Illegal
summary executions of civilians were practiced, often on a large scale, from August 15, 1945, up to the end of Korean War. Mass killings were conducted by various parties in both the North and South, as well as US forces who bombed civilians indiscriminately for fear of disguised enemy soldiers.
Ulsan massacre The
Ulsan Bodo League massacre was committed by the South Korean police against suspicious left-leaning civilians, most of them illiterate and uneducated peasants, who were misinformed when they registered themselves as Bodo League members. In the southeastern city of Ulsan, hundreds of people were massacred by South Korean police during the early months of the Korean War. In July and August 1950 alone, 407 civilians were summarily executed without trials. On January 24, 2008, the former President of Korea
Roh Moo-hyun apologized for the mass killings. (See also the mass killings conducted against prison inmates who were suspected leftists, which took place at prisons in other cities such as Busan,
Masan and
Jinju.)
Wolmido Incident The commission concluded on March 11, 2008, that indiscriminate bombing by the US on
Wolmido Island,
Incheon, Korea, on Sept. 10, 1950, caused severe casualties of civilians residing in the area. At the time, the
United Nations attempted a
sudden landing maneuver in Incheon to reverse the course of the war, and Wolmido Island was a strategically significant location that needed to be secured. Declassified US military documents provided evidence of the attack without acknowledging the civilian casualties. On Sept. 10, 1950, five days before the Inchon landing, 43
United States Air Force (USAF) aircraft dropped 93
napalm canisters over Wolmido's eastern slope to clear the way for American troops. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission ruled that the attack violated international conventions on war, accusing the US military of using indiscriminate force on three attacks in 1950 and 1951, in which at least 228 civilians, possibly hundreds more, were killed. The commission asked the country's leaders to seek compensation from the United States. Surviving villagers were forced to evacuate their homes and did not return, since the island became designated as a strategically important military base even after the Korean War. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission recommended that the Korean government negotiate with the US government to seek compensation for those victimized by the incident.
Bodo League massacre s by the Republic of Korea Army and Police in July 1950. The
Bodo League (National Guidance Alliance, 국민보도연맹; gukmin bodo rungmaeng, 國民保導聯盟) was established on April 20, 1949, in order to convert
left-wingers residing in South Korea, including former members of
South Korean Workers Party(남조선로동당; 南朝鮮勞動黨), and embrace them as citizens of the "democratic" South Korea. However, its goal was an apparent manipulative tactic of the
right-wing South Korean government to identify potential
communists within the South and eventually eliminate them by execution around the time of the Korean War. Its headquarters was established on June 5, 1949, and regional branches were set up by the end of March the following year. In the course of recruiting members of the Bodo League, many innocent civilians were coerced to join by regional branches and governmental authorities trying to reach their allocated numbers. Shortly after the Korean War broke out, Syngman Rhee's government became obsessed with the idea that communist sympathizers might cooperate with the communist North and become threats to the South, and ordered each police station to arrest those who had left-leaning tendencies. From July to September 1950, police authorities and special troops of South Korea were organized to strategically carry out the orders. In most cases, arrested Bodo League members or sympathizers were forcefully held in storage spaces near police stations for several days before being summarily executed at sites such as remote valleys in deep forest, isolated islands or abandoned mine areas. The number of Bodo League members reached an estimated 300,000 nationwide before the Korean War. Several thousand civilians were illegitimately killed without due process. In addition, the families of the victims were branded as associated with communists and often targeted by a series of regimes suffering from extreme
McCarthyism. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission received 10,859 cases around the time of the Korean War. The committee received over 200 additional cases, but it needed to amend the law in order to proceed. Rep. Kang Chang-il of the
United Democratic Party (Republic of Korea) proposed a revision to the bill to prolong the time limit for a maximum of six months.
