25th World Scout Jamboree

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25th World Scout Jamboree
Buan-gun
CountrySouth Korea
Coordinates35°42′56″N 126°35′39″E / 35.71556°N 126.59417°E / 35.71556; 126.59417
Date1-12 August 2023
Camp ChiefSimon Hang-bock Rhee
AffiliationWorld Organization of the Scout Movement
Previous
24th World Scout Jamboree
Next
26th World Scout Jamboree
Website
https://www.2023wsjkorea.org/
 Scouting portal

The 25th World Scout Jamboree was held from 1–12 August 2023 at

tidal flat on the coast of the Yellow Sea in South Korea. The campsite is flat, overlooks the sea on one side and features a view of the mountains. The site is about 8.8 square kilometres (3.4 sq mi), 6.2 km × 1.7 km (3.9 mi × 1.1 mi) (based on the longest points).[1]

Planning and execution failures, in conjunction with recent flooding and a heat wave, led to health issues among attendees. The South Korean government, in cooperation with World Organization of the Scout Movement, decided to evacuate the attendees on 8 August due to Typhoon Khanun.[4] After the evacuation, a program of visits to cultural and historic sites and pop music concerts was improvised for the displaced participants in various regions of the country.[5] The closing ceremony was relocated to a football stadium in Seoul.

Bid process

Both the ZHP (Polish Scouting and Guiding Association) and Korea Scout Association (KSA) launched bids to host the 25th World Scout Jamboree.[6][7]

The

Ljubljana, Slovenia, however this was postponed past the 23rd World Scout Jamboree, where both contingents still made bids.[8]

The ZHP's proposed theme, "Be the Spark",

Huffington Post promoting Gdańsk as an ideal host city.[8][10]

Korea Scout Association's proposed theme, "Draw Your Dream"

Goseong, Gangwon-do with 19,093 participants from 135 countries under the theme of "Many Lands, One World".[13][14][15]

Korean President Moon Jae-in and former United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon actively and publicly promoted KSA's candidacy.[16][17]

On 16 August 2017, during the 41st World Scout Conference in

Baku, Azerbaijan, WOSM announced that the 25th World Scout Jamboree would be held in South Korea.[18]

Programme

Opening ceremony

The Jamboree Opening Ceremony at Saemangeum.

The opening ceremony was held at Saemangeum on the evening of Wednesday 2 August. The main speaker was the

drone light show.[20]

During the opening ceremony, 108 Scouts suffered from heat-related illnesses and exhaustion due to the extreme heatwave and were taken to the hospital. Some parents of the Scouts pointed out the poor management and lack of sufficient infrastructures against the heatwave.[21][22]

Organization of attendees

World Scout Jamborees are attended by Youth Participants (Scouts who are 14-17 years old at the time of the jamboree) and adult volunteers, serving in the capacity as Adult Leaders (AL), Contingent Management Team (CMT) members, and International Service Team (IST) members. The smallest units are patrols. One patrol consists of nine Youth Participants (YP) and one Adult Leader (AL). Four patrols, or 36 YPs and 4 ALs, make up a Unit.

Pillars of the jamboree program

The jamboree program is composed of five pillars: Scouting for Life, Smart & Scientific, Safe & Secure, Sustainability, and ACT (Adventure, Culture, and Tradition).

  1. Scouting for Life: Refers to activities enabling participants to develop leadership and life skills through Scouting activities, challenging their perception about global issues and encouraging them to become active citizens. It incorporates Scouting's values, methods, and current emphasis concerning global citizenship education and sustainable development education.
  2. Smart & Scientific: Refers to activities featuring the latest technology, from robotics to virtual reality, including Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) programs.
  3. Safe & Secure: Refers to activities educating and raising awareness to prevent and respond to communicable diseases, natural disasters, and other emergencies. It also showcased Korea Scout Association's diverse safety education programs. These are aimed at improving the ability of participants responding to danger and contributing as responders in emergencies.
  4. Sustainability: Refers to activities that educate and raise awareness about the United Nation's Sustainable Development Goals, and methods that allow participants to act as peace messengers. It also promotes sustainable development in the scouts' respective communities. The jamboree featured Better World Tent and Global Development Village, where participants learned about their role and connection with nature, procedures to create a culture of peace and dialogue, promote diversity and inclusion, and more.
  5. ACT (Adventure, Culture, Tradition): Refers to various adventurous activities featuring the environment and diverse terrain around Saemangeum, including the mountains and rivers, cross-cultural exchanges to experience the best of Korean culture and tradition from K-pop music to Bibimbap food to the Hangul alphabet and others.

Criticism and failures

Soon after Scouts began arriving it became evident that sanitation, transportation, infrastructure, and other basic needs of the visiting Scouts were not going to be met.[23] Poor planning and execution led to serious issues that were later heightened by the higher than anticipated temperature.[24] The site of the Jamboree was previously tideland and the increased rainfall immediately before the opening ceremony only worsened the issues with the site.[24][25]

According to SBS News, the Ministry of Gender Equality and Family, which prepared for the festival, received an estimated budget of about 200 billion (about US$153 million), constructional costs included. There was no proper drainage facility on the event site, so the site experienced flooding before the opening ceremony.[23] The start of the Jamboree was delayed when unusually heavy rainfall resulted in flooding of part of the site, causing problems with water and power supplies.[26]

Food shortages and hygiene issues including insufficient food and unmanaged facilities were also raised.[27] Basic infrastructure, such as operational showering facilities, toilets, and trashcans, were not sufficiently provided by the organizers to sufficiently accommodate the 43,000 Scouts.[28]

The Jamboree was also significantly affected by a heat wave, with temperatures up to 35 °C (95 °F). On 4 August, 1,486 people visited the on-site hospital,[29] which secretary-general of the organizing committee Choi Chang-haeng attributed to high energy exertion during the opening ceremony's K-pop concert.[30]

President Yoon Suk Yeol instructed the government to provide air-conditioned buses and refrigerator trucks to protect participants suffering from the heat wave.[31]

Calls for government resignations continued into September, with

Kim Hyun-sook to step down.[32] The Minister was later replaced by Prime Minister Yoon with Kim Haeng.[33]

Contingent responses

On 4 August,

British Embassy in Seoul as their biggest partner in planning new events.[36]

The Boy Scouts of America contingent (with 1,100 participants)[30] also decided to withdraw from the jamboree, and had their Scouts evacuated to Camp Humphreys, a US military base, on 6 August.[37]

On 7 August, the Scouts of China, which represents Taiwan (with 1,613 participants), withdrew its contingent from the event citing to the inhospitable environment and safety concerns.[38][39] The Scout Association of Hong Kong (460 participants),[40] Scouts Aotearoa of New Zealand[41] and the Singapore Scout Association contingents also withdrew on 7 August.[34]

With Typhoon Khanun being forecast to affect the site, on 7 August the World Organization of the Scout Movement requested that the South Korean government end the Jamboree early and have all participants leave the site.[42] All attendees were relocated to hotels and accommodation in Seoul or whatever the contingent had decided on.[34] President Yoon asked local governments across the country to devise tourist programs for the displaced Jamboree participants. The city of Busan found accommodation for 10,000 Scouts and arranged visits to Haeundae Beach and Taejongdae nature park. In North Chungcheong Province, accommodation was found in universities, training centers and hotels. The Jogye Order of Korean Buddhism made facilities available at 170 of their temples.[43] The Ministry of Interior and Safety said it would later settle the local governments’ food and accommodations expenditures, which amounted nearly to 15 billion (about US$11 million).[44]

Review by WOSM

In September after the event, the World Organization of the Scout Movement announced to start a independent review of the shortcomings that let to delivery of the event.[45] The panel of reviewers contained members of the Scouts organization as well as external event planners previously involved in high profile events, like the FIFA World Cup. The report was made public through WOSM's online learning platform in April, 2024.[46] In the report, it was claimed that the South Korean government took the leading role of organizing the event, became the "de-facto organizer" while sidelining Korea Scout Association. The report indicated that the government misled the international and national scout organizations over the preparation of the event, and also accused the government of hindering the investigation post-event by not providing information. The government denied the claims, indicating that they were supporting KSA and that no one asked them for information.[47]

Closing ceremony

The 2023 Saemangeum World Scout Jamboree K-pop Super Live was a concert that also served as the closing ceremony of the 25th World Scout Jamboree held at the

KBS2's Music Bank was cancelled to facilitate the staging of the event.[52][53]

Setlist

References

  1. ^ a b "2023 SaeManGeum 25th World Scout Jamboree Official Site". 2023 SaeManGeum 25th WorldScout Jamboree Official Site. Korea Scout Association. Retrieved 1 March 2022.
  2. ^ Ji-hye, Jun (1 August 2023). "43,000 young Scouts gather at Saemangeum for World Jamboree". The Korea Times.
  3. ^ Ji-hye, Jun (3 August 2023). "World Scout Jamboree in Korea becomes nightmare due to mounting heat illnesses, hygiene issues". The Korea Times.
  4. ^ "WOSM Statements from the 25th World Scout Jamboree". scout.org. 7 August 2023. Retrieved 7 August 2023.
  5. ^ "Wrecked World Scout Jamboree turns into tours, festivities". Korea JoongAng Daily. 10 August 2023. Retrieved 12 August 2023.
  6. ^ "Polska 2023: Be the spark! | 25th World Scout Jamboree Candidate". Archived from the original on 2 October 2015. Retrieved 24 August 2015.
  7. ^ "Official Declaration of 2023 / 25th World Scout Jamboree bidding of KSA". Korea Scout Association. 9 March 2011. Retrieved 13 September 2018.
  8. ^ a b Adamowicz, Paweł (6 December 2017). "The City of Gdansk is World Scout Jamboree candidate for 2023". HuffPost. Retrieved 13 September 2018.
  9. ^ "POLSKA 2023 World Scout Jamboree Bid | Be the spark!". polska2023.pl. Retrieved 26 March 2017.
  10. ^ Adamowicz, Paweł (9 November 2016). "Gdansk ready to host World Scout Jamboree 2023". HuffPost. Retrieved 26 March 2017.
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  14. Boys' Life
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  53. ^ "잼버리가 드러낸 한국식 행정 시스템의 무능" [The Incompetence of the Korean-style Administrative System Revealed by the Jamboree]. 시사IN, 시사인 Sisa in. 21 August 2023.

External links