뷰페이지

Shattered ‘Korean Dream’… Overlooked suicides of Nepali migrant workers in S Korea 

Shattered ‘Korean Dream’… Overlooked suicides of Nepali migrant workers in S Korea 

기민도 기자
입력 2019-10-01 19:42
업데이트 2019-10-01 19:53
  • 글씨 크기 조절
  • 프린트
  • 공유하기
  • 댓글
    14
[The 2019 Migrant Report]
 Bandana Timalsina reaches out to touch her husband‘s face for the last time before his cremation at the Bagmati River. Kedar Timalsina committed suicide while working at a seafood factory in Busan, July 2019. The coffin carrying his dead body arrived at the Tribhuvan International Airport in Kathmandu on August 26.  [Ki Mindo/ The Seoul Shinmun]
 Bandana Timalsina reaches out to touch her husband‘s face for the last time before his cremation at the Bagmati River. Kedar Timalsina committed suicide while working at a seafood factory in Busan, July 2019. The coffin carrying his dead body arrived at the Tribhuvan International Airport in Kathmandu on August 26.
[Ki Mindo/ The Seoul Shinmun]
In the past 10 years(2009-2018), 43 people out of 143 Nepali migrants who died in South Korea took their own lives- meaning 3 out of 10 deaths involved suicides. The Seoul Shinmun confirmed the figure through the Embassy of Nepal in Seoul and found out most of the cases involved migrant workers who entered the country with E-9 visa.

Yet, a bigger tragedy lurks behind their unsung deaths as neither the Government of South Korea nor the Government of Nepal pays much attention to these recurring problems.

In 2018, Nepal sent the largest number of non-professional or low-skilled migrant workers(8,404) to South Korea. Obviously, they come to this country for the so-called ‘Korean Dream’. But then, why did so many of them have to die on South Korean soil?

From August 26th to September 2nd, the Seoul Shinmun met with some forty people in cities throughout Nepal -such as Kathmandu, Dong Kharka and Pokhara. These people included family members of migrant workers as well as Nepali youths who were dreaming of coming to South Korea to work one day.

Three Stories of Betrayed Korean Dreams

#Kedar Timalsina(28)

An adult-size coffin wrapped with cardboard boxes and plastic tapes was carried out of the Tribhuvan International Airport in Kathmandu.

Inside the coffin lay a 28-year-old man named Kedar Timalsina. When his body was found around midnight on July 20th in Saha District, Busan, he was already dead as he apparently hanged himself in the storage of a seafood processing factory.

Waiting for him at the airport arrival site were some men from Kedar’s family. “This paper doesn‘t say anything about why Kedar killed himself,” they mumbled among themselves while sifting through the pages of the simple document sent from South Korean police.

Kedar’s family said they did not understand why he had to make such an extreme choice to kill himself. It had been only 25 days since his wife Bandana Timalsina gave birth to their first son. The newborn looked like his father. “You know, I even heard Kedar threw a big party to celebrate the birth of this baby. Why would such a man kill himself? It doesn’t make any sense,” said Bandana’s older brother. Besides, Kedar had an aging mother who just turned 60 and would need his care more than before.

What further frustrated the grieving family was the abhorring silence and indifference. Neither South Korea nor Nepal provided an adequate explanation. The Embassy of Nepal in Seoul and South Korean police seemed they were done with the case since they had returned the body to his family. South Korean police never investigated surveillance cameras installed in the factory or carried out forensics on Kedar’s mobile phone. The police said, “We found no evidence of murder on his body. Moreover, we understand he had a clear motivation to commit suicide.”

“How can they not even review the CCTV and mobile phone? Is this how South Korea handles things?” Bandana‘s older brother asked a Korean reporter sitting in front of them.

According to South Korean police, on the other hand, Kedar’s family was the “clear motivation” behind his suicide. Citing a statement made by Kedar’s co-worker, the police explained that Kedar had recently purchased some land, which turned out to be a fraud.

“It’s a lie!” Listening to the Korean reporter relaying what he had heard from the police, Kedar’s family got furious. They insisted, “He bought the land a year ago for 2.90 million rupees (roughly 30 million Korean won) but now the price has gone up to 4.35 million rupees (roughly 43.5 million Korean won).”

