About Ayanna Nahmias
Ayanna Nahmias was interviewed on Radio Netherlands Worldwide program titled 'The State We’re In,' about her life in Africa and her determination to transcend her past. She started the Nahmias Cipher Report to provide information to readers about life in emerging economies, and to provide alternative insight into the challenges faced by women and children living in these countries. The blog features stories from around the world to inspire other people to persevere and triumph in the face of great adversity. She blogs about current events in emerging economies, international politics, human rights abuses, women’s rights and child advocacy.
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Will the ‘Enemy of my Enemy’ Strategy Foster Cooperation in the Middle East
04/02/2016
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The Miracle of Healing as a Result of Giving
13/12/2015
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What Women Don’t Need to Hear from Men
10/12/2015
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America’s Reluctant Racists: Are the Media & Donald Trump to Blame?
01/09/2015
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Two Months Past the Elections, Turkey Still Does Not Have a New Government
27/08/2015
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Erawan Shrine Bombing, Religiously Motivated or an Ancillary Attack Against Thailand’s Tourism?
26/08/2015
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The Complicated Dynamic of Arab’s Love-Hate Relationship with the Rest of the World
19/08/2015
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Portrait of a Suicide Bomber, DNA Identifies Turkey ISIS Terrorist who Killed 32 People
06/08/2015
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Turkey: Top 5 Reasons for the AK PARTİ Failure
28/07/2015
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Uganda: Report finds over 89 cases of violations against LGBTI persons
25/07/2015
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Timbuktu Rebuilt After Radical Islamist Destroyed
23/07/2015
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Russian Billionaire Funds Search For Alien Life
21/07/2015
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Mohed Altrad, a Bedouin Who Flees the Desert, Becomes Billionaire, Wins Coveted 2015 EY Award
19/07/2015
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Muslim American Support for LGBT Rights is Growing
14/07/2015
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Citizens of Turkey Put a Halt to Erdoğan’s Ascent
14/07/2015
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Civil Rights in America, a New but Old Debate. Meet My Grandfather, Julius W. Robertson, Atty.
05/07/2015
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“Well, Who Burns Churches in God’s Name??!!” South Carolina Black Churches Under Fire
02/07/2015
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NASA’s Next Frontier: The Moons of Jupiter
01/07/2015
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Karachi Heat Wave, Hottest in Recorded History, Death Toll Surpasses 1,100
27/06/2015
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The Fallacy of Western Love | Meriam Al Khalifa
15/06/2011
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Taliban Shoot 14-Year-Old Pakistani Activist, Malalai Yousafzai
09/10/2012
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The Sexual Hyprocrisy of the Taliban | Bacha Bazi
06/04/2012
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KKK Burns Black Woman Alive
23/10/2012
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Melkam Addis Amet 2009 | Happy Ethiopian New Year
11/09/2009
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Naija Style Gele | Nigerian Fashion
29/12/2009
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Mother Kills Daughter with Acid
01/11/2012
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Tunisian Police Rape Woman then Charge Her with Indecent Exposure
05/10/2012
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Frida Kahlo | The Thorned Princess
18/05/2011
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The Rabbit Hole of ‘Legitimate’ Rape
20/08/2012
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Death by Marriage | Rape Victim Amina Filali
18/03/2012
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Welfare, a State of Connectedness
07/10/2012
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Savita Halappanavar | Denied Abortion Dies from Septicemia
14/11/2012
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Twenty Commandments for Ethical Living
29/10/2012
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Combating Racism Against Africans
27/09/2010
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Dying to Walk Fashion Week Catwalks
07/09/2012
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A Tale of Two Pots
06/06/2012
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Waris Dirie | FGM vs Circumcision
03/05/2012
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Video Captures Taliban Executing Woman
09/07/2012
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South Korea’s Abysmal Record of Disability Rights Despite Economic Prosperity
21/01/2015
Asia & Pacific, Elder Abuse, Human Rights, Modern Day Slavery, News, Social Commentary, South Korea
Ayanna Nahmias, Editor-in-Chief
Last Modified: 22:56 p.m. EDT, 21 January 2015
An Amputee Beggar in South Korea, Photo by James Pawlowski
SINAN COUNTY, South Korea – Though South Korea’s record of human rights abuse is not as heinous as its neighbor North Korea, it still grapples with abuse of the weakest members of its society. Prior to the latest exposé, there have been several studies and reports on the targeting of poor women and runaways who are approached by brokers with offers of domestic work, only to find themselves forced to work in the commercial sex trade.
