Despite walkouts across the U. S., students in Seoul were told not to participate.
American students attending high school on a military base in Seoul, South Korea were threatened with military police if they tried to participate in a national student walkout to protest gun violence Wednesday.
The walkout was a grassroots effort built upon anti-gun violence activism of students who survived the school shooting in Parkland, Florida last month. Students had planned on walking out of school at 10 a.m. for 17 minutes to commemorate the 17 people killed in the massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. Students across the U. S. participated and called for their lawmakers to take action on gun violence.
The administration of Seoul American High School highly discouraged participation. The school is on the Yongsan Garrison military base in South Korea’s capital.
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A letter to parents and “sponsors” from Principal Donald Williams Jr. said students would face disciplinary action if they walked out Wednesday.
Students from Harvest Collegiate High School form a circle around the fountain in Washington Square Park on March 14,2018 in New York to take part in a national walkout to protest gun violence, one month after the shooting in Parkland, Florida, in which 17 people were killed. Students across the US walked out of classes on March 14, in a nationwide call for action against gun violence following the shooting deaths last month at a Florida high school. The nationwide protest is being held one month to the day after Nikolas Cruz, a troubled 19-year-old former student at Stoneman Douglas, unleashed a hail of gunfire on his former classmates. Timothy A. Clary/GETTY
“Seoul American High School will maintain a roster of any student who walks out of class and will provide that list to the Yongsan Garrison Command Team to determine if any further steps are warranted,” read the message. “We would also like to note that any student who leaves campus during the walkout time will be dealt with by military police who will take their name information and then escort them back into school control immediately.”
The letter said that United States Forces Korea, under whose jurisdiction the base falls, prohibits protests on U. S. military installations.
It was not immediately clear if any students at Seoul American High School attempted to participate despite the stern warning. The letter said that the school’s student council was planning a memorial for a later date.
Students on other bases in South Korea, however, did participate in the walkout.
Around 100 students at Daegu Middle/High School at Camp Walker participated in the walkout, and between 150 and 200 students at Humphreys High School at Camp Humphreys held a vigil, according to Stars and Stripes.
The Department of Defense Education Activity who runs the schools did not immediately respond to Newsweek’s request for comment.