None of Kedar’s personal belongings were returned to his family. The police said, ”The Nepali Embassy told us that his family did not want his items back.“ The family‘s account was different. They said they had never communicated with the Embassy about Kedar’s personal belongings.

”We are responsible for confirming the identity and death certificate in order to promptly return the body back to his family in Nepal. The Embassy does not send back items unless they are important,“ the Embassy of Nepal replied when asked about it.

On the day of the arrival, the family took Kedar’s body to the Bagmati River, an important tributary of the Ganges. When Bandana opened the cover of the coffin to see her husband for the last time, she burst into tears caressing his face. ”Why… What should I do with our baby?“

Kedar’s family moistened his mouth with water from the Ganges and put fire into the mouth to cremate. It took 4 hours for the fire to consume his body. With Kedar’s ‘Korean Dream’, all was gone.
이미지 확대
 Lili Maya Gurung looks at a photo of her husband and daughter together. Her husband Bal Bahadur Gurung died after jumping off the Wolleung Bridge in Jungnang District, Seoul, June 2018. Bal B. Gurung who had first come to South Korea with work permit feared deportation after becoming unregistered as he failed to secure employment.
 Lili Maya Gurung looks at a photo of her husband and daughter together. Her husband Bal Bahadur Gurung died after jumping off the Wolleung Bridge in Jungnang District, Seoul, June 2018. Bal B. Gurung who had first come to South Korea with work permit feared deportation after becoming unregistered as he failed to secure employment.
# Bal Bahadur Gurung(32)

”He really loved the children. These kids remind me of my husband every time I see them,“ said Lili Maya Gurung(28) thrusting a tissue under her sunglasses. The Seoul Shinmun met her in Pokhara in central Nepal.

Lili Maya‘s husband Bal Bahadur Gurung forced himself off the Wolleung Bridge in Jungnang District, Seoul, on June 12th, 2018. He died immediately after being hit by a passing vehicle. CCTV footage showed Bal Bahadur walking back-and-forth over the bridge several times. He seemed nervous. He hesitated. But nothing would change the fact that he had just become an ‘unregistered’ migrant two days ago. He feared deportation.

Bal Bahadur entered South Korea with a proper work visa in October 2017. In the following March, however, he left the company and registered himself at the Ministry of Labor to find another work. Migrant workers automatically lose their right to stay in the country if they fail to secure employment within three months. Bal Bahadur went back to Nepal to spend a short time with his family then came back to South Korea. Unfortunately, he had no luck in finding work. Time marched on inexorably until his three months were up. He became an unregistered or illegal migrant.

That night, Bal Bahadur had no money. Later, a message found on his mobile phone showed that he had been trying to borrow some money from his co-worker.

”Had he owned some money, do you think he could have been able to get a taxi to go home in Suwon and lived?“

Lili Maya came to South Korea to take care of the remains of her husband by herself.

“Unfortunately, many people in Nepal can’t afford to come to Korea even if a family member dies here. Still, the Nepali Embassy does nothing about it,” sighed another Nepali, Lama Dawa Pasang(43), who had been helping Lili Maya during her visit.

Lili Maya’s neighbors often ask her, “Your husband looked so happy when he was visiting you two months before he passed away. What happened to that happy man? What happened in South Korea?” Shocked by his youngest son’s tragic death, Bal Bahadur’s father -a former soldier- is suffering from amnesia.

In Nepal, when a family member dies, they make an altar at home to display a photo of the deceased and burn incense every morning and evening. ”Mom, we only do this for dead people. Did Daddy die?“ Lili Maya’s seven-year-old daughter asked. “No, your father has gone abroad to work,” replied Lili Maya. But that did not stop Lili Maya from crying. “I want to die, too. But when I think of these poor children, I can’t.”
이미지 확대
 A mobile phone, wallet and two letters left by Dhan Raj Ghala who killed himself while working at a futon factory in Dalseo District, Daegu, June 2011. 8 years on, Man Maya Ghala has not read these letters yet as she still struggles to digest the death of her husband.
 A mobile phone, wallet and two letters left by Dhan Raj Ghala who killed himself while working at a futon factory in Dalseo District, Daegu, June 2011. 8 years on, Man Maya Ghala has not read these letters yet as she still struggles to digest the death of her husband.
# Dhan Raj Ghala(40)

