Bill Gates has been accused of disrespecting Park
Geun-hye (both above), the South Korean president, after being pictured shaking hands with
her, with one hand in his pocket.
The picture of the meet-and-greet between the
Microsoft founder and Ms Park on Monday was front page news across the country.
Some newspapers cropped out the offending pocketed hand, but most chose to
highlight it.
"Cultural difference, or an act of
disrespect?" the JoongAng Ilbo wrote in the accompanying caption.
"Disrespectful handshake? Casual
handshake?" the Dong-A Ilbo asked.
South Korea
– a deeply hierarchical, Confucian society where etiquette has great
significance – is particularly sensitive to any possible slight to its national
pride.
While the presidential Blue House declined to
comment, social networking sites were clogged with opinion.
"Even considering the cultural difference,
there is an appropriate manner for certain occasions ... how can he put his
hand in his pocket when meeting a leader of the state?" tweeted @msryu67.
Some news portals posted montages of Mr Gates
shaking hands with other world leaders, which showed that he has some form when
it comes to informal greetings.
In a 2008 meeting with Ms Park's predecessor Lee
Myung-Bak, Gates also kept one hand pocketed, although a 2001 picture with
then-President Kim Dae-Jung showed him adopting a more respectful, two-handed
shake.
"Gates is a casual man who's not bound by
customs so he shakes hands in this manner even when meeting heads of
international organizations or top political figures," Dong-A Ilbo quoted
an unnamed friend of his in Seoul as saying.
Some Koreans suggested the media criticism was
misplaced.
"Please, people ... don't think your Confucian
mindset is a universal norm elsewhere in the world," tweeted @itanomaly.
Mr Gates was in South Korea as chairman of the nuclear
start-up TerraPower, promoting its project to develop a next-generation nuclear
reactor.
Ms Park, meanwhile, was seeking the Microsoft
founder's advice on her plans to build a "creative economy".
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