South Korea’s communications watchdog said Wednesday it has banned local access to 139 online postings related to Daesh terrorist group over the past two months, following rising concerns after a South Korean teenager reportedly went to Syria to join the terrorist group, Yonhap news agency reported.
The Korea Communications Standards Commission said 44 of the postings were about Daesh recruitment, while others included explicit videos and photos of the terrorist group killing Japanese hostages.
The watchdog also banned access to 21 postings which glorified crimes conducted by the group, or that supported the South Korean teen who disappeared in January while he was in Turkey, possibly to cross into Syria and join the extremists’ organization.
Identified only by his surname Kim, the 18-year-old disappeared on Jan. 10 during a trip to the southern Turkish town of Kilis. Kim is said to have accessed links related to the Daesh and used SNS to keep in contact with a friend who may have connected him to the militant group.
The watchdog added that it will continue its special surveillance on illegal Daesh-related contents online indefinitely.
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