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Yeosu-Suncheon Rebellion
[edit]The Yeosu-Suncheon Rebellion, also known as the Yeo-Sun Incident (Yeo-Sun an abbreviation of the area names Yeosu and Suncheon), was a rebellion that began in October of 1948, mainly ending in November of the same year, with pockets of resistance lasting through 1957, almost 10 years later.
The rebellion took place in Yeosu, Suncheon, and various surrounding towns in the South Jeolla province of South Korea. Rising anti-government sentiment towards the Syngman Rhee regime ignited in rebellion as 2000 left-leaning soldiers based in the Yeo-Sun area raised arms in opposition to the Rhee government's handling of the Jeju Uprising, which occurred just months earlier in April.
The rebelling soldiers seized weapon caches in the area, taking control of Suncheon, and civilians in support of the rebellion paraded the streets waving red flags. Police officers attempting to quell the violence were captured and executed, as well as public officials and landlords.
As the rebellion spread, the number of soldiers participating has been estimated to have reached between 2000 and 3000 men. The soldiers captured and massacred right-leaning families as well as Christian youths.[1]
After a week, the South Korean Army had suppressed the majority of resistance[2], in the process killing anywhere from 439 to 2000 civilians.[3] The South Korean Army was led by US commanders, with military advisors attached to each South Korean Army unit. US aircraft were used to transport troops to suppress the rebellion.[2]
Park Chung-hee, who would later become a president of South Korea, participated in the rebellion, although he was allegedly given leniency in exchange for aiding the hunt for others involved in the rebellion.[4]
Background and lead-up
[edit]Political situation in Korea
[edit]After Imperial Japan surrendered to Allied forces on 15 August 1945, the 35-year Japanese occupation of Korea finally came to an end. Korea was subsequently divided at the 38th parallel north, with the Soviet Union assuming trusteeship north of the line and the United States south of the line. In September 1945, Lt. General John R. Hodge established a military government to administer the southern region, which included Jeju Island and the areas in South Jeolla around Yeosu and Suncheon. In December 1945 U.S. representatives met with those from the Soviet Union and United Kingdom to work out joint trusteeship. Due to lack of consensus, however, the U.S. took the “Korean question” to the United Nations for further deliberation. On November 14, 1947, the United Nations General Assembly passed UN Resolution 112, calling for a general election on May 10, 1948 under UNTCOK supervision.
Fearing it would lose influence over the northern half of Korea if it complied, the Soviet Union rejected the UN resolution and denied the UNTCOK access to northern Korea. The UNTCOK nevertheless went through with the elections, albeit in the southern half of the country only. The Soviet Union responded to these elections in the south with an election of its own in the north on August 25, 1948.[5]
Suppression of Jeju Uprising
[edit]The Jeju Uprising was an insurgency on the Korean province of Jeju Island which was followed by an anticommunist suppression campaign that lasted from April 3, 1948 until May 1949. The main cause for the rebellion were the elections scheduled for May 10, 1948, designed by the United Nations Temporary Commission on Korea (UNTCOK) to create a new government for all of Korea. The elections, however, were only planned for the south of the country, the half of the peninsula under UNTCOK control. Fearing the elections would further reinforce division, guerrilla fighters of the South Korean Labor Party (SKLP) reacted violently, attacking local police and rightist youth groups stationed on Jeju Island.
Though atrocities were committed by both sides, the methods used by the South Korean government to suppress the rebels were especially cruel. On one occasion, American soldiers discovered the bodies of 97 people including children, killed by government forces. On another, American soldiers caught government police forces carrying out an execution of 76 villagers, including women and children.
In the end, between 14,000 and 30,000 people died as a result of the rebellion, or up to 10% of the island’s population. Some 40,000 others fled to Japan to escape the fighting. In the decades after the uprising, memory of the event was suppressed by the government through censorship and repression. In 2006, almost 60 years after the rebellion, the Korean government apologized for its role in the killings. The government also promised reparations but as of 2017, nothing had been done to this end.[5]
The way Yeosu-Suncheon Rebellion (or Incident) began when members of a South Korean military regiment in Yeosu refused to transfer to Jeju Island; they were sympathetic to the communists and against the Rhee government and the decisive U.S. influence in South Korea.
On the night of October 19th, 40 soldiers (who were members of the South Korea Labor Party, a communist party) of the 14th regiment of Yeosu army took hold of the arsenal in the absence of the regimental commander and vice regimental commander. Hang-soo Ji, chief of the 14th regiment personnel section, asked more than 2000 soldiers to gather at their drill ground and gave an inflammatory speech. Most of the soldiers who were sympathetic to North Korea cheered to Ji's speech, and those were against Ji were executed on the spot. Those who stood with Ji formed a rebel army, who proceeded to get on different cars to seize the police station of Yeosu and Yeosu Town Hall, killing about 100 police officers, about 500 civilians who supported the Rhee government, as well as some right wing politicians and party members under Rhee's regime.
By October 20th, the insurgent forces took hold of entire Yeosu and joined the 2nd Company of the 14th Regiment who were stationed in Suncheon County. In the afternoon, Suncheon got occupied by the rebel army. One company belonging to the 4th Regiment of Gwangju army was immediately dispatched to suppress the rebellion, but its commander got killed, and his company was merged into the rebel army.
On October 21st, Syngman Rhee declared martial law in the Yeosu-Suncheon region, and sent 10 battalions in an attempt to contain the situation. The rebel army then began to attack surrounding areas such as Gwangyang, Gokseong, Boseong and Gurye. On the 22nd, the rebel army was gradually shifting to Jirisan.
On the morning of October 23rd, Rhee's troops began to attack Suncheon, which was occupied by the rebels. As a result, main forces of the rebel army retreated to Yeosu and mountainous regions in the north. By 11 am, Rhee's troops entered the city area of Suncheon, where there were only defenseless students and civilians left, and proceeded to pursue the insurgent forces in Yeosu.
On October 24th, pursuing troops of Rhee's army were ambushed by the rebel army. More than 270 soldiers of the troops died, and their commander in chief was also severely injured. Meanwhile, main forces of the rebel army began to transfer to Jirisan in the north.
On October 25th, Rhee's troops began to attack Yeosu, where they got resisted by more than 200 soldiers of the rebel army, 1000 students and civilians.
After two days of street battles, the area was fully suppressed (October 27th). A wide-range search for alleged accomplices of the insurgent forces was made by Syngman Rhee as revenge. Those who were suspected of being accomplices of the rebel forces were taken into an elementary school and executed, bodies of thousands of innocent civilians piling up inside the school. For this reason, Rhee's army has been suspected of massacre.
November: containment and suppression
[edit]The uprising was largely contained by early November, but scattered guerrilla activity continued well into 1957. Even after Yeosu and Suncheon got fully suppressed, Rhee's army still went on to search for accomplices of the rebel forces in the surrounding areas and executed many civilians living around Yeosu and Suncheon, claiming that there were still rebel forces left in both areas.
During the Yeosu-Suncheon Rebellion, 2976 people (3392 according to some other sources) died, 887 (or 82) went missing, 1407 (or 2056) were injured, 152 soldiers were executed by court martial, and 5242 homes were destroyed.[11]
Rhee learned from this rebellion that the Korean army had been penetrated by members of the South Korean Labor Party, and soon started a full-scale purge of communists: left wing members of the South Korean Labor Party and soldiers who came from the Korean Liberation Army were all expelled from the Korean army.
In the meantime, Park Chung-hee, who would later become the president of Korea, was arrested and was sentenced to life at first, but it was alleged that he was punished leniently in exchange for agreeing to hunt down people involved in the rebellion. Moreover, because of the rebellion, left wing politicians and people who were against Rhee enacted the National Security Law on December 1st, 1948.
After the rebellion happened, residents in the western part of the country were arbitrarily forced to remain silent about the incident, which was also the case with the Jeju uprising.
The matter was recently reviewed by the South Korean Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which found that government forces killed between 439 and 2000 area civilians. Brutality was also reported on both sides of the conflict.
See also
[edit]- Truth and Reconciliation Commission (South Korea)
- Jeju Uprising
- Communism in Korea
- List of massacres in South Korea
References
[edit]- ^ Stueck, William (2004). The Korean War in World History. University Press of Kentucky. p. 39. ISBN 978-0813123066.
- ^ a b Hart-Landsberg, Martin (1998). Korea: Division, Reunification, & U.S. Foreign Policy. Monthly Review Press. pp. 87–88. ISBN 978-0853459279.
- ^ "439 civilians confirmed dead in Yeosu-Suncheon Uprising of 1948 New report by the Truth Commission places blame on Syngman Rhee and the Defense Ministry, advises government apology". the hankyoreh. January 8, 2009.
- ^ Cumings, Bruce (1981). The Origins of the Korean War, Liberation and the Emergence of Separate Regimes, 1945-1947. Princeton University Press. p. 266. ISBN 978-0691101132.
- ^ a b "Jeju uprising". Wikipedia. 2018-01-11.
- ^ "麗水-順天事件". Wikipedia. Retrieved 2018-01-29.
- ^ "麗水・順天事件". Wikipedia. Retrieved 2018-01-29.
- ^ 金, 徳珍 (2005). 年表で見る韓国の歴史. 日本: 明石書店. ISBN 978-4750321868.
- ^ "麗水-順天事件". Wikipedia. Retrieved 2018-01-29.
- ^ "麗水・順天事件". Wikipedia. Retrieved 2018-01-29.
- ^ 金, 徳珍 (2005). 年表で見る韓国の歴史. 日本: 明石書店. ISBN 978-4750321868.