Getting Sta*bed But Still Can't Fight Back.. South Korea's Ridiculous "Self-Defense" Law Problem
Asianalysis with AL & HELEN Asianalysis with AL & HELEN
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 Published On Aug 28, 2023

In May 2023, a convenience store owner, Mr. A, was stabbed with a knife by an armed man in the city of Daejeon, South Korea.

Mr. A pushes him off, in desperate attempts to save his life, then subsequently kicks the armed man in order to take the sharp weapon away from him. After the knife was taken from the criminal, Mr. A does not conduct any further physical damage onto him.

However, on July 28th, 2023, Mr. A received a shocking message from the South Korean Prosecutor’s Office, which is the fact that he is to be investigated not as a victim, but as the OFFENDER who has conducted assault on the armed criminal.

This is as under the South Korean law, what Mr. A has done in order to defend himself from literally being stabbed to death, is not considered as self-defense.

So how do you exactly defend yourself from such a situation if a similar event ever happens to you while you are in South Korea, with the occurrence of random knife attacks currently soaring to historical highs in the nation?

We will find the answer to that very question in this video.

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◆About us◆

AL
I graduated from Waseda University 早稲田大学 (the alma mater of the current Japanese Prime Minister, Chairman of Samsung Group, CEO of Sony, president and CEO of Honda, etc) with a degree in Global Political Economy 国際政治経済学科 at the Department of Political Science and Economics 政治経済学部, and have lived, studied and worked in Japan for over 10 years.

I am in charge with most of the research and presentation on our Youtube Channel.

HELEN
My wife Helen majored in Japanese Language for her bachelor's degree, and have broad experiences working in Japan as a Japanese translator.

Helen is in charge of most of the beautiful editing and thumbnail designs that you see on our Youtube Channel.
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Timestamps:

0:00 Introduction

1:55 Our Recent Experience

5:50 How This Could Matter To You

7:43 Legal Precedents Where Self-Defense Was Not Accepted-

8:02 Case A

12:10 Case B

13:44 Case C

15:23 Legal Precedents Where Self-Defense Was Accepted-

15:43 Case D

17:53 Case E

19:56 Our Final Thoughts & Considerations

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