The Japan Times - Abolish or rebrand? South Korea's 'feminist' ministry in crosshairs

EUR -
AED 3.807443
AFN 77.391292
ALL 99.493048
AMD 411.236955
ANG 1.868156
AOA 947.988616
ARS 1092.019801
AUD 1.662113
AWG 1.867209
AZN 1.760047
BAM 1.963896
BBD 2.092868
BDT 126.403548
BGN 1.961925
BHD 0.390749
BIF 3068.137457
BMD 1.036619
BND 1.406338
BOB 7.162736
BRL 5.988439
BSD 1.036493
BTN 90.321974
BWP 14.477102
BYN 3.39215
BYR 20317.723586
BZD 2.082144
CAD 1.488548
CDF 2954.362282
CHF 0.939489
CLF 0.02644
CLP 1014.756271
CNY 7.449451
CNH 7.552227
COP 4311.690466
CRC 524.577799
CUC 1.036619
CUP 27.470392
CVE 110.722531
CZK 25.173186
DJF 184.586315
DKK 7.460762
DOP 64.05593
DZD 140.602761
EGP 52.129782
ERN 15.549278
ETB 132.633331
FJD 2.406925
FKP 0.853746
GBP 0.832034
GEL 2.943898
GGP 0.853746
GHS 15.962268
GIP 0.853746
GMD 75.153968
GNF 8958.933986
GTQ 8.012263
GYD 216.860301
HKD 8.072724
HNL 26.405368
HRK 7.649776
HTG 135.582876
HUF 406.893348
IDR 16899.422085
ILS 3.705942
IMP 0.853746
INR 90.236088
IQD 1357.837098
IRR 43641.64127
ISK 146.795006
JEP 0.853746
JMD 163.263066
JOD 0.73538
JPY 160.449907
KES 133.878976
KGS 90.652268
KHR 4168.304832
KMF 496.385051
KPW 932.95681
KRW 1503.822882
KWD 0.31988
KYD 0.863786
KZT 538.616079
LAK 22547.607008
LBP 92822.254129
LKR 310.496038
LRD 206.276362
LSL 19.453964
LTL 3.060865
LVL 0.62704
LYD 5.11117
MAD 10.446568
MDL 19.471838
MGA 4866.202172
MKD 61.722173
MMK 3366.896615
MNT 3522.429945
MOP 8.314217
MRU 41.378384
MUR 48.721162
MVR 15.963341
MWK 1797.361797
MXN 21.20281
MYR 4.606701
MZN 66.238838
NAD 19.453964
NGN 1546.562253
NIO 38.148004
NOK 11.689803
NPR 144.515658
NZD 1.839101
OMR 0.39905
PAB 1.036503
PEN 3.84131
PGK 4.220481
PHP 60.133239
PKR 289.140285
PLN 4.216932
PYG 8161.805223
QAR 3.778952
RON 4.984185
RSD 117.080852
RUB 103.596064
RWF 1464.078161
SAR 3.887694
SBD 8.785534
SCR 14.849161
SDG 623.007574
SEK 11.395988
SGD 1.402514
SHP 0.853746
SLE 23.740152
SLL 21737.372608
SOS 592.359195
SRD 36.390526
STD 21455.911066
SVC 9.069477
SYP 13478.114376
SZL 19.447738
THB 34.901386
TJS 11.298305
TMT 3.628165
TND 3.327382
TOP 2.427869
TRY 37.247612
TTD 7.030186
TWD 34.054479
TZS 2657.132218
UAH 43.260781
UGX 3814.800448
USD 1.036619
UYU 44.715205
UZS 13459.748672
VES 60.613355
VND 26102.055096
VUV 123.069436
WST 2.903389
XAF 658.691576
XAG 0.032195
XAU 0.000365
XCD 2.801513
XDR 0.794993
XOF 658.682005
XPF 119.331742
YER 257.912192
ZAR 19.376832
ZMK 9330.799205
ZMW 29.15303
ZWL 333.79075
  • RBGPF

