Categories: WORLD

American YouTuber Johnny Somali jailed in South Korea for kissing ‘comfort women’ statue

A Seoul court sentenced American YouTuber Johnny Somali to six months in prison for his offensive stunts.

American YouTuber Johnny Somali has been sentenced to six months in prison for public nuisance in 2024 when he filmed himself kissing a statue commemorating Korean wartime sex slaves. South Korean authorities charged a Somali man, whose real name is Ramsey Khalid Ismael, with violating public order and obstructing commercial activities in 2024 and banned him from leaving the country.In October 2024, the 25-year-old YouTuber posted several videos provoking Koreans. He sang the North Korean national anthem, spilled noodles in a convenience store, and had many heated arguments with strangers. He then uploaded a video of himself kissing and twerking next to a statue commemorating the Korean women who were forced into sexual slavery by Japan’s occupying forces before and during World War II, known in Japan as “comfort women.” As the incident sparked a backlash, Somalia apologized and said he was unaware of the statue’s significance. The trial, originally scheduled for March 2025, was postponed after prosecutors added additional charges alleging that Ismail shared artificial intelligence-generated sexual content of him with a female YouTuber through deepfake technology. “The defendant repeatedly committed crimes against unspecified members of the public in order to profit from YouTube and disseminated the content in defiance of Korean law,” the court said during the trial, noting that prosecutors were seeking a three-year prison sentence.After being charged, Ismail reposted a video on his YouTube account of what he claimed was the reason for the charges.In a video posted in January titled “They want me to go to a Korean jail…” Ismail recorded himself wearing a black robe and hood similar to that of a Ku Klux Klan member, sparking several heated debates.In X’s profile, Ismail calls himself “a political prisoner on trial for freedom of speech and expression in South Korea.”

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