attributable to the DP,” learn one touch upon YouTube. One other described it as “100% the fault” of the occasion.
Park Han-shin, whose brother died within the aircraft crash, says he has been accused of being a DP member and “faux bereaved member of the family”. So intensive have been these claims that his daughter took to social media to name them out.
“It pains me deeply to see my father, who misplaced his brother in such a tragedy, being labelled a ‘scammer’. It additionally makes me nervous that this misinformation may lead my father to make mistaken selections out of despair,” she wrote on Threads two days after the incident.
Park Han-shin says he’s shocked by how folks appear to “get pleasure from profiting from others’ ache”.
“That is merely not one thing a human being ought to do,” he instructed the BBC.
“I’m simply an atypical citizen. I’m not right here to enter politics. I got here to seek out out the reality about my youthful brother’s dying.”
NEWS1Whereas there aren’t any excellent options to hate, specialists say social media corporations ought to set up insurance policies on what constitutes hate speech and average content material posted on their platforms accordingly.
“On-line customers ought to have the ability to report malicious posts and feedback easily, and platform corporations should actively delete such content material,” Prof Koo says. Regulation enforcement businesses also needs to take perpetrators to process, he provides.
Reminding folks of their shared identities may assist, says Prof Uyheng.
“The much less folks really feel that they’re on reverse ends of a zero-sum sport, maybe the extra they’ll really feel that tragedies like these are the shared concern of us all – and that victims deserve empathy and compassion, not vitriol and condemnation.”

















































