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Festival promoting South Korea’s ceramic culture faces fury over Chinese-made prizes

Organisers of the Yeoju Ceramic Festival apologised amid public backlash and calls for accountability

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A miniature moon jar bearing a “Made in China” sticker that was received as a prize from an event held during the Yeoju Ceramic Festival in South Korea. Photo: Threads
The Korea Times
Organisers of South Korea’s renowned Yeoju Ceramic Festival have apologised after Chinese-made ceramic products were distributed as giveaway prizes at an event intended to promote the country’s pottery heritage, sparking public backlash and online criticism.

The controversy emerged after a social media user said on Tuesday that a miniature moon jar received through a festival promotional event carried a “Made in China” sticker.

“I honestly doubted my eyes when I opened the package,” the winner said on social media, posting photographs of the prize. “This was an event held under the name of the Yeoju Ceramic Festival, but what I received was a cheap, low-quality product with a ‘Made in China’ sticker on it, which is worse than something you’d buy at Daiso. Is this right?”

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The annual festival, held in Yeoju, Gyeonggi province, is one of South Korea’s best-known ceramic events and aims to promote local artisans and the region’s pottery industry.

As part of a social media campaign held from May 1 to May 10, visitors who posted photos from the festival on their personal social media accounts were entered into a drawing. Twenty winners were selected to receive miniature moon jars, a traditional ceramic form widely associated with Korean pottery.

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As criticism mounted, the Yeoju Sejong Cultural Tourism Foundation, which organises the festival, issued a public apology.

“The distribution of low-cost Chinese-made products as prizes under the name of a festival intended to promote Yeoju’s ceramic culture and support local ceramic artists was highly inappropriate,” foundation chairman Lee Soon-yeol said in a statement on Wednesday.

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