Temporary workers are risking their lives to bring attention to unfair labor practices in the shipbuilding industry.
Workers in South Korea's Economic Struggle: Aerial Protest Highlights Inequality

Workers in South Korea's Economic Struggle: Aerial Protest Highlights Inequality
Desperate workers are using extreme measures to voice their grievances as labor inequality becomes a hot topic in South Korea's presidential race.
In South Korea, the fight for labor equality has taken to the skies, with a temporary worker named Kim Hyoung-su making headlines as he protests atop a 98-foot-tall traffic camera tower in central Seoul. For 77 days, Kim has lived in a makeshift tent, exposing a critical issue that has become a focal point in the lead-up to the presidential election scheduled for next Tuesday.
“I feel like an animal in a cage, eating, sleeping, and relieving myself in the same place,” Kim stated from his precarious perch, emphasizing the lengths he must go to in order to highlight the struggles faced by workers like himself. This 52-year-old laborer is one of many subcontracted employees at Hanwha Ocean shipyard, a pivotal player in South Korea’s economy, known for its stark wage disparities.
Despite performing the same tasks as directly hired workers, subcontractors earn just half the wages, a disparity that Kim can no longer tolerate. He climbed the tower, located in front of Hanwha's headquarters, on March 14, driven by the goal of shedding light on the “discrimination” that plagues his working conditions. His activism has resonated within the labor community, as many others join in solidarity to demand fair treatment and equitable pay.
The disparities in compensation and treatment among workers raise profound questions about labor rights and social justice in a rapidly evolving economic landscape. As South Korea approaches a pivotal election, the voices of those like Kim Hyoung-su cannot be ignored, shining a spotlight on an ongoing struggle for equality in the workforce.
“I feel like an animal in a cage, eating, sleeping, and relieving myself in the same place,” Kim stated from his precarious perch, emphasizing the lengths he must go to in order to highlight the struggles faced by workers like himself. This 52-year-old laborer is one of many subcontracted employees at Hanwha Ocean shipyard, a pivotal player in South Korea’s economy, known for its stark wage disparities.
Despite performing the same tasks as directly hired workers, subcontractors earn just half the wages, a disparity that Kim can no longer tolerate. He climbed the tower, located in front of Hanwha's headquarters, on March 14, driven by the goal of shedding light on the “discrimination” that plagues his working conditions. His activism has resonated within the labor community, as many others join in solidarity to demand fair treatment and equitable pay.
The disparities in compensation and treatment among workers raise profound questions about labor rights and social justice in a rapidly evolving economic landscape. As South Korea approaches a pivotal election, the voices of those like Kim Hyoung-su cannot be ignored, shining a spotlight on an ongoing struggle for equality in the workforce.