Parents of S. Korean soldiers spent sleepless night worrying about sons after martial law declared
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Soldiers try to enter the main hall of the National Assembly on Dec 3, after South Korea President Yoon Suk Yeol declared martial law.
PHOTO: AFP
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SEOUL - The declaration of martial law late on Dec 3
In an online community of Korean soldiers’ parents on Naver, which has around 150,000 members, parents voiced their worries throughout the night, uncertain about what their sons were facing.
All able-bodied men in South Korea over the age of 18 are required to serve in the army for at least 18 months.
“I left a message to my son - ‘I love you’ - knowing he wouldn’t be able to read it. Then I cried, overcome with anxiety that something might happen to him,” one user wrote.
Sharing feelings of shame and sorrow, some apologised to their sons for the state of the nation.
One post read: “How frightening it must have been for our sons in the military.” To this, another user replied: “It was such a heartbreaking night for my son.”
Some parents spoke up on behalf of their sons, expressing concern for the soldiers caught in the unrest.
“The fervor should not be directed at the soldiers but at the presidential office in Yongsan-gu,” one comment read, addressing the physical altercations between protesters and military personnel at the National Assembly. THE KOREA HERALD/ASIA NEWS NETWORK

