POLITICS

S. Korean new leader scraps state-issued textbooks

2017-05-13 14:34 GMT+8
Editor Gong Rong
South Korea's new President Moon Jae-In on Friday scrapped state-issued school history textbooks introduced by his ousted predecessor, saying they represented an "outdated and one-sided" view of the past, his office said.
The previous Park Geun-Hye administration had introduced state-authored history textbooks at middle and high schools, arguing that some existing tomes reflected left-leaning and pro-North Korea ideologies.
Moon's chief press secretary Yoon Young-chan told in a press briefing on May 12./VCG Photo
Park's conservative government began publishing the new textbooks this year despite opposition from liberal critics, who saw them as an attempt to glorify the dictatorship of Park Chung-Hee, late father of the impeached president.
"As efforts to normalize history education, the president has ordered the abolition of state-authored textbooks," said top presidential spokesman Yoon Young-chan, adding they "symbolize outdated and one-sided history education and attempts to divide the people".
Protests in South Korea over the controversial textbooks, including this one by retired teachers in November 2015./VCG Photo
Moon believed "history education must no longer be used for political purposes", Yoon said. 
The previous government initially planned to make the state-authored textbooks as the only option available to educators but later said that schools would be able to choose between them and approved texts from commercial publishers.
Moon Jae-in arriving at Cheong Wa Dae on May 10 after winning the election./VCG Photo
‍Some 80 middle and high schools in South Korea, just 1.5 percent of the total, have said they would adopt the state-issued books.
The Korea Times reported that many historians said the state-authored textbooks "would distort history and cause social divisions".
(Source: AFP)
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