    0.2700

    66.27

    +0.41%

  • RYCEF

    0.1500

    7.5

    +2%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    125.93

    +0.63%

  • GSK

    -0.0900

    34.81

    -0.26%

  • SCS

    0.1050

    11.175

    +0.94%

  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    23.29

    -0.26%

  • BTI

    0.4050

    40.145

    +1.01%

  • RIO

    1.0850

    60.935

    +1.78%

  • NGG

    0.1300

    62.14

    +0.21%

  • RELX

    0.0600

    49.91

    +0.12%

  • AZN

    -0.4000

    69.46

    -0.58%

  • VOD

    -0.3950

    8.095

    -4.88%

  • BCE

    0.3200

    24.35

    +1.31%

  • BP

    0.5510

    31.421

    +1.75%

  • CMSD

    0.0010

    23.751

    0%

  • JRI

    0.1400

    12.6

    +1.11%

Abolish or rebrand? South Korea's 'feminist' ministry in crosshairs
Abolish or rebrand? South Korea's 'feminist' ministry in crosshairs

Abolish or rebrand? South Korea's 'feminist' ministry in crosshairs

South Korea's anti-feminist president-elect has vowed to abolish the Ministry of Gender Equality. But actually getting rid of it will be tricky, experts say, and the incoming administration is already backing off its promise.

Text size:

Since it was set up in 2001, the department has been a driver of social progress for South Korean women -- for example, making it possible for single mothers to register their kids in their name.

Along the way, it has also become a flashpoint in South Korea's increasingly bitter debates over sexism and gender, with detractors such as incoming President Yoon Suk-yeol claiming it is an obsolete backwater of "radical feminism".

The ministry's supporters, however, point to a track record of welfare policies that benefit a diverse cross-section of society -- from teenage runaways to the children of North Korean defectors.

"My ex just moved out one day and never came back," said single mother Jin Mi-ae, adding that her former husband refused to contribute financially to their child's upbringing.

Failing to pay child support was criminalised in South Korea only last year. Many eligible parents -- mostly women -- still do not receive it but thanks to the ministry's efforts, there are now mechanisms in place to help.

Jin filed a case with the Child Support Agency -- set up by the ministry in 2015 -- and said its assistance was crucial in her quest to get her ex-husband to help.

Yoon has said he will not renege on his abolition pledge, but last week, his transition team said they would keep the ministry for now.

Scrapping the ministry would require legislation to reorganise the government -- a tricky ask as Yoon does not have a majority.

"The likely clash at the National Assembly may taint the new administration's image," Shin Yul, a political science professor at Myongji University told AFP.

With local elections coming up in June, he added, it is unlikely Yoon's People Power Party would want to expend political capital on a bruising legislative fight and has put the issue "on hold".

- 'Symbolic target' -

In recent years, South Korea's #MeToo generation has mobilised on a host of issues, from legalising abortion to demanding prosecutions for "revenge porn".

This has triggered online backlash against so-called "radical feminism", with young South Korean men bemoaning their own lot -- chiefly compulsory military service, from which women are exempt.

Yoon appealed to disgruntled male voters, branding himself an anti-feminist and pledging to abolish the ministry.

It became a "highly symbolic target" as the conservative candidate courted young men who felt the government was unfairly "privileging the interests of women", Sharon Yoon, a Korean studies professor at the University of Notre Dame, told AFP.

Yoon claimed South Korean women do not suffer from "systemic gender discrimination" -- despite much evidence to the contrary on the gender wage gap and female workforce participation.

He won the election in March -- but by the narrowest margin ever, after young women mobilised against him.

Even so, activists say his victory is a huge blow.

"It's devastating to have a president-elect who actively spreads prejudice and hatred," Yujin, a 26-year-old female voter and activist, told AFP.

- 'We are the fire' -

With a budget of some 1.41 trillion won ($1 billion) -- compared with 54.61 trillion won for defence spending -- the ministry has the least funding of any government department.

Even so, it has introduced a slew of programmes that supporters say help the most vulnerable, from stipends to tackle "period poverty" to projects that assist victims of domestic abuse.

Its most defining achievement was its role in the abolition of South Korea's "hoju" registry, the patriarchal family record system.

But this vital work is not recognised, activist Kim Do-kyung told AFP. Like domestic labour, "it's a lot of real and important work, but no one really considers it work," she said.

The ministry declined AFP's request for comment.

Yoon's battle cry against it appears to have galvanised women -- the left-leaning Democratic Party said it has signed up thousands of new female members, and other activists have announced forays into politics.

"We are ready to be the leaders of this country," activist Haein Shim told AFP.

"Yoon's administration will do all they can to make us burn to keep our mouths shut, but we don't burn because we are the fire."

Many experts now expect Yoon to "rebrand" rather than abolish the ministry, pointing to how his victory has refocused global attention on sexism in the country.

"South Korea does not exist in a vacuum," Linda Hasunuma, a political scientist at Temple University, told AFP.

"The world is watching how it treats its women and girls."

Y.Ishikawa--JT