Source: Global Research.ca
Matthew Hoey
Matthew Hoey
This
handout picture released by the Republic of Korea (ROK) Navy shows ROKS
DDH-981 Choi Young, a Chungmugong Yi Sun-shin class South Korean
destroyer, firing during a joint military exercise between US and South
Korean navies in the Sea of Japan (East Sea) on July 27, 2010 (AFP Photo
/ Roknavy)
Residents
on the South Korean Island of Jeju are continuing to resist the siting
of a huge naval base there. Critics fear it will be used not as a shield
against North Korea, but as a base for the US to target rising world
power, China.
On Tuesday, four activists protesting against the base in Jeju’s Gangjeong village were arrested.
Matthew
Hoey, an international co-ordinator of the Campaign to Save Jeju
Island, told RT that the activists were peacefully protesting outside a
hotel where the 10th Annual South Korea-UN Disarmament Conference, known
as the Jeju process, was taking place. His friends were among those
arrested.
According
to Hoey, 94 per cent of residents in Gangjeong village voted against
the construction plans. Those opposed to the base are mainly concerned
about environmental issues and fear it could harm South Korean-Chinese
relations.
“Recently
the provincial government here in Jeju demanded that the construction
be stopped, but the military said ‘no’,” he noted. “The government is
simply not listening.”
Hoey worries that the villagers have run out of legal options in their non-violent campaign against the base.
Following
the arrests, a large rally has taken place outside the police station
where the activists were detained and also at the gates of the naval
base, he said.
Hoey says the base is going to become one of the largest naval military bases in the world.
“The
capacity of this base is 20 large destroyers, two aircraft carriers,
two subs and it would be outfitted with the Aegis ballistic missile
defense system,” he explained.
The
South Korean government started the construction of a $970 million base
in January 2011 despite local resistance. The Defense Ministry said
American ships would be allowed to visit the port.
South
Korean military officials claim the base is necessary to serve as a
shield against North Korea, secure maritime transportation routes and
help boost the regional economy.
But critics say the base could become an outpost for the United States to flex its muscles against rising world power, China.
“We’re
a hair less than 300 miles away from the Chinese mainland and this is a
very attractive location for the United States military. As an official
at a conference the other day told me, it’s no secret that US ships
will be calling this home,” Hoey said.
“Maybe
not next year, maybe not in five years, but sometime down the road the
idea of a Jeju missile crisis comes to mind – a rapid escalation between
the US and China,” Hoey warns.
“US ships and subs are just 300 miles off the shore here in Jeju. It makes the island a target.”
With
unique nature and biological diversity, Jeju Island has been named a
Biosphere Reserve by UNESCO. The island contains the Natural World
Heritage Site, Jeju Volcanic Island and Lava Tubes.
“Touch not one stone, not one flower,” is its residents’ battle cry in the fight to preserve the island.