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South Korea to tighten asylum laws as hundreds of Yemenis arrive | |
2018-06-30 | |
[AlAhram] South Korea will tighten laws governing the arrival of refugees, the Justice Ministry said on Friday, after a rapid rise in the number of Yemeni asylum seekers sparked anti-refugee sentiment in the racially homogeneous country. No culture clash there, nope, nope... More than 552 people from Yemen ![]() arrived on the southern resort island of Jeju between January and May, more than the 430 Yemenis who had ever applied for refugee status in South Korea, the ministry said.
More than 540,000 South Koreans have signed an online petition to the presidential Blue House in the past two weeks, asking the government to abolish or amend no-visa entries and the granting of refugee status to applicants. Only let them in if they can eat kimchi... The Justice Ministry said it will revise the Refugee Act to prevent abuses. South Korea will also increase the number of officers reviewing refugee applications so as to "quickly review and thoroughly verify identities so as to meticulously review potential for problems including terrorism and violent crime". South Korea has already blocked asylum seekers in Jeju from leaving the island and on June 1 dropped Yemen from the list of countries that would not require a visa when entering the country. the asylum seekers have chosen Jeju can be traced to a direct flight from Kuala Lumpur, established by budget carrier AirAsia X in December, a Justice Ministry official said. "A few Yemenis started to enter the country in early December and the news about the new flight spread among the 2,800 Yemenis in Malaysia," the official said, declining to be identified by name. South Korea began accepting refugee applications in 1994 after acceding to the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees in 1992. The country also enacted the Refugee Act in 2013, becoming the first Asian country to pass its own refugee legislation which allows protection for refugees that have sufficient grounds for fear of persecution due to race, religion, nationality, social group or political view. A total of 40,470 people have applied for asylum in South Korea since 1994. The government has so far granted refugee status to just 839. Yemen has been locked in civil war for the past three years, with aid agencies warning earlier this year that the country is in danger of tipping into famine if fighting continues to disrupt imports of food aid. A blogger has called a rally for Saturday in Seoul, under a banner reading "Fake Refugees GET OUT", with mothers of young children posting online they intend to join to raise concerns about crime and loss of jobs. | |
Posted by:trailing wife |
#11 ![]() |
Posted by: Jack Chaiter7913 2018-06-30 17:12 |
#10 Don't they realize that diversity is their strength? Why do you think India and Brazil's economies are so much larger than China and Japan's? Uh, or something. Fortunately for Sork, it's only countries of pallor that are required to diversify themselves into oblivion. |
Posted by: charger 2018-06-30 13:00 |
#9 Send them to Iran, Iran started the war in Yemen. |
Posted by: ruprecht 2018-06-30 11:25 |
#8 WTF. Korea needs to put them on a boat back to Yemen and suggest they die in battle for their preferred side. |
Posted by: Flilet Omeremble3846 2018-06-30 10:01 |
#7 The kufr of Jeju, jejune, Soon mooed the Mohammedan tune, And peaceful sharia Rained down on Korea... When cattle jumped over the moon. |
Posted by: Zenobia Floger6220 2018-06-30 08:18 |
#6 Send them on to North Korea. In turn the Norks can send them on to China, if they don't eat them first. It's time China take in its fair share of refugees. |
Posted by: Seeking Cure For Ignorance 2018-06-30 07:59 |
#5 Korea? From Yemen? I would have thought that there were a few places between A and B they could have gone, no? Always seem to go to the rich places. What's wrong with all the 'stans? |
Posted by: AlanC 2018-06-30 07:53 |
#4 I recommend the Isabella and Ferdinand program. Convert or move on. |
Posted by: Procopius2k 2018-06-30 07:48 |
#3 The infection spreads to unlikely places |
Posted by: Frank G 2018-06-30 06:22 |
#2 Ima not expecting a sternly worded UN letter of condemnation anytime soon. The UN only writes.... 'letters of condemnation.' |
Posted by: Besoeker 2018-06-30 05:17 |
#1 Ima not expecting a sternly worded UN letter of condemnation anytime soon. |
Posted by: Raj 2018-06-30 05:13 |