Recently, it was reported by a number of news outlets that salt farmers have been using disabled men to perform the arduous work in the salt farming industry. These men are treated inhumanly and most are physically abused by their ‘employers.’ These men work to produce an estimated “two-thirds of South Korea’s sea salt on more than 850 salt farms on dozens of islands in Sinan County, including Sinui island, where half the 2,200 residents work in the industry. (Source: National Post)
According to The U.S. National Library of Medicine, the “latest National Survey on Persons with Disabilities estimated 2,683,400 persons with disabilities in South Korea, of whom 58% were men and 42% were women. People with physical disability represent approximately 50% of the entire population with disability. Disability-related policies and services to improve the participation of persons with disabilities have been expanded in the last decades, guided by 5-yr plans.” (Source: Pubmed.gov)
In 2009, the Asia Pacific Forum (APF) published a report that stated that The National Human Rights Commission of Korea (‘NHRCK’) issued a number of “key decisions on protecting the rights of people with disabilities.” (Source: APF) Yet, 5-years later the issue of wage inequality and equal protection under the law is still problematic. Until the 2014 expose by the Associated Press (AP) the issue of enslavement of the disabled on salt farms, which had previously been reported on, had slipped quietly from the public’s eye.
Though South Koreans and the rest of the world were outraged by these abuses, like many atrocities that don’t directly affect us, these concerns became “those peoples’ problems,” and we assuaged our conscience with the belief that some organization has now intervened to correct the problem. However, as with many human rights abuses in the Asian manufacturing sector, we as beneficiaries turn a blind eye because of the affordability of the items that are produced. Many of us cannot afford to boycott low cost items sold by Walmart and other megastores because it has a direct impact on our budgets. But, these savings come at the cost of enslavement or barely subsistence level wages paid to the people who spend long, back-breaking days producing the products we use.
With a population of 50.22 million, of which 632,000 are international residents, and the ubiquity with which salt is used in cooking and other processes, a great number of people are benefiting from the enslavement of disabled South Koreans who unfortunately find themselves caught up in this industry. AP and other news outlets published extensive interviews with people who were beaten, tortured, starved, and otherwise abused but knew there were no viable alternatives available to them.
Those who were brave enough to report the abuse by the salt farmers routinely discovered that their complaints were not taken seriously, and in fact, the legal system (police and courts) routinely disregarded or dismissed these allegations. When a plaintiff was successful in getting their case to court, most salt farmers were given a small fine which they quickly paid. This tacit approval of these human rights abuses only serves to reinforce the farmer’s heinous behavior, while demonstrating to the ‘salt farm slaves’ that their plight will go unchanged.
Thus, many of the enslaved disabled eventually returned to the salt farms and greater abuse because they were unable to support themselves otherwise. Salt farm owners refuted the claims of abuse and slavery with the assertion that able bodied people don’t want these jobs and if they didn’t provide employment to people with disabilities then these individuals would become a burden on society and would likely die from starvation. This argument is specious and self-serving, our outrage then complacency is deplorable, but the real culprit is the South Korean government.
Many reported on this story at the beginning of this month, and just as many have claimed that the government has investigated and brought the slavers to justice. The arrest of a few or the scapegoating of more does not address a systemic problem of the abuse of the disabled. South Korea must face the fact that it benefits from its position as a rising global economy and the political echelon would do well to remember that “…the moral test of government is how that government treats those who are in the dawn of life, the children; those who are in the twilight of life, the elderly; and those who are in the shadows of life; the sick, the needy and the handicapped.” ~ Hubert H. Humphrey
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