Jung Woo-sung "Jeju Island Yemen refugees understands animosity but ... Musashi Entrance disapproval"

Jung Woo-sung told Jeju Island of his candid thoughts about the Yemen refugee controversy.United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) Goodwill Ambassador Jung Woo-sung on the 26th at the 13th Jeju Island International Convention Center (ICC) in Seogwipo City, in a special session on the theme of People on the Road: Today and Tomorrow in the World Refugee Problem prepared by JoongAng Ilbo I attended.In a conversation with JTBC anchor Kim Pil-gyu, Jung Woo-sung said, It is impossible to think about human rights to put Yemen in a country that can not enter Jeju Island without a visa from the 1st.The control of the refugees entrance through visas is a way that the refugee has a risk of going to any Europe, he said. I have visited many refugee camps and met countless refugees and displaced people and often thought, How should we inform our European people about this huge world problem, I have done too much homework?But because it was a distant Europe story, most of them accepted and understood it.At one point, however, it seems that many refugees think why should we be responsible for those people because they applied in Jeju Island.Of course, the word human rights to the public can be a very vague and difficult story. Jeju Islanders may have an antagonism or anxiety about whether Jeju Island should be responsible, he said. It seems that Jeju Island has created a consciousness that it should be responsible because it has limited its output.If the emancipation was approved, Yemen would have been able to reduce the burden on the Jeju Island and the central government by solving the food and shelter themselves, even if it was difficult to get help from the community such as Seoul. Jung Woo-sung is one of the 11 former World World United Nations refugee organization goodwill ambassadors.After visiting the refugee camps several times in person in 2014 as an honorary ambassador, he was officially appointed as a goodwill ambassador.Nepal (2014), South Sudan (2015), Lebanon (2016) and Iraq (2017), followed by a direct visit to the Rohingya refugee camp (Bangladesh Cox Bazar) in December last year, and donates 50 million won each year.

Jung Woo-sung told Jeju Island of his candid thoughts about the Yemen refugee controversy.

United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) Goodwill Ambassador Jung Woo-sung on the 26th at the 13th Jeju Island International Convention Center (ICC) in Seogwipo City, in a special session on the theme of "People on the Road: Today and Tomorrow in the World Refugee Problem" prepared by JoongAng Ilbo I attended.

In a conversation with JTBC anchor Kim Pil-gyu, Jung Woo-sung said, "It is impossible to think about human rights to put Yemen in a country that can not enter Jeju Island without a visa from the 1st."

"The control of the refugee's Entrance through visas is a way that the refugee has a risk of going to any Europe," he said. "I have visited many refugee camps and met countless refugees and displaced people and often thought, 'How should we inform our European people about this huge World problem, I have done too much homework?'"

"But because it was a distant Europe story, most of them accepted and understood it. At one point, however, it seems that many refugees think 'why should we be responsible for those people' because they applied in Jeju Island. Of course, the word human rights to the public can be a very vague and difficult story. "

"Jeju Islanders may have an antagonism or anxiety about whether Jeju Island should be responsible," he said. "It seems that Jeju Island has created a consciousness that it should be responsible because it has limited its output. If the emancipation was approved, Yemen would have been able to reduce the burden on the Jeju Island and the central government by solving the food and shelter themselves, even if it was difficult to get help from the community such as Seoul. "

Jung Woo-sung is one of the 11 former World World United Nations refugee organization goodwill ambassadors. After visiting the refugee camps several times in person in 2014 as an honorary ambassador, he was officially appointed as a goodwill ambassador.Nepal (2014), South Sudan (2015), Lebanon (2016) and Iraq (2017), followed by a direct visit to the Rohingya refugee camp (Bangladesh Cox Bazar) in December last year, and donates 50 million won each year.