Yongjugol, Paju. There Are Still People Here.Shutting Down the Red-Light District: Stories of the People of Yongjugol Facing EvictionOn Monday, January 29, 2024, people who had been ordered to demolish the buildings inside Paju’s Yongjugol red-light district began to appear, part of the second execution by proxy (a type of gangjae jiphaeng, an administrative execution often referring to forced demolitions and evictions) carried out by Paju City Council. It had been two months since the first demolition attempt took place on November 22 of last year. The problem is that there are still people living here in Yongjugol.
The organization Anti-Prostitution Human Rights Movement E-loom documented the closing of the Cheongnyangni red-light district in the book Cheongnyangni: Systematic Forgetting, History Linked by Memory, which explains the historical condoning of the camptown sex industry.
“In principle, prostitution inside the red-light districts was illegal, but apart from a few cases, there was never an actual crackdown by the authorities. In fact, the women working inside the red-light districts had to undergo regular testing for sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) by the government. This specific policy toward Korea’s sex industry is referred to as the ‘Tacit Permission and Management System.’”
Paju’s Yongjugol was also one of the places affected by this “tacit permission and management system.” Even after the US Army left the area, Yongjugol continued as a red-light district.
As of today, around 50 establishments and 85 sex workers continue to operate in Yongjugol, and they have been fighting demolition and eviction since last year [2023]. Many citizens have been calling for their voices to be heard and for people to take interest in the issue.
In the afternoon of January 29, the “Opening of the Yongjugol Sex Worker Defense Sit-In” was held for those in solidarity with the struggle against the ongoing eviction process. For around 1.5 hours, supporters heard from Byeolli, representative of the Yongjugol sex worker association Jajak Namu Hwae (literal translation: White Birch Society), about the situation in Yongjugol and the diverse stories of the people living and working here. The event was facilitated by Yeoreum, an activist with the organization Sex Worker Liberation Action Movement Scarlet ChaCha.
These stories are about people’s lives that don’t fit into the simple dichotomy of being for or against prostitution. Before evicting and pushing them out, shouldn’t people at least listen to their stories? Here, I share the stories told by activist Byeolli during the opening event.
2023 Paju Mayor’s New Year Address Began the “Shutting Down Yongjugol” Project
Last year, on January 2, Paju mayor Kim Kyung-il announced the Red-Light District Maintenance Plan in his first official document of 2023 and formed an exclusive task force with the aim of “shutting down Yongjugol within the year.”
Though there was talk of installing a shipping container at the entrance of the neighborhood to serve as a base for authorities, it initially wasn’t considered as a serious problem. After the Paju mayor’s announcement, the women workers who until then didn’t know each other well formed the Jajak Namu Hwae association. Since submitting a petition to the city and meeting with city council members a few times, they thought the issue was being resolved. Then the container was put in, and news came that the task force had been formed. Finally, the workers set up a meeting with the task force when it came to visit Yongjugol.
“There were members of the Ministry of Gender Equality and Family and public officials, so we thought they would help us. But as we talked, women who had come to Yongjugol from Suwon (the Suwon Station red-light district was completely shut down in 2021) must have figured out what was going on, and they got angry because they had experienced being kicked out of a [forcibly] closed red-light district. So they argued back that even though the government promised support, if it was really supporting the workers, why did only 30 out of 200 people in Suwon receive benefits, and why did people from there end up coming here?”
People Whose Lives Aren’t Reflected in the Victims of Prostitution Rehabilitation Ordinance
Paju City Council announced that it would support the women workers of Yongjugol through the “Victims of Prostitution Rehabilitation Ordinance,” and it would be for an “unprecedented” two-year period, unlike the usual one year provided by other local governments. Yet the women workers do not welcome these benefits. The reasons for this can be found in the fine print behind the pledge of providing up to 40 million won.
The second problem is the lack of overlapping benefits. For example, if worker A is a recipient of 500,000 won through the nationwide basic livelihood subsidy, she is only eligible to receive a matching amount of support through the ordinance, instead of the original 1 million won. In other words, while basic livelihood subsidy recipients, single parents, and others receiving welfare benefits are also eligible to apply for ordinance benefits, the total amount they could receive is reduced.
The third problem is the fact that the ordinance itself was created without any input from the affected community. The condition for receiving support through the ordinance is restricted to those signing a “memorandum to exit the sex industry,” and any evidence of engaging in prostitution would result in having to return all or a portion of the funds.
In the case of housing benefits, the recipient must live in a place designated by Paju City Council for up to two years, and Jajak Namu Hwae points out that the living expense subsidy (1 million won per month for one year) does not consider the reality of housing costs. Not only that, but there are people in Yongjugol whose lives are outside of the scope of this ordinance.
“Honestly, as this situation (closing Yongjugol) has continued for over a year, there are a lot fewer people coming here. Still, there are many different reasons why women stay. For one thing, there are many single moms in Yongjugol, so when you’re raising kids, it’s not easy to move to another area. They’d have to move schools, it’s complicated. Also, those who were driven out of Suwon and other places don’t want to go through that again. I’ve also been here for 10 years, and it’s hard to imagine going somewhere else.
There are also the relationships here. Some of the women don’t have parents or families, so the people whom they’ve worked and struggled with here have become family. Especially the aunties who make us food. They’ve worked here a long time, so they ‘care a lot about the girls (us),’ they say. There’s even one auntie who’s doesn’t just make food and go home, but who waits for us to eat after we wake up. She’ll watch us eat and say, ‘Eat this, eat that.’ Even if I say, ‘I’ll eat on my own,’ she keeps saying, ‘Eat this.’ It’s such a burden. (laughter)
Actually, many women working here are on medication for mental disorders or disabilities. They have mental problems caused by childhood trauma and other issues, so they really can’t live a normal lifestyle. Some have illnesses like epilepsy, so they can’t go to an average workplace. There are many who didn’t graduate high school and those who spent their lives only working and looking after their parents and brothers, who now pretend not to know them. Others got divorced with no settlement money or child support so they have no choice but to support themselves. Now (that I’m active in Jajak Namu Hwae), I’m also learning about their lives.”
Are We Who Live in Yongjugol Not “Citizens”?
The plan to shut down Yongjugol within the year proceeded with installation of the shipping container at the neighborhood entrance, weekly Tuesday tours by outsiders walking for a “happy street for women and citizens,” and attempts to install CCTV cameras throughout the area. The container, which was supposed to be a place for counseling the workers and hearing their stories, instead came to be used for police surveillance, and the weekly tour made them feel like spectacles. It was the same for the CCTV. No one welcomed the idea of installing cameras in front of their homes and places of business.
“About a week after last November’s eviction attempt, they tried to install another CCTV camera. Instead of coming through the neighborhood entrance and down the road, they cut through a nearby field with the crane to try and take us by surprise. It was around 6:30 in the morning, and they didn’t even bring in police for mediation or in case of an accident. Though most of the residents are women, there were no female police officers or public officials.”
Due to fierce resistance by Yongjugol workers, the camera was not installed that day, but a worker who protested by climbing up an electric pole and onto the crane claw sustained physical and psychological injuries. Actually, a construction worker mounting an excavator to install a CCTV camera is in itself a violation of Article 202 of the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Act, which states, “When working with claw-mounted construction equipment, workers are not permitted to be in any position other than the seat of the vehicle.” Byeolli remembers this day as “the day an illegal act was committed against us ‘illegal’ people in Yongjugol.”
Establishment owners and sex workers are not the only two kinds of people in Yongjugol. There are also kitchen aunties, laundromat aunties, beauty salon ladies, and uncles working in the marts and convenience stores. Everyone has a role to play here. Yet the “shutting down Yongjugol” project does not consider them, let alone offer them support.
“Sometimes I think about giving up (the fight against eviction), but there are too many people involved. Recently, I met a salon lady who told me her shop isn’t doing well, so she’s had to take on the second job of making house calls to do people’s hair. I asked her if she’s okay, since it could be unsafe to go to strangers’ places, and she just replied, ‘Well, I have to work, so I have to go.’ The laundromat auntie can’t even bring herself to ask us for the laundry money. There’s no work, so the girls say apologetically, ‘I’ll give it to you next month, Auntie,’ and she just says, ‘Take your time.’ I heard there’s even an auntie who insists on getting only half of her monthly pay from the owner.
These aunties are almost all in their 60s and 70s, and most of them have lived in Yongjugol for 40-50 years. Though it’s not the case for everyone, [some] people who have been working here for a long time have enough money [to stop working]. But they want to continue working here. At their old age, they can’t do other kinds of work, and their lives, friendships, and relationships are all here. If their jobs disappear, they’ll have nothing to do, no one to meet, and no people to care for. They ask ‘Where will I go?’ It’s terrible for them to think of just staying home all day.”
These elderly aunties in their 60s and 70s are also participating in the struggle, as well as the mart uncles. Even though Yongjugol is their longtime home and workplace, Paju City Council has no current countermeasures planned to support them when it is shut down. What makes them the angriest is being “treated as nonexistent people,” with no contact other than the sudden announcement of shutting down within a year. They have no idea what they should do to prepare and are asking, “Can we really just be ignored like this?”
There Are People Still Living Here
“There’s a grandmother who comes here to collect boxes [to earn money from recycling facilities]. We called her ‘Foul Mouth’ because she would come around and swear all the time, and every time she saw me, she’d ask for a cup of coffee or a cigarette, so I didn’t really like her (laughter). She would gather up so many boxes that she couldn’t carry them all, so we thought, ‘What’s wrong with her?’ But then she donated 500,000 won to our association. We wondered how this grandmother could spare the money, and we hurried to try and return it to her. It turns out that she’s a former ‘Yankee princess’ [yang gongju, a common name for women who provided sexual services in the US military camptowns]. She used to work in the camptown and remained in the neighborhood. So she gave us an extra 500,000 won to use for our struggle. It was really touching.”
From the outside, Yongjugol might be seen as just a place that should quickly disappear and have its history covered up. However, the fact that there have been people making their livelihoods here for a long time cannot be forgotten. Is it really too much to ask to allow them a bit more time and to put together a proper relocation plan? The people of Yongjugol are also aware of the reality of their situation. All they are asking for is sufficient communication, relocation measures, and time to prepare for their next steps.
Seeing the women of Yongjugol asking for more time to become self-sufficient and be able to relocate brings back the history of this place and how the state has “dealt with” the people here. The process of shutting down Yongjugol will become a testament to whether this history will be repeated or whether it will find a new path to move forward.
Translated by Anastasia Traynin Published Feb. 1, 2024 *Original article: https://ildaro.com/9826
◆ To see more English-language articles from Ilda, visit our English blog(https://ildaro.blogspot.com).
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