Family of late Vietnamese graduate demands gov’t apology over fatal immigration raid

Two months after a young Vietnamese woman fell to her death during a government immigration raid, her grieving father on Tuesday continued a relay of 108 bows in front of the presidential office in Seoul, demanding an official apology and the suspension of what advocates call "human-hunting" crackdowns on migrant workers. The father of the late Tu Anh, 25, knelt before the fountain square near Cheong Wa Dae for a second consecutive day, joined by human rights activists urging the government to take responsibility for her death. "I regret not stopping my daughter when she decided to study in Korea," said Vu Van Sung. "Her mother still trembles every evening around 6:30 — the time she died. It feels like her soul is still wandering, and we cannot find peace." According to the Daegu-Gyeongbuk Committee for Justice for Tu Anh and the Network to Eliminate Discrimination against Migrant Workers, Tu Anh fell from a third-floor factory building in Daegu’s Seongseo Industrial Complex on Oct. 28 at around 6:30 p.m. while trying to avoid an immigration enforcement team. She was pronounced dead