Uljin massacre The commission found that 256 people were killed in
Uljin, Gangwon Province, by South Korea's police forces, the
Counter Intelligence Corps (CIC), and the 3rd
ROK Army after being accused of siding with local leftists. The massacre took place between September 26, 1950, and the end of December 1950. The victims were identified by historical documents, testimony by witnesses and petitioners, records from the Uljin police station, and field research conducted throughout the county. Reserve troops from the 3rd Army selected about 40 village residents with leftist tendencies from Uljin police-station cells based on lists by right-wing organizations and village chiefs, summarily executed and buried them in Hujeong-ri's Budul Valley on October 20, 1950. The Uljin police released some of the accused between October and November 1950, but about 250 civilians were buried in Shinrim's Olsi Valley. In the late fall of 1950, several Onjeong-myeon villagers were accused of providing food to fugitive relatives who had fled after being suspected of leftist tendencies. On November 26, 1950, the Onjeong police arrested suspects and confined them to a storage space. Twelve were executed en route to the Uljin police station in Sagye-ri, Buk-myeon, by police from
Hadang. The victims were accused of holding positions in North Korea's occupation authority, and were targeted for mass killings conducted by South Korean authorities when they re-entered the region. Most collaborators with North Korean forces had already crossed the border to the north at the time of the massacre, however, and civilians had joined the local leftists. There were no clear distinctions to separate the guilty from the innocent, and many took the opportunity to eliminate personal opponents. The summary executions of civilians without adequate judicial process were
crimes against humanity, and the victims' descendants experienced social discrimination in
McCarthyist, pre-democratic South Korea. The commission advised the government to apologize to the victims' families, to conduct human-rights education, and to hold memorial services for those who were wrongfully prosecuted and murdered.
Geumsan massacre The commission found a total of 118 rightists, including civil servants, were killed by left-leaning regional self-defense forces, communist
guerillas, and the North Korean People's Army in
Geumsan County after North Korean troops entered the area, especially between July and November 1950. On September 25, 1950, a number of right-wing personnel, including civil servants under the South Korean regional government, were brought to the
ad hoc police entity in Geumsan, which was established by the North after its entry to the region. They were slaughtered before being buried at a nearby hill called Bibimi-jae. The massacre was carried out by members of the ad hoc police and North Korean troops on orders from the provisional police chief. At dawn on November 2, 1950, a group of communist guerillas swarmed into the
Buri-myeon police department controlled by the South, incinerated the building, and captured those inside. During the course of the assault, many villagers were accused of collaborating with the South, and 38 of them were executed. Additional mass killings of civilians by communist
partisans in locations including
Seokdong-ri in
Namyi-myeon, and
Eumji-ri in Geumsan County, were also confirmed by the commission during the investigation. Most of the victims were accused of being affiliated with the South Korean governing entities before the North's entry into the region or of having right-leaning political loyalties. The accused included members of the Korean Youth Association (대한청년단; 大韓靑年團) and the Korean National Association (국민회; 國民會), both of which were representative right-wing political organizations in the peninsula. In spite of the various accusations, the commission discovered the majority of casualties were committed due to personal animosities and a desire of the perpetrators to eliminate their adversaries. The commission's investigation found that the perpetrators of the Geumsan massacre were members of the regional self-defense forces, communist partisans, local leftists residing in the area, and North Korean troops who fell behind their main regiments. The commission recommended revising the historical accounts kept in governmental archives in accordance with the commission's finding.
