A 120,000-strong protest across several major cities in the Republic of Korea on 18th of January 2018 that brought to light the murder of Ms. Ji-In Gu – a young woman who died after refusing to renounce her beliefs - has triggered a global wave of protests in more than thirty countries including the UK, France, Germany, Switzerland, Czech Republic, South Africa, Australia, Zimbabwe, Namibia, New Zealand, Japan and the Philippines. Global rallies have urged for justice to be delivered and for the enactment of a law that bans coercive conversion programmes. Shockingly, the South Korean government continues to turn a blind eye and, as of yet, has failed to issue a single statement.
In 2016, Ms. Gu was kidnapped, confined and shackled for a period of 44 days where she forcibly received “conversion education”. After her escape, she petitioned to the President of South Korea on 4th of June 2017 for a law banning coercive conversion. Her plea was ignored. She was re-taken captive to a recreational lodge in Hwasun, Jeonnam province, where she died on 29th of December 2017. The autopsy revealed a strong likelihood of cardiac arrest caused by asphyxiation. Her parents are under investigation for having allegedly collaborated with these so-called ‘Christian pastors’ after having admitted their daughter on to the coercive conversion programme.
South Korea, home to more than 1200 victims of coercive conversion, is a supposedly democratic and developed country which enshrines freedom of religion for all under article 20 of its constitution. Through the practice of coercive conversion, people have been confined, shackled and beaten for having refused to renounce their religious beliefs. Coercive conversion programme leaders mask their true identity and use fear to pressure family members into ‘protecting’ their son or daughter. As Ms. Eun Kyung Lim, speaking on behalf of a Korean non-governmental human rights organisation named Human Rights Association for Forced Conversion (HRAFC) argues “Isn’t it nonsense that forced conversion with human rights infringement takes place in a country that is defending freedom of religion by the constitution?”
Indeed, does the South Korean government not possess or feel a duty or imperative to respond to the voices of its own people? Should it not ensure that peoples’ basic rights are protected according to the constitution and that those responsible are held to account in a court of law? Isn’t religion that which promotes and fosters good-will between one another and deeper understanding of a greater power or Creator?
The plea was made on British soil on 10th of March 2018 in London, UK, at a rally co-hosted by the Association for Victims of Coercive Conversion Programmes (AVCCP) and International Women’s Peace Group (IWPG). Religious leaders representing the Muslim, Christian, Sikh, Buddhist, Hindu and Jain faiths - along with their communities - gathered in Parliament Square to call on the South Korean government to enact a law that bans coercive conversion. With the practice of forced conversion becoming increasingly common within our own prisons, we must do more to counter religious conversion of any kind before more lives are stolen. Speaking on the UK rally, Vardata Singh from the London Central Gurdwara said: “It was very inspirational, it was a time of great sadness when forced conversion is becoming more widespread in British prisons, it has become almost an epidemic, and the need to protect people’s rights to religious freedom is imperative”
To help call for the enactment of a law banning coercive conversion, please consider taking a moment to fill out the following petition:-
Signature Campaign for the Enactment of a Special Law Against Coercive Conversion Programs
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