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필리핀(이주노동자)시장 #3

 

Last February Seoul's "re-development" Mafia (a collaboration of the city bureaucracy with the construction Mafia) selected the next victim to realize its f*cking gentrification (and anti-migrant workers) program: the Filipino Market in Hyehwa-dong...

  

 

...the Sunday venue for the migrant worker community from the Philippines...

 

One month later, in March, almost everyone was optimistic that the danger for the market was averted, at least for the time being...

 


But last week's (bourgeois/reactionary) JoongAng Ilbo(9.29) proved that "the opera ain't over until the fat lady sings":


Seoul’s Filipino market to be cut in half

 
Citing traffic and overcrowding, the district office is moving ahead with its plan, despite objections from marketgoers.


The Filipino market in Hyehwa-dong is facing a new obstacle in its 15-year history.


Jongno District officials are planning to cut the size of the market in half, following complaints from local residents and overcrowding in the area around the market.


The market has become a popular weekend gathering place in Seoul for expats from various countries, and expats have already raised objections to the plan.


The Filipino market is held every Sunday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in front of Dongsung High School, where vendors sell everything from daily necessities, like shampoo and soap, to specialty comestible ingredients made in the Philippines.


Seoul’s Jongno District Office said yesterday in an interview with the JoongAng Ilbo that the size of the market will soon be cut to half, partially because the stalls interfere with pedestrian and vehicle traffic and also because of complaints from residents nearby.


“We plan to expel unauthorized vendors, but will allow 15 shops that have been in business for the past 15 years to remain,” said Choe Seong-min, the director of the district’s construction management division. “We know the place is a meeting spot for Philippine nationals in Korea, but the stalls cannot be legalized and residents have voiced lots of complaints about the market.”


Recently, the district office had white lines painted on the marketplace grounds to demarcate the stalls, allowing four square meters (43 square feet) for each one.


Vendors who cross the line will face consequences, the district office said.


“District office officials said if we cross the designated line, we will lose some of our merchandise,” said Park Il-sun, the leader of Hanbihoe, an association of Philippine merchants in Korea.


The market sprang up after a Filipino priest began conducting mass in Tagalog - the main spoken language in the Philippines - at Hyewha Cathedral in 1996, drawing a number of foreign nationals to the area. Today, the area is both a market and meeting place for Filipinos, Koreans and other expats.


The market is already half of its original size - it used to be 100 meters long. It will be cut in half again after the district’s plan is implemented...


http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2926463



 




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