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South Korean Culture Ministry Admits Existence of Artist Blacklist Linked to Presidential Scandal

Accepted submission by takyon at 2017-01-23 07:48:25
Digital Liberty

The South Korean Presidential corruption scandal [wikipedia.org] extends to the censorship of film and art [reuters.com]:

South Korea's culture ministry apologized on Monday for a blacklist of artists which excluded them from government support, admitting there was a systematic effort to sideline critics of scandal-plagued President Park Geun-hye. The apology was the clearest admission yet of the blacklist of cultural and media figures critical of the impeached leader that has led to the arrests of her former chief of staff and the culture minister at the weekend for abuse of power.

"It is distressing and shameful that the ministry, which should have been the bulwark for freedom of artistic expression and creativity, has caused questions of fairness in assisting culture and arts with a list of artists to be excluded from public support," Vice Culture Minister Song Soo-keun said.

The blacklist, part of which was seen by Reuters, contains the names of thousands of actors, writers, film directors and others. It includes acclaimed film directors like Cannes award winner Park Chan-wook, Venice Film Festival top prize winner Kim Ki-duk and actors Moon So-ri and Song Gang-ho. None was immediately available for comment. Faced with a political crisis earlier in her term, the government and state entities used the blacklist as "guidelines" to penalize artists and censor content, a special prosecutor's office investigating an influence-peddling scandal said last week.

Related: South Korea Broadens Internet Censorship to Innocuous Music Videos [soylentnews.org]
South Korean President Park Geun-hye Impeached [soylentnews.org]
Samsung Vice Chairman a Suspect in South Korean Presidential Bribery Probe [soylentnews.org]


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