>> ASIAONE / NEWS / LATEST NEWS / ASIA / STORY
Crackdown on Internet malice
Mon, Nov 10, 2008
AFP

SEOUL - SOUTH Korean police have rounded up more than 2,000 people for spreading malicious rumours on the Internet during a month-long crackdown sparked by an actress's suicide, officials said on Monday.

The National Police Agency said 11 people have been formally arrested and detained for serious legal breaches and that prosecutors would be asked to charge another 2,019 with various offences.

Actress Choi Jin Sil hanged herself last month. She was said to have been upset by Internet rumours that she lent a huge sum to actor Ahn Jae Hwan, who had earlier killed himself because of debt pressures.

'After the top entertainer's suicide, there was a social consensus that those who spread false rumours online be sternly punished,' Mr Oh Se Chan, a chief investigator at the agency's cyber-terror prevention centre, told AFP.

'The crackdown will continue in order to secure a cleaner and sounder environment on the Internet.'

Some 59 per cent of the 2,030 people were accused of libel or breaching laws on contempt, 23 per cent of blackmail and 18 per cent of cyber-stalking, the agency said.

In one case, a man rejected for a bank loan posted defamatory comments about the bank manager, the JoongAng Daily reported. Another man was detained after he posted in his blog that his ex-girlfriend had had a number of abortions.

Choi's death followed the suicide last year of two South Korean celebrities who came under cyber-attack on their own websites.

In response, the government in Seoul passed a law to curb the country's notorious cyber-bullying by preventing Internet users from hiding behind fake IDs when they post entries at major portals and news websites. -- AFP

 

 
STORY INDEX
 
  Thai transvestite beauty pageant cancelled amid political turmoil
   
 
  Blogger's remand extended
   
 
  More S'pore-Japan flights
   
 
  Transvestite teacher to be transferred
   
 
  China used planes, rockets to prevent wet end of Games
   
 
  Australian plan to create 'homophobia free-zones' attacked
   
 
  Philippines leader gets oil firms to cut diesel prices
   
 
  Crackdown on Internet malice
   
 
  Strong quake hits Qinghai
   
 
  Support for Japan PM falls
   
We welcome contributions, comments and tips.
a1admin@sph.com.sg