Politics of the Yellow Sewol Ribbon

Politics of the Yellow Sewol Ribbon

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Yellow ribbon is the symbol of the Sewol incident, a ferry disaster that killed 304 passengers three years ago today. All over South Korea, tiny yellow ribbons dangle from people’s backpacks, wallets, bicycles, and on the windowsills of small cafés. Politicians — mostly from the
Yellow ribbon isthe symbol of the Sewolincident,a ferry disaster that killed 304 passengers three years ago today. All over South Korea, tiny yellow ribbons dangle from people’s backpacks, wallets, bicycles, and on the windowsills of small cafés. Politicians — mostly from the liberal factions — don the yellow ribbons to show their solidarity. But the yellow ribbon is as much a symbol of division as unity. It’s a testament to how politicized the Sewolincident has become in South Korea; how the f

Yellow ribbons hang outside of Seoul City Hall on May 6, 2014 in memory of the lives lost in the Sewol ferry tragedy Stock Photo - Alamy

Boy who raised alarm on doomed ferry had no time to call parents - The Japan Times

South Korean Mourners Hold Yellow Ribbons Editorial Stock Photo - Stock Image

Dal Kim's Instagram, Twitter & Facebook on IDCrawl

The Sewol Ferry Disaster, New Formations of the Social, and Digital Media (Part 2)

Polls let South Koreans deliver verdict on ferry tragedy

Seohoi Stephanie Park - KOREA EXPOSÉ (Page 3)

Candlelight and the Yellow Ribbon: Catalyzing Re-Democratization in South Korea

liberal - KOREA EXPOSÉ

The Four-Year Journey of the Sewol Tragedy, by Jung Han Lee