Gurye Massacre The TRCK found that, between late October 1948 and July 1949 in
Gurye County, shortly after the
Yeo-Sun Incident, a large number of civilians were illegitimately killed as South Korean troops and police forces conducted military operations to subdue communist insurgents. These mass killings are considered separate from the Yeosun Incident. Approximately 800 civilians were massacred. 165 victims were identified, according to various historical records kept in
Korea's National Archives, historical records of subjugating communist insurgents (공비토벌사; 共匪討罰史) in the South Korean Army Headquarters (1954), field research, and statements from witnesses. South Korean troops and police forces captured, tortured, and executed civilians accused of collaborating with local leftists or insurgents. Villages located near insurgent bases were incinerated, and their residents were accused of collaboration before being executed during operations to "clean up" communist insurgents. A series of similar mass killings occurred between late October 1948 and early 1949 near Gurye, when the 1st and 2nd Battalions of the 3rd Regiment of the South Korean Army were based in the region. The Gurye Police Office detained civilians suspected of collaborating with local communist partisans and commonly tortured their captives before executing them and concealing their bodies in nearby areas or on Mt. Bongseong. The members of the Korean Youth Association (대한청년단; 大韓靑年團) in Gurye also directly or indirectly abetted these systematic operations of mass killings by providing groundless accusations and supporting the extermination of those affiliated with communist guerillas or local leftists. They mostly assisted with the removal and burial of bodies after the executions. Accusations against victims included joining a left-leaning organization, such as the Socialist Labor Party in South Korea (남로당; 南勞黨). Other accusations were as minor as residing near areas targeted by the military, or being related to suspected victims. South Korean troops and police forces commonly conducted indiscriminate arrests, detention, and imprisonment. They tortured and summarily executed people without adequate investigation or legitimate judicial process. The
martial law proclaimed at the time was not supported by any law and, thus, the administrative and judicial authorities of the chief commander under martial law were subject to revocation. Furthermore, administrative and judicial authority were arbitrarily interpreted and implemented by regional chiefs, which increased the number of civilian casualties. Even if martial law is considered legitimate, the principle of non-combatant immunity was neglected for the authority to execute innocent civilians. Perpetrators often practiced a type of
extrajudicial punishment (즉결처분권; 卽決處分權) to carry out summary executions. This was often misunderstood to be the authority to arbitrarily kill civilians. The commission found that the killing of innocent civilians by the public authorities in Yeosu and Suncheon greatly transgressed the constitutional legality given to the military and police force at the time. They failed in their sacred obligations of protecting the lives and property of civilians. The commission advised the government to officially apologize to the bereaved families of the victims, restore the honor of the dead, revise historical records in accordance with its findings, and reinforce education in sustaining peace.
Massacre at Muan-gun The TRCK verified that on October 3, 1950, leftists massacred 96 right-wing residents of
Cheonjang-ri,
Haejae-myeon, in
Muan County. Around 10:00 pm on October 3, 1950, four regional leftist leaders drew up lists of right-wing residents to be executed. The selected families were bound and dragged by the leftist perpetrators to a nearby shore, where the perpetrators executed the adult family members using knives, clubs, bamboo spears, and farm implements before pushing them off a cliff near the shore. Children under the age of 10 were executed by being pushed into a deep well. While the commission identified 96 victims, including 22 children and 43 women, the total number may be as high as 151. The total number of perpetrators is estimated to be 54 leftists. The Commission found that this incident offers an opportunity for self-examination in regard to the atrocities of war.
Ganghwa Massacre Around the time of the
Third Battle of Seoul, the
Ganghwa Regional Self-defense Forces assumed that, if North Korean troops occupied the region, those with left-leaning tendencies and their families would collaborate with the North. Therefore, preemptively eliminating a potential
fifth column became a strategically beneficial objective. Shortly before the retreat, the Chief of the Ganghwa Police and the Chief of the Ganghwa Branch Youth Self-defense Forces issued execution orders. These were followed by special measurements issued from the
Gyeonggi Provincial Police Chief with regard to traitors. The mass executions carried out afterwards often occurred with the aid or tacit consent of South Korean and U.S. forces. Shortly thereafter, some residents of Ganghwa and their families, were accused of treachery. They were captured by the Ganghwa Regional Self-defense Forces, and detained at the Ganghwa Police Station and its subordinate police branches. The detainees were tortured before being executed at remote sites scattered throughout the region. The possible number of casualties based on statements from witnesses, petitioners, and documents, was as high as 430. Details of the incidents emerged when a group of residents registered their deceased family members as victims under the Korean War Veteran Memorial Law. The TRCK concluded that the Ganghwa Regional Self-defense Forces were guilty of killing 139 civilians residing in the Ganghwa, Seokmo and Jumun island areas around the time of the January 4, 1951, recapture of
Seoul by Communist forces. These summary executions of civilians without due process were considered to be a crime against humanity. Family members were presumed to be tainted by guilt by association. They suffered social stigma. While direct responsibility for the incidents may be directed at regional governments and civil organizations, the South Korean government was also held accountable since they neglected their obligations to administer and control the regional authorities’ activities. The Commission found that the Ganghwa Self-defense Forces, an organization outside the control of any U.S. or South Korean authorities, was provided with arms, which they then used to assault civilians. This action by the government resulted in the deaths of innocent villagers. The Commission advised the government to officially apologize to the victims’ bereaved families, seek reconciliation between the victims and perpetrators, and arrange adequate emergency alternatives, considering Ganghwa's geographical circumstances.
Mass Murder of Accused Leftists in Naju Twenty seven petitioners filed for verification of a mass murder that took place in
Naju, South Korea, on February 26, 1951. According to the petitioners, a total of 28 villagers were summarily executed at
Cheolcheon-ri,
Bonghwang—myeon in Naju without due process, having been accused of collaborating with communist guerillas. The TRCK found that the Naju Police Special Forces were responsible for the atrocity, and recommended that the government officially apologize to the families of the victims, restore the honor of the dead, and implement preventive measures.
Bodo League-related massacres in the Gunwi, Gyeongju, and Daegu regions The Commission determined that at least 99 local residents in
Gunwi,
Gyeongju, and
Daegu were massacred between July and August 1950 by the military, local police, and CIC after being blacklisted or accused of being members of the Bodo League. In July 1950, dispatched CIC forces and local policemen arrested and temporarily detained members of the Bodo League at local police stations or detention centers. The detainees were categorized into three different groups before being transported to
Naenam-myeon,
Ubo-myeon, or
Gunwi County and massacred. The Commission recommended that the government issue an official apology, provide support for memorial services, revise official documents including family registries, and strengthen peace and human rights-related education.
Bodo League-related massacres in the Goryeong, Seongju, and Chilgok regions The Commission found that a number of civilians were killed by the local police, military, CIC, and military police after being accused of cooperating with leftists or being a member of the Bodo League. The killings took place between July and August 1950 in the
Goryeong,
Seongju, and
Chilgok regions of North
Gyeongsang Province. Bodo League members were either arrested by local police or summoned to nearby police stations and detained. As North Korean troops advanced southward, the army and military police took custody of the detainees before killing them. The Commission recommended that the government officially apologize to the families of the victims, support memorial services, revise family registries and other records, and provide peace and human rights education.
Bodo League-related massacres in Miryang, South Gyeongsang Province The Commission ascertained that members of the Bodo League in the
Miryang region were massacred by the local police and the South Gyeongsang Province CIC between July and August 1950. The victims were forcibly confined in various warehouses before being executed in August 1950. The Commission recommended that the government officially apologize to the families of the victims, support memorial services, revise family registries and other records, and provide peace and human rights education.
Bodo League-related massacres in Yangsan, South Gyeongsang Province The Commission found that regional members of the Bodo League and those in preventive detention were killed by the local police and CIC forces between July and August 1950. The victims were either forcibly arrested by the police or summoned to the police station, where they were detained or transferred to nearby detainment centers before being executed in August 1950. The Commission recommended that the government officially apologize to the families of victims, support memorial services, revise family registries and other records, and provide peace and human rights education.
Bodo League-related Massacres in Yeongdeok, North Gyeongsang Province The Commission determined that in July 1950, approximately 270 regional Bodo League members and those held in preventive detention were illegally victimized by the military and police forces in
Yeongdeok County, North Gyeongsang Province. Shortly after the outbreak of the Korean War, the 23rd Regiment of the 3rd Army and Yeongdeok Police were concerned that Bodo League members might collaborate with the North Korean People's Army and conduct sabotage behind the front lines. In order to prevent this, the police and army executed them. The Commission recommended an official apology, revision of family registries and other records, peace and human rights education, and financial support for memorial services.
Bodo League-related massacres in Busan and Sacheon The Commission found that regional Bodo League members and those in preventive detention were killed by the Busan CIC, the military, and local police between July and September 1950. Bodo League members in the Busan and
Sacheon regions were forcibly arrested or summoned to local police stations, where they were detained before being executed. The Commission recommended that the government officially apologize to the families of the victims, support memorial services, revise family registries and other records, and provide peace and human rights education. == Survey to identify massacre victims ==