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This work was produced as part of official duties and already made public by a national agency or a local government of the Republic of Korea (South Korea), or the author's economic right of it is owned in its entirety by a national agency or a local government of the Republic of Korea under a contract.
Furthermore, with the exceptions of photographs reproducing otherwise copyrighted works of art, and photographs inserted into a work of study or art and produced only for the purpose of inclusion within said work, photographs or other works of a similar form to photography either published or produced in negative on or before 31 December 1976 ...
The Taegeuk represents peace and harmony. The five petals all have meaning and are related to South Korea's national flower, the Hibiscus syriacus, or Rose of Sharon (Korean: 무궁화; Hanja: 無窮花, mugunghwa). The emblem was announced on 10 December 1963.
Governmental emblem Government emblem of South Korea (Taegeuk) Government Seal of South Korea: National motto: 홍익인간 (弘益人間) "Benefit broadly in the human world / Devotion to the Welfare of Humanity" National tree: Korean red pine (Pinus densiflora) Korean red pine: National flower: Mugunghwa (Hibiscus syriacus) Hibiscus syriacus ...
Flag of the Socialist Women's Union of Korea: Red-white-red flag with the name of the organization: "Women's League" (녀성동맹). 1955–present Flag of the Korean Youth League in Japan Tricolor flag with the League's logo. ?–present Flag of the People Power Party: Red flag with the party emblem in the middle. ?–present Flag of the ...
Flag of the national government: Symbolic Hibiscus syriacus insignia, inlaid with the word 정부 ("Government"). March 2016 – present Flag of the national government Symbolic Taeguk insignia, with wordmark 대한민국정부 ("Government of the Republic of Korea"). 2005–present Flag of the South Korean national police agency
Furthermore, with the exceptions of photographs reproducing otherwise copyrighted works of art, and photographs inserted into a work of study or art and produced only for the purpose of inclusion within said work, photographs or other works of a similar form to photography either published or produced in negative on or before 31 December 1976 ...
South Korea also criminalizes not just desecration of the South Korean flag, but the flags of other countries as well: Article 109 imposes up to 2 years in prison or a fine up to 3 million South Korean won for damaging, removing, or staining a foreign flag or emblem with intent to insult a foreign country.