Disability rights activists to resume protests in Seoul this week

The group Solidarity Against Disability Discrimination will stage activities downtown on Wednesdays and Thursdays during morning rush hour.

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Activists from the disability rights group Solidarity Against Disability Discrimination stage a protest at a subway station in Gwangju on May 16.

A disability rights activist group said Tuesday it will resume its subway protests in Seoul this week, following a six-month hiatus.

Solidarity Against Disability Discrimination (SADD) said in a press release that the protests will take place during morning rush hour inside Seoul City Hall Station, starting Thursday.

SADD urged Seoul Mayor Oh Se-hoon to reinstate 400 workers who had been hired under the city government's rights-centered public jobs program but have since been laid off. The program was launched in 2020 to provide employment for the severely disabled, but it was abolished in 2024.

Separately, the group will stage another protest by boarding buses every Wednesday at 8 a.m. in Seoul's central Jongno District, starting this week.


Yonhap