I guess Korea doesn’t have any whistle blower laws:
The Jeju Office of Education is under fire for reprimanding a female teacher who had informed the state human rights agency of her boss’s sexual harassment of a student.
Unionized teachers, human rights activists and the provincial council of the country’s largest island are calling for the office to withdraw the reprimand, warning that otherwise they will take collective action to strike it down.
On Monday, the five female members of the Jeju Self-Governing Provincial Council issued a joint statement denouncing the education office. “The educational authorities showed an attempt to dodge responsibility by taking an administrative decision against the female teacher for filing the complaint,” it said. “It should immediately cancel the disciplinary step and make an apology to all the residents of Jeju.”
But the office insists that the decision was justifiable, citing a regulation that bans the content of counseling with any student from being open to a third party without the consent of the involved student. According to the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), the middle school teacher reported the alleged harassment to the agency along with a record of some corrupt behavior involving the head of the school.
“The principal made sexually abusive remarks to the student and even groped her bottom,” said an NHRC officer. [Korea Times via reader tip]
Read the rest at the link.






10:32 pm on August 27th, 2010 1
Sounds like Jeju island would be a fine place to work while under the authority of such a fine education office.
10:34 pm on August 27th, 2010 2
S. Korea = protect the guilty to no end and forever thine this will be done.
10:19 am on August 29th, 2010 3
Her mistake was to not get dirt on the head of the school board first. That way you can down two dirty old men at once instead of just one. But yeah this is typical Korean education BS, fix the leak not the problem.
11:37 am on August 29th, 2010 4
This is amazingly crappy…
…but it will be solved through public outrage by an increasingly proactive Korean population that knows right from wrong and is willing to stand up for their beliefs.
Before everyone gets all holier-than-thou, consider that USFK has been just as crappy… and gotten by with it because there was no public outrage.
The whole Lt. Davis thing comes to mind.
Not big enough? Google Sibel Edmonds.