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[2015.5.24] Gloria Steinem and female activists cross Korean demilitarised zone

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Gloria Steinem and female activists cross Korean demilitarised zone

Women Cross DMZ group traverses border between North and South Korea, despite suggestions they were being used as propaganda tools by Pyongyang

Female activists cross demilitarised zone between North and South Korea

An international group of female peace activists, led by US feminist writer Gloria Steinem, made a rare crossing of one of the world’s most militarised borders between North and South Korea on Sunday.

The group of 30 activists from 15 countries, known as Women Cross DMZ, described the event as a triumph for peace and reconciliation, dismissing criticism that the women had allowed themselves to be used as propaganda tools by the North.

“We were able to be citizen diplomats,” said 81-year-old Steinem. “We are feeling very, very positive. We have received an enormous amount of support.”

The women had planned to walk across the demilitarised zone (DMZ) dividing the two countries through the Panmunjom “truce village”, where North and South Korean soldiers stand metres apart in a permanent face-off over the border.

But South Korea opposed the plan and the women finally agreed “with regret” to Seoul’s preference for a road crossing on the western part of the border.

Authorities on both sides said they could not guarantee the safety of the women had they walked across, and they had to travel by bus instead.

The North allowed a South Korean bus to cross the demarcation line to pick them up on the North side of the DMZ and transport them over the border to South Korea.

Despite its name, the DMZ is one of the world’s most heavily militarised frontiers, bristling with watchtowers and landmines, and crossings through the land border are rare.

With this year marking the 70th anniversary of the division of the Korean peninsula, the women said they wanted to draw attention to the need for a permanent peace treaty to replace the armistice that halted – but technically never ended – the 1950-53 Korean war.

A bus carrying the Women Cross DMZ group at a military checkpoint after crossing the border through the demilitarised zone.
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 A bus carrying the Women Cross DMZ group at a military checkpoint after crossing the border through the demilitarised zone. Photograph: Jung Yeon-je/AFP/Getty Images

The group, which includes Nobel peace laureates Leymah Gbowee and Mairead Corrigan-Maguire, has also highlighted the anguish of divided families who have had little or no contact since the separation into North and South.

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“We are here today because we don’t believe in war,” Maguire said after passing through immigration on the South side.

“You can get to human rights when you have a normal situation and not a country at war,” said Maguire, who won the 1976 Nobel peace prize for her co-leadership of the women’s peace movement in Northern Ireland.

“The sooner we get a peace treaty signed … and normalise relationships … the quicker we will get to human rights,” she added.

Detractors argue the group had played into the North’s hands by refusing to directly criticise its human rights record during their stay in Pyongyang, where the activists held a peace gathering with North Korean women’s groups before making the crossing.

They also suggested the interactions at that gathering were less than genuine given that the North Korean women were likely to have been specially selected by the authorities.

“I know we had real human exchanges with North Korean women,” Steinem insisted. “Nothing we do can change the image of North Korea. We are trying to make person by person connections, so that there is understanding.”

On the south side of the border, the women walked about one kilometre alongside the fencing marking the DMZ to Imjingak – a park near the border where they were met by several hundred South Korean supporters.

A small group of conservative protesters heckled the group, angered by reports in North Korea’s state media – later denied – that some of the women had praised the North’s founding leader Kim Il-sung while in Pyongyang.

Praising North Korea or promoting its ideology is a criminal act in the South.

In an editorial in the Washington Post last month, Abraham Cooper of the Simon Wiesenthal Center and Greg Scarlatoiu of the Committee for Human Rights in North Korea, had blasted Steinem and her fellow activists for allowing North Korea to engage in “human rights theatre intended to cover up its death camps and crimes against humanity”.


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