‘Communist party’ joke in South Korea leads to espionage probe

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Mock protesters wearing placards that read ‘Destroy the communist regime’ take part in an anti-terror drill in Seoul. The incident serves as a reminder that in South Korea, jokes involving communism do not translate well.

Mock protesters wearing placards that read ‘Destroy the communist regime’ take part in an anti-terror drill in Seoul. The incident serves as a reminder that in South Korea, jokes involving communism do not translate well.

PHOTO: AFP

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A group of holidaymakers inadvertently triggered a national security investigation after a photo of their gathering with a banner jokingly referring to it as a “communist party” meeting circulated online.

The image, which showed approximately 20 individuals, including children, under a banner that read “Inaugural Korean Communist Party Family Summer Camp,” quickly spread across online forums, leading multiple concerned citizens to file espionage complaints with the authorities.

On Aug 22, South Jeolla province police confirmed to local media that they had been investigating these complaints. The photo in question indicated that the event took place from Aug 4 to 6 at a guest house in the province.

Upon investigation, the group turned out to be anything but a cell of undercover operatives. Law enforcement identified the individuals as members of a local money pooling group and their families who were simply enjoying a summer holiday together.

The “communist party” moniker, the authorities learnt, was an inside joke poking fun at their leader’s decision-making style.

“We just thought it would be funny,” one group member told local media, explaining that a friend had brought the banner as a gag prop. The authorities plan to dismiss the case without pressing charges, having determined the incident was merely an attempt at humour.

The incident serves as a reminder that in South Korea, where threats and military provocations from a heavily armed “communist” state across the border are an everyday matter, jokes involving communism do not translate well.

Although South Korea is considered a free, open society with established democratic norms, the country’s state of being technically still at war with North Korea impacts various aspects of its legal and political framework – most notably, the National Security Act.

Established in 1948 to counter threats from North Korea, the National Security Act provides the basis for punishing members and supporters of “anti-state organisations” and those who “praise” or “encourage” entities deemed enemies of the state.

While the law does not explicitly outlaw communism, its vague language has allowed authoritarian leaders in the country to use the “communist” label to suppress opposition and criticism.

While cases such as this lay bare lingering anxiety surrounding communism, legal experts note that in today’s South Korea, even parties openly promoting communist ideals may not necessarily face charges under the National Security Act. The law is now applied with much greater restraint than in the past, they explained. THE KOREA HERALD/ASIA NEWS NETWORK

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