Former President Moon must be pretty concerned that the investigation into the Scout Jamboree fiasco will find cronyism during was to blame for the poor location and extravagant spending by organizers chosen by his administration. This is likely what is causing him to come out and preemptively attack the Yoon administration to place blame on them:
The office of President Yoon Suk Yeol hit back at former President Moon Jae-in on Monday for accusing the government of mismanaging the 2023 World Scout Jamboree, citing a newspaper editorial that called Moon “shameless” for his remarks.
Moon wrote in a Facebook post Sunday that the country “lost many things” due to the Jamboree, including national dignity and pride, leaving people only to feel embarrassed.
The comments appeared to lay blame on the current government after a lack of preparation left many Jamboree participants struggling to cope with a scorching heat wave earlier this month.
“A leading newspaper of our country said in today’s editorial that it is like a thief turning on the master with a club and a thick face with no shame,” a presidential official told reporters when asked about Moon’s remarks. “We take note of that assessment.”
This audit and investigation of the Scout Jamboree could get real interesting considering it is also going to include how North Jeolla province, a major area of support for the prior Moon administration was selected for the event. Was this really the best site for the event or a political favor? It looks like we will eventually find out along with where all the money went:
South Korea’s state audit agency could launch an inspection of what went wrong and who was responsible for the poor organization of the 2023 World Scout Jamboree as early as this week, officials said Sunday.
The Board of Audit and Inspection (BAI) has begun preparations to inspect the organizing committee, the North Jeolla Province government, and the gender equality and interior ministries following the event’s conclusion on Saturday, according to the officials.
The jamboree, which ran from Aug. 1-12, opened at a campsite in Saemangeum, a reclaimed wetland on the southwestern coast, but faced severe criticism for lacking the facilities to host some 40,000 participants from around the world during a scorching heat wave earlier this month.
The participants were later relocated to various cities across the nation to escape a powerful approaching typhoon.
Officials said the BAI will announce the launch of the inspection as soon as the number of inspectors is finalized. It is expected to cover everything from how Saemangeum was chosen to host the event, how the necessary infrastructure was built, the operations of the organizing committee and details of where the massive 100 billion won (US$75 million) budget for the jamboree was spent.
This is another example of how Koreans can rally in crisis to protect the country’s image. Can you imagine Taylor Swift or other American pop idols at the last minute coming together to do a short notice concert for Scouts in order to protect America’s image?:
About 40,000 participants of the 2023 World Scout Jamboree gathered in Seoul on Friday for a K-pop concert, wrapping up the world event plagued by a heat wave and a typhoon with a glitzy entertainment show.
The “K-pop super live” concert took place at Seoul World Cup Stadium in western Seoul following a closing ceremony to look back on highlights of their 12 turbulent days in South Korea and hand over the Scout flag to a representative from Poland, the host country for the 2027 jamboree.
Girl group NewJeans took the stage with “ETA” from its recently released album and the global hit “Hype Boy,” and 18 other K-pop artists performed at the show, including IVE, NCT Dream, ITZY, Mamamoo, The Boyz, Kang Daniel and fromis_9.
Also on the stage were Shownu X Hyungwon, Zerobaseone, Kwon Eun-bi, Jo Yuri, P1Harmony, KARD, The New Six and ATBO.
Just when you thought the Jamboree fiasco could not get any worse now Korean Scouts are claiming racism over their accommodations:
Korean Jamboree Scouts protest being treated like “asylum seekers” in own country: they were taken to church auditorium with no showers while foreign Scouts offered plush accommodations at corporate retreats with own rooms, showers and fitness center
370 of the Korean Scouts were assigned to an auditorium of a Christian church in Yongin, Geonggyi Province, for their post-Saemangeum accommodation. They are not happy with this Jimjilbang-style facility and their parents are protesting “reverse discrimination.”
Obviously, there are no beds at the auditorium so church administrators brought in mats to have them sleep en masse in one large area. The Korean Scouts charge the mats are too thin to sleep comfortably on and that there are no showers at the church. They claim to be using garden hoses attached to faucets to wash themselves.
Some told their parents that they would rather go back to Saemangeum than put up with the church-provided facility: “They told me that they are being treated like asylum-seekers in their own country. We can understand that we need to treat our foreign guests well. However, this is unacceptable.”
One way of looking at this is that this is one of the best aspects of Korea is how people can come together to protect the country’s image. Can you imagine what the reaction in the U.S. would be if the President asked private companies to accommodate a bunch of Scouts and provide tour programs for them because of government incompetence?:
GS E&C employees put up tents on a football field at the company’s training center in Yongin, Gyeonggi Province, Tuesday, for Scouts from Greece, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Zambia and Botswana. Courtesy of GS E&C
The abrupt relocation of participants of the 25th World Scout Jamboree on Tuesday from the Saemangeum campsite in North Jeolla Province to lodgings in eight other regions around the country has not only confused public servants nationwide, but also drawn complaints from employees working at privately owned companies which have been drafted to offer their facilities.
Amid the efforts of domestic firms to minimize damage to Korea’s reputation by offering an additional labor force, plus other basic necessities, due to the poor management of the global event, workers have been objecting to being forced to do tasks that are not relevant to their roles and responsibilities.
“We received a call from the presidential office on Monday night to prepare suitable accommodation, tourism programs and plans to transport the Scouts to the K-pop concert and the airport,” a GS E&C employee wrote on Blind, an anonymous chat forum app for verified employees. “After the abrupt request, my colleagues had to prepare tourism programs and put up tents for the Scouts.”
Here is the latest on the Scout Jamboree fiasco which now apparently can’t figure out what they are going to do for the closing ceremony:
Scouts hoist the Jamboree and the 25th World Scout Jamboree flags at the opening ceremony of the event in Saemangeum, North Jeolla Province, Aug. 2. Courtesy of World Organization of the Scout Movement
The 25th World Scout Jamboree got off to a disappointing start due to poor preparations and facilities management amid a heat wave that sparked outcries from participants and parents. The global youth event is likely to be the source of more embarrassment as the government is not fully ready for a flag handover ceremony to the next host country.
Although the Korean government took control of the remainder of the quadrennial event, whose participants exited the campsite due to the rapidly-approaching Typhoon Khanun, government ministries and organizers are still undecided on how to deliver the Jamboree flag to the event’s next host, Poland, at the closing ceremony on Friday.
The Korean government created a team led by Prime Minister Han Duck-soo to handle the rest of the Jamboree event to ensure that the Scouts can enjoy Korean culture during the remaining period of the event. However, government ministries and organizers are passing on the responsibility to other agencies, especially involving matters related to the flag handover ceremony.
When The Korea Times inquired about the flag handover event, an official at the prime minister’s office in charge of the Jamboree said the matter should be referred to the organizing committee.
What a fiasco the Scout Jamboree has turned out to be. It is not like it couldn’t have been predicted that the weather in August in South Korea is miserable:
German Scouts and adult volunteers participating in the 25th World Scout Jamboree arrive at Myongji University’s dormitory in Yongin, Gyeonggi Province, Tuesday, after leaving the main campsite in Saemangeum, a reclaimed tidal flat in North Jeolla Province, as all participants were relocated across the country amid a typhoon threat. Yonhap
About 37,000 Scouts participating in the 25th World Scout Jamboree left their campsite in Saemangeum for Seoul and seven other regions across the country on Tuesday ― four days ahead of schedule due to the rapidly-approaching Typhoon Khanun.
Interior and Safety Minister Lee Sang-min said the government mobilized more than 1,000 buses to relocate about 37,000 people from 156 countries.
The global youth event initially drew over 43,000 Scouts from 159 nations, but the 1,500-member U.S. and 4,400-member U.K. delegations, along with participants from Singapore, pulled out of the campsite earlier citing risks posed by a heat wave.
“Four police helicopters and 273 patrol cars were also mobilized for the safe movement of the participants,” Lee said during the last media briefing held in Saemangeum, a reclaimed tidal flat in North Jeolla Province that has served as the venue for this year’s World Scout Jamboree.
According to the government, the participants were scattered throughout 128 accommodations across the country, including 64 in Gyeonggi Province, 18 in South Chungcheong Province, 17 in Seoul and eight in Incheon.
Most of the places are college dormitories or government and corporate training facilities.
You can read more at the link, but maybe the government should have let the military plan this instead of civilian authorities who seemed more interested in taking lavish trips abroad.
If this alleged misappropriation of funds is going on with the Jamboree other large public events should be audited as well. The Jamboree spending is only coming to light due to the poor weather that exposed issues with planning; what misappropriation of funds has happened in events that went off as planned?:
This file photo, taken July 24, 2023, shows a site for the 25th World Scout Jamboree, set to take place at Saemangeum, a reclaimed area in Buan, about 204 kilometers south of Seoul, from Aug. 1-12. The Buan county office provided this photo.
An overwhelming amount of public funds in South Korea spent for the 2023 World Scout Jamboree was used for operational and personnel expenses instead of for the setting up of infrastructure, such as shower and bathroom stalls, at the camp site, according to data provided by organizers Monday.
It has raised scrutiny on whether both central and local authorities involved in the jamboree management throughout the years adequately used public funds — especially in light of revelations of over some 90 reported cases of lavish overseas business trips taken by civil servants in the name of research.
According to data provided by the central government, the North Jeolla provincial government and the jamboree organizing committee on Monday, the accumulated budget used to run the event and related expenditure had amounted to 117.1 billion won (US$89.5 million).
Of the total, 74 percent, or 87 billion won, had been used to cover personnel expenses for the organizing committee and operational costs, such as those related to travel and food for the Scouts, and the K-pop concert for the jamboree.
Spending for campsite infrastructure, including water and sewage facilities, parking lots and water-spraying cooling tunnels, stood at 20.5 billion won.
Expenses for toilets, showers and drinking water fountains at the campsite amounted to 13 billion won, or 11 percent of the total spending, data showed.
Here is where the spending gets infuriating:
Data also showed that officials, such as those from the gender equality and family ministry, and the North Jeolla provincial government, went on dozens of lavish overseas trips throughout eight years under the guise of research for the jamboree.
In May 2018, five officials from the province went on an eight-day trip to Switzerland and Italy under the pretext of investigating successful jamboree hosting cases.
The trip included visits to tourist attractions, such as Interlaken, Lucerne, Milan and Venice. Switzerland and Italy, however, had no experience hosting jamborees.
In December of that year, another group of officials at the provincial government visited Australia, and in 2019, officials from the gender equality ministry and the provincial government traveled to the United States to attend the 24th World Scout Jamboree held in West Virginia.
Several of the trips included cruise ship programs totally unrelated to the World Scout Jamboree.