S Korea labour activist charged after temple standoff

S Korea labour activist charged after temple standoff

Seoul - South Korean prosecutors on Tuesday formally charged a prominent labour activist who had evaded arrest for weeks by seeking sanctuary in a major Buddhist temple in Seoul which came under siege by police.

Han Sang-Gyun, the head of the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU), was charged with inciting violence and obstructing justice during a massive anti-government rally in November, Yonhap news agency said.

Dozens of police officers and protestors were injured and dozens of police buses damaged in the November 16 protest in central Seoul.

To evade arrest following the rally, Han sought sanctuary in the capital's Jogye Temple, where leading monks negotiated with police over his fate.

He finally surrendered in early December after police threatened to storm the temple and remove him by force.

Tensions had run high around the temple, with hundreds of police facing off against a human barricade of monks and lay Buddhists.

South Korean religious venues have a long history of providing refuge for political activists, most notably in the 1980s when many pro-democracy activists sought sanctuary from police arrest in Catholic churches.

The November protest - involving more than 60,000 people - was the largest in more than seven years in the South.

Protestors demanded that Seoul scrap labour reforms that critics say would make it easier for firms to fire workers.

They also called for President Park Geun-Hye to cancel a controversial plan to impose state-issued history textbooks in schools.

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