The Korea Herald

지나쌤

[Herald Interview] Korea faces multicultural challenges

By Korea Herald

Published : Feb. 23, 2015 - 19:49

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When the governing Saenuri Party picked Jasmine Lee to serve as a lawmaker in April 2012, hate groups attacked her as a “dark-skinned” foreigner posing as a Korean.

Saenuri officials hoped Lee, the first Philippine-born lawmaker here, would encourage “diversity” in a dominantly homogenous, and sometimes xenophobic South Korea, to better represent naturalized citizens, foreign laborers, and other minorities in the National Assembly.

She has done her best to meet the expectations, Lee said in an interview with The Korea Herald earlier this month, but the country has a long way to go.

 
Jasmine Lee. (Chung Hee-cho/The Korea Herald) Jasmine Lee. (Chung Hee-cho/The Korea Herald)

“There has never been a multicultural society in South Korea,” she said. “So officials here don’t know exactly how to support such families here.”

Although international marriages involving South Koreans have decreased, more than 25,000 foreigners have wed South Korean husbands or wives each year from 2006 to 2013, according to Statistics Korea. Officials suspect thousands more are missed by government tallies.

The influx of both unskilled and skilled workers has also increased the need for a government policy that will assist foreign-born residents and their Korean-born children adjust to their lives in Korea. Often, the language is the highest barrier.

“Mothers who come from Southeast Asia, North America, or other places often don’t speak Korean,” she said. “Their children suffer the consequences, as their moms often lack the lingual requisites to coach and educate their children, who must learn Korean as they grow up.”

Incorporating males born in households with foreign fathers or mothers, into the military is another one of those needs.

South Korea’s Constitution obligates physically and psychologically fit men to serve 21 months in the armed forces. But the military did not accept “multicultural” men until 2011, as officials thought they would lack the social skills to mingle with others in their unit.

Lee has a son with her late Korean husband, who is likely to enter the military sometime next year. She said incorporating men from multicultural families was a step in the right direction.

“A Justice Ministry official once suggested that ‘multicultural’ servicemen serve in segregated units,” Lee said.

“I asked the official if those multicultural men would fight separately from other units if a war broke out. He said no.”

“So I asked him, then why segregate them?”

Lee also suggested easing labor restrictions keeping skilled workers away from South Korean employers who desperately need them, in reference to the Labor Ministry’s Employment Permit System.

The EPS allows non-skilled workers from 15 nations, mostly Southeast and Central Asian countries, to enter Korea if employers here can’t find South Korean nationals to fill factory jobs and other labor-intensive positions.

But EPS laborers are subject to tough restrictions that only allow them to work here for three years. At best, they can work here for eight, but immigration regulations keep their families from entering Korea with them.

“I’ve seen employers who say they are reluctant to give up formerly nonskilled workers who have worked for them three, four years,” Lee said. “By then, employers say that the workers are now skilled, and are finally fluent in Korean. But the EPS forces them out.”

When asked if she’ll run again in the 2016 general election, Lee said she would if given the chance by her party. But she didn’t expect the Saenuri Party to relist her for a proportional representative position, or a run in a voting district somewhere in the country.

“That’s okay with me though. I’m sure I can continue my work elsewhere, without having people say bad things about me all the time,” she said laughing.

By Jeong Hunny (hj257@heraldcorp.com)