“I am enocent. I have no mistake. Company cheating me. I am no crazy […] company take my signiture [...] please investigation please”

This is part of Dhan Raj Ghala’s letter, hand-written in English. He apparently died as a result of a suicide by hanging in June 2011 while working at a futon factory in Dalseo District, Daegu City. Dhan, who first came to South Korea in September 2010, even had a plane ticket booked to go back to Nepal. But, for some reason, he still ended up with the same tragic choice.

Upon seeing a Korean reporter on August 31st in their home in Pokhara, Dhan’s wife Man Maya Ghala(48) and Dhan’s younger brother Bhim Raj Ghala(36) began talking about what had happened 8 years ago.

Bhim said he had to go to South Korea because he could not let his brother go without knowing why he had to die there. To Bhim, his older brother was a man who loved his family more than anything and a hard-working person.

“After seeing the letters, I thought Dhan must have been bullied at work,” Bhim explained. “He could have suffered from depression after learning he had signed something without knowing what it was. In the letter, he was worried that the company did something bad.”

Dhan left another short letter written in Nepali, as well. He wrote, “I’ve done nothing wrong. I once fought with another worker from Mongolia. I don’t know what that Mongolian guy told Korean people… (The company) is cheating me.” Similar letters had also been sent twice to a manager of the company, in which Dhan wrote, “We used to talk to each other. But you don’t talk to me these days. I don’t understand. Please tell me why.”

The company, however, denied the claims made by Dhan. They insisted that there was no bullying and that Dhan had never signed any document.

It’s been told Dhan found Korea’s alternating shifts between day and night extremely difficult. Since mid-April, Dhan had been only given night shift for two months until his death. “My husband told me he could not sleep when he was working night shifts,” Man Maya explained.

A source at a labor union said, “Dhan could have been very stressed due to night shifts and workplace bullying. When the company sounded as if they were to fire him, he must have felt extremely pressured.”

In Nepal, when fathers bring gifts from overseas, they share it with neighbors.

“When my children received their portion, they looked rather sad. They must have thought of their late-father,” Man Maya’s voice trembled as she recalled how it wounded her children. Her daughter and son were ten and five, respectively, at the time of their father’s death. Now they’ve grown to become a college student and a middle school student. ”I will never forgive those people who did wrong things to my father,“ Dhan‘s son vows to take revenge whenever the absence of his father strikes him. The siblings made a promise to each other not to go abroad no matter what.

Nevertheless, Man Maya and Bhim said they did not hate Koreans. “You see in South Korea, as well as in Nepal, there are good people and bad people. Sadly, my husband met bad people. I don’t want to blame all Koreans because of them. Still, I want those bad ones to be punished.”

Kathmandu·Dong kharka·Pokhara Ki Mindo key5088@seoul.co.kr
English Translation: Lee Myungju ana.myungjulee@gmail.com

▶The Seoul Shinmun plans to cover more in-depth stories involving migrant workers, marriage migrants and migrant children in South Korea. If you have experienced or witnessed wage theft, uncompensated workplace injuries, verbal and/or physical abuses, we are waiting for your news tips. Email: key5088@seoul.or.kr

Also, get in touch with more news tips and stories on bullying and any form of discrimination against marriage migrants and migrant children. Your news tips will strictly remain anonymous and protected.

많이 본 뉴스

의료공백 해법, 지금 선택은?
심각한 의료공백이 이어지고 있습니다. 의대 증원을 강행하는 정부와 정책 백지화를 요구하는 의료계가 ‘강대강’으로 맞서고 있습니다. 현 시점에서 가장 먼저 필요한 것은 무엇일까요?
사회적 협의체를 만들어 대화를 시작한다
의대 정원 증원을 유예하고 대화한다
정부가 전공의 처벌 절차부터 중단한다
의료계가 사직을 유예하고 대화에 나선다
광고삭제
위로