Online-addicted Korean man arrested over son's death


SEOUL, April 15, 2014 (AFP) - South Korean police said Tuesday they had arrested a man for allegedly allowing his infant son to starve to death while spending days playing online games at Internet cafes.

The 22-year-old man surnamed Chung was arrested Monday after the badly decomposed body of the two-year-old was found in a trash bag near the southeastern city of Daegu, city police said.

The case received extensive media coverage in South Korea, where the ruling conservative party is pushing a bill that would classify online gaming as potentially addictive as drugs, gambling and alcohol.

TV stations aired CCTV footage of Chung in his apartment elevator, nonchalantly checking his hair in the mirror with one hand while holding a trash bag allegedly containing his dead son in the other.

The details echoed a notorious 2010 case that shocked the country when a couple allowed their three-month-old baby to starve to death while they played video games.

In late February, Chung's wife started working in a factory far from the city, leaving her unemployed husband to care for their child.

But he spent most of his time in Internet cafes, visiting home every two or three days to feed the child.

Police said he found the baby dead on March 7 and left the body at home for more than a month, before finally dumping it in a garden a mile away.

Police said Chung initially reported the baby missing, but later confessed to disposing of the body.

A Daegu police detective working on the case told AFP that Chung would likely be charged with homicide and abandoning a body.

Online game addiction is seen as a serious problem in South Korea - one of the world's most wired nations with a thriving gaming industry.

A woman was arrested in 2012 after giving birth in the toilet of an Internet cafe where she had been playing for days, and abandoning the newborn.

The Star Festive Promo: Get 35% OFF Digital Access

Monthly Plan

RM 13.90/month

Best Value

Annual Plan

RM 12.33/month

RM 8.02/month

Billed as RM 96.20 for the 1st year, RM 148 thereafter.

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Regional

Jimmy Lai to be sentenced on Monday in Hong Kong national security trial
Chinese AI firms defend safety practices, push back on Western criticism
Chinese AI goes next level in geometry at a top US maths Olympiad
Chinese quadriplegic runs farm with just one finger
Hotels allege predatory pricing, forced exclusivity in�Trip.com antitrust probe
DeepSeek technique to improve AI’s ability to ‘read’ long texts questioned by new research
Uber’s quest to crack Japan leads through a rural hot-springs town
Inside China's buzzing AI scene year after DeepSeek shock
OpenAI expects another ‘seismic shock’ from China amid speculation of new DeepSeek release
An app’s blunt life check adds another layer to the loneliness crisis in China

Others Also Read