Archive for March 2006

Did the Chosun Ilbo Puff Up the “Yodok Story” Story?

A trusted reader in Seoul, Brendan Brown, is casting doubt on the Chosun Ilbo’s story reporting that “Yodok Story” is a sold-out runway success (see this entry, and this one).  The reader says of the Chosun report:

[I]t’s crap. I got my wife to call today and ask about the availability of seats for the performances before and a[f]ter April 17 and there are many seats available.

A friend of mine who went before I did also said that most of the theatre was empty when he went.

It’s a disappointment, and I certainly wish “Yodok Story” all the best, but I won’t echo a story about which I have serious doubts.  Readers in Seoul, what say you?  You can try to book tickets of your own here.  I’d be interested in hearing what they tell you.

A new report in the Christian Science Monitor also adds this telling detail:

The show finally opened March 15, after finding a new home at the Seoul Educational and Cultural Center, far from the center of town, but still spacious and modern enough to mount the production. The show’s original run will wrap up this weekend, though it may be extended or play in other cities.

Emphasis mine.  Sorry, but I really don’t believe that a runaway success would play for such a short period of time.  It does appear that “Yodok Story” was starved of oxygen in Korea, and that’s unfortunate.

———–

So what of the “government pressure” angle?  Just get a load of how far the government’s position has moved from its previous full-scale denial:

Government officials refuse to confirm or deny charges of pressure to ban the show. For the record, they say they have not seen it and are not interested in doing so.

Nor has Chung Seung-San been completely stoic in the face of that pressure, admitting that ”[w]e toned it down and revised it a lot.”  Hmmmm. 

Kudos to Don Kirk for asking both the government and those behind “Yodok Story” many detailed questions, including about that fishy “kidney” loan.  Chung actually produces a contract(!), which may not prove much of anything, but overall, Kirk does seem to have several people telling him a reasonably consistent story, even as the government backs down from its denial.

I suspect we haven’t heard the last about this one, but the more I hear, the less I believe anyone. 

A Special Message for the Embassy of the Republic of Korea

No, we are not a CIA front, but thanks a million for asking around at the local think tanks!  The best publicity is always free.

                                                With deepest affection,

                                                                       Joshua

First Act, Last Laugh

Update:  New information (see comments) suggests that the Chosun Ilbo may have considerably exaggerated the success of ”Yodok Story;” the government also looks to be backing away from denying that it put pressure on producers and investors.

Update 2 (8/06): I withhold final judgment, but the preponderence of reports I’ve heard go like this: plenty of empty seats at the first curtain call, but the seats tended to fill up to nearly full with the late arrival of ticketholders.

Original Post:  In one of the great ironies of this young year, “Yodok Story” has had a splendid opening because of the very people who tried keep it from seeing its first opening act. The Chosun Ilbo reports that many shows are sold out, and that the play’s Web site has crashed from the overflowing traffic (though OFK/TKL readers have known for weeks that the site has labored under what we will call technical “challenges”).

A month after the fact, the government finally got around to denying reports that it tried to intimidate “Yodok Story” producers into watering down the atrocity stories in the script, or that it had a hand in pressuring some investors to pull out of the production. Director Chung Seong-San also claims that someone threatened his life. Soon afterward, a flood of media attention attracted new investors, donors, and the interest of theataah-goers.

Whoever attempted to stop “Yodok Story” failed miserably. Not only did the play get most of its publicity from its enemies free of charge, so did the cause those enemies tried to conceal from the world’s attention. The latest of many Western news sources to describe “Yodok Story” is the BBC, which covered opening-night reaction by the audience whose reaction is the most telling: other defectors. In the process, the BBC tells its readers those defectors’ stories, and about the people who didn’t live to tell their own.

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Robert Koehler picks up some good commentary from a Korean blogger and a poet from the North, but otherwise, it pains me to say, missed the point widely. His focus on who was in the audience — as opposed to the subject matter on stage — brought him perilously close to giving us a thinking person’s answer to an Oscar night “worst dressed” list. There’s no arguing with Robert’s assertion that the paleocon politicans in attendance had mixed motives. I have enough fingers on one hand to count all of the sincere politicians in South Korea without even putting down my beer. (He makes a stronger point when it comes to Hwang Jang Yop, however; after all the people Hwang probably sent to die in Yodok before his defection, he still aspires to political leadership and claims that Juche is “misunderstood.” On the other hand, Hwang contributed money, so they can’t very well keep him out.)  As it happens, I’m not being a great fan of Park Geun-Hye or her entourage myself, and I’ve been a consistent critic of their bouts of authoritarianism against people whose views I despise. Yet I still applaud them for recognizing the moral rightness and political appeal of demanding the closure of concentration camps in their own country, and I don’t see how those two points are mutually exclusive. What kind of nation Korea wants to be — free or slave, united or divided, righteous or mercenary — is an issue that deserves a place at the very center of Korea’s national debate. Ditto Lee Myung-Bak, another politician of whom I’ve never been especially fond. Their mixed records on promoting freedom are certainly less shocking than the fact that certain former human rights activists were conspicuously absent from the gallery.

What’s more, I respectfully disagree with how Robert characterizes, even dismisses, the allegations of government censorship:

This was no doubt helped by the Chosun Ilbo, which lent what we’ll call an extremely sympathetic ear to “Yodok Story” director Jung Sung-san’s claims that his musical was the victim of pressure from the South Korean government, which he said feared his show would upset Pyongyang. 

Robert’s link goes to a post which refers to a Chosun Ilbo story that actually reported this back in February:

South Korean government agencies are demanding changes to the story, which they say dwells too heavily on the negative aspects of the camp, according to producers

Emphasis mine. Thus, we presumably have at least two producers and one director telling the reporter that there was government pressure, which is to say nothing of the investors who pulled out, or the “key member[] of the production team” who quit. In fact, Chung’s story is that –

“After reading our script, government officials demanded that we change part of the story, saying it’s too much,” Chung said. “I got a phone call, I don’t know if it was a government official, saying ‘It’s so easy to get you. You will be punished.’” 

Again, emphasis mine. (The part of Chung’s story I tend to have real trouble with is the part about his kidney. Fwiw, a well-connected acquaintance passes along the unconfirmed rumor that a Norwegian investor paid off the kidney loan, and you can take at the face value at which I offer it. And as I will explain in closing, it’s all completely beside the point.)

I’m certainly not in a position to vouch for Chung or the Chosun Ilbo’s reporter. