Its mention has been treated as a taboo at times and at some places. The discussion of the subject is always considered a disgust. The evocation of the horror scene will give you a shudder. The thought of its victim will give you an inexpressible throb to your heart.
Shame on the nation and its people that I, as global a blogger, report to the colleague global bloggers, that rapes are common occurrences here in South Korea. It's doubly shameful because grandma victims, who had been forced to serve as "Comfort Ladies" of the Imperial Japanese Army during the World War II. have taken a witness stand just a month before to testify to the United States House of Representatives about the Japanese brutalities.
I keep throwing up, from time to time, at the thought of the role shift that has taken place these days. The role shift from victims to victimizers, with their grandsons of pathetic octogenarians taking on the role of rapists. What a shameful sea change.
Who victimized whom anyway? It's been weird, really weird in that crimes were not committed in kind to take revenges on the past wrongdoings of the neighbor country by the adult Korean men. They were juvenile Koreans, high schoolers in some cases and mostly middle school boys ages 14 to 16.
Juvenile monsters terrorized their peers, in most cases, forcedly took middle school girls to hills and valleys, waylaid them and abused them. Most recently a group of juvenile monsters lured familiar middle school girls, drank liquors together and mass raped one girl in drunk stupor and left her for dead.
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