A meme shared on social media depicting Southeast Asian countries confronting South Korea. Captured from X
A wave of online backlash against Korea is spreading across Southeast Asia, fueled by a dispute over fan behavior at a K-pop concert and intensified by controversial comments from public officials, highlighting how quickly digital tensions can take on a regional dimension.
Boycott sentiment toward Korea spreads
Posts accusing Koreans of discrimination have circulated widely on platforms such as X, formerly known as Twitter, and Facebook in recent days, with users from Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand sharing calls to boycott Korean products and culture. A hashtag invoking a sense of Southeast Asian solidarity, “SEAbling," has gained traction as users frame the backlash as a collective response.
The dispute traces back to a Jan. 31 concert by the Korean band "Day6" in Kuala Lumpur, where several Korean fans were filmed attempting to use prohibited cameras with telephoto lenses and arguing with local security staff. Videos of the incident spread rapidly online, prompting criticism from users across the region.
Online exchanges soon escalated into a cycle of insults. Some Korean users responded to criticism with posts mocking Southeast Asia’s economy, people and cultures, including a post which drew 83 million views that depicted Southeast Asian women as orangutans. Users in Southeast Asia retaliated with posts targeting Korea’s plastic surgery rates, suicide rate and food.
Tensions were further inflamed by a succession of controversies involving Korean politicians. A provincial governor’s suggestion that young women from Vietnam be brought to rural areas of Korea to marry local men drew sharp criticism from Vietnamese media and social media users.
“Insulting and offensive language such as ‘importing women’ should be taken seriously, local outlet VietnamPlus wrote.
Last month, President Lee Jae Myung wrote on social media: “Those who mess with Koreans will face ruin. Does this sound like an empty threat?” The message, written in both Korean and Khmer, referred to crackdowns on online scam operations in Cambodia.
Cambodia later asked why the message had been written in Khmer, and the post was quickly deleted. The Khmer Times reported that many Cambodians expressed anger.
Source: Korea Times News