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The Seoul city government has unveiled a set  of plans aimed at helping expatriates in Seoul  fight  discrimination  and  mistreatment  and  better cooperate with locals in dealing with  residential issues.  Under the plan, the city will hire transla- tors who specialize in law in order to support  foreigners who are engaged in lawsuits due  to discrimination based on race. Along with  these officials, the city plans to hire expatri- ates fluent in Korean to have them provide  more general translation services at hospitals  and district offices.  One can register for the translation service  at the Seoul Global Center in Jongno, central  Seoul.  In February, the Seoul Metropolitan Govern- ment set up a team in charge of promoting  human rights for foreign residents and now  plans to use the resources from that division  to come up with human rights support ser- vices exclusively for expatriates. Officials will  also establish four free shelters across the  city where foreigners who are jobless or have  family disputes can stay. The city has yet to an- nounce a specific time frame or locations for  these shelters.  The city will also allow foreign residents  from different countries to select representa- tives to form an expatriate council from 2015  forward. The representatives will regularly  discuss neighborhood issues and inform the  city government of the results of those meet- ings.  Seoul said in the statement that the content  of those discussions will be reflected in its pol- icies. The new initiative is intended to more  actively include foreign residents in commu- nity and town meetings. Despite the fact that  the number of foreigners living in Seoul has  surpassed 390,000 and has continued to in- crease, expatriates are usually excluded or  not informed of town meetings. In addition, a  large cultural institute that promotes the cul- tures of countries outside the Organization  for Economic Cooperation and Development  will open by 2018. Only a handful of relatively  wealthy countries can afford to open cultural  centers in foreign countries.  In Seoul, there are 13 cultural centers. The  municipal government did not announce the  specific list of countries that will be included  in the integrated cultural center, but stressed  that they will be non-OECD members.  “The focus here is diversity,” said Cho Hyun- ok, head of Seoul’s women and family policy  division. “We tried to reflect diverse ethnic  groups and aim to serve all foreign residents  through a wide range of programs and poli- cies.” Authorities have arrested the owners of a pil- low factory in Daegu over allegations that they  habitually abused a mentally disabled worker  and pocketed his wages, estimated to be about  40 million won ($39,080).  The Daegu Metropolitan Police Agency said  the owners, identified by their surnames Jang  and Yu, are suspected of enslaving a 50-year- old mentally handicapped man surnamed Lee  from January 2012 to October 2013, and sub- jecting him to extreme working conditions at  their factory near Seomun Market.  The victim is severely mentally challenged,  with the mental capacity of a 7-year-old and  an IQ of around 70, officials said. “They treat- ed him like a slave,” added a source from the  police. “He barely slept four hours a day.”  According to police, the suspects forced Lee  to sell the pillows on the road and abused him  when he couldn’t reach the target quota. When  he finished his work, he apparently slept on  the factory floor without heating, even during  the winter. Lee reportedly escaped from the  premises in November, after which he lived on  the street.  Police were alerted to the case in January  after they were told that a homeless man had  been seen sleeping on a road near the market.  They added that they had also indicted a  man surnamed Seo and his wife for their in- volvement in exploiting the victim.  A police report stated that Lee had met Jang  and his accomplices in May 2011 when he was  working at a factory in Buk District, Daegu.  Lee had allegedly left his home 12 years earli- er and had been living alone since.  After noticing that he was intellectually disa- bled, Jang, Seo and his wife convinced Lee that  they could help him find a Vietnamese wife.  They forced him to borrow 9.3 million won  from a lender for the purpose of wedding ex- penses and the arrangement fee. After stealing  the money, Seo and his wife handed Lee over  to Jang to work at the pillow factory. Despite the fact that Lee worked at the facto- ry for nearly two years, area residents claimed  they never noticed anything unusual. The au- thorities said they are expanding their probe.   sEoul’s plANs will AssisT  ExpATriATEs  policE ArrEsT Two suspEcTs  ovEr worKEr ExploiTATioN 25 The Seoul Metropolitan Gov- ernment announced yesterday  that it would offer 900 public  jobs to the homeless as part of  a comprehensive plan to help  them socially rehabilitate.  About 500 posts will be di- vided among those 65 and old- er, the disabled and those who  are ill. They will be tasked with  cleaning facilities that serve the  poor and the community, as  well as with meal preparation.  The city government will com- pensate those workers 26,000  won for four hours of work per  day. They will be allowed to  work 15 days per month. For those who are younger  and healthier, Seoul is expected  to create 400 new jobs, which  will involve cleaning up public  parks and facilities, managing  green belts and supporting the  welfare operations of the city.  They will receive 43,000 won  per day, for five days of work a  week. In a related move, the govern- ment will also open up a shared  workplace in June near Seoul  Station and Yeongdeungpo Sta- tion, where the homeless are  known to gather. There, home- less workers will be in charge  of simple manufacturing opera- tions, such as the production of  shopping bags. Sixty people who prove to  have a strong and sincere work  ethnic will later be given a  chance to run their own street  market in collaboration with  various companies.   sEoul  ANNouNcEs  plANs  for  homElEss