Key Points

The South Korean Democratic Party has escalated its fight against alleged election interference by the far-right Rhee Park School. Online news reports suggest the group systematically manipulated public opinion through coordinated comment campaigns during the presidential election. Police have already taken initial steps by restricting the movement of the group's leader and conducting raids. The investigation aims to uncover potential election law violations and protect the integrity of the democratic process.

Key Points: South Korea Election Scandal Lee Jae-myung Probes Rhee Park School Rigging

  • Democratic Party files complaint against Rhee Park School for election interference
  • Online news outlet Newstapa reveals coordinated comment manipulation
  • Police launch investigation and ban group leader from leaving country
  • Allegations involve coordinated online propaganda targeting election candidates
2 min read

South Korea: Democratic Party urges probe into rigging during election

Democratic Party demands investigation into online manipulation by far-right group during South Korean presidential election campaign

"We will hold accountable any attempt to disturb our society by manipulating public opinion - Noh Jong-myeon, DP Floor Spokesperson"

Seoul, June 7

The South Korean Democratic Party (DP) on Saturday called for a thorough investigation into a conservative education organisation's alleged online opinion manipulation in the final days of the June 3 presidential election campaign.

In a written briefing, DP floor spokesperson Noh Jong-myeon said a "fair and urgent investigation is urgently needed" into the far-right group "Rhee Park School" to determine whether they were involved in manipulation of online comments and "far-right propaganda to indoctrinate children."

"We will hold accountable any attempt to disturb our society by manipulating public opinion and contaminate the educational field with far-right indoctrination," he said.

Last week, the online news outlet Newstapa reported that the education group, named after former conservative Presidents Rhee Syng-man and Park Chung-hee, has been operating a team of online commenters to sway public opinion in favour of then conservative People Power Party candidate Kim Moon-soo and against Lee Jae-myung, the then liberal DP candidate who won this week's presidential election, Yonhap news agency reported.

The team allegedly instructed its members to write online comments praising Kim as well as ones critical of Lee in a coordinated manner, according to Newstapa.

In response, the DP filed a complaint against the group, accusing it of election law violations and obstruction of business.

Earlier, the DP also launched a special committee to investigate the allegations.

Earlier on June 4, South Korean Police launched an investigation into a conservative education organisation accused of online opinion manipulation in the final days of the June 3 presidential election campaign.

Police had said it banned Son Hyo-sook, head of the far-right group "Rhee Park School," from leaving the country, and raided the group's office in Seoul to secure evidence earlier in the day.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya K.
This reminds me of our own election issues with fake news. Every democracy needs strong laws against online manipulation. South Korea is showing how to act swiftly - our EC should take notes! 🇮🇳
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Rahul S.
Interesting to see education groups involved in politics. In India we've seen similar cases where school textbooks become political tools. Hope the investigation is fair - democracy needs transparency.
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Ananya M.
The speed of South Korea's response is impressive! Police raids and travel bans within days. Meanwhile in India, election cases drag for years. We need this kind of urgency to protect democracy.
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Vikram J.
While manipulation is wrong, I worry about overreach. In India, we've seen how 'fake news' laws can be misused to silence opposition. Hope South Korea maintains balance between justice and free speech.
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Sneha R.
The education angle is most disturbing. Schools should teach critical thinking, not political indoctrination. As a teacher, I know how vulnerable young minds are. Hope they ban such groups permanently!
K
Karan P.
South Korea's tech-savvy approach to election monitoring is commendable. India should collaborate with them to develop better digital tools to detect coordinated disinformation campaigns. Jai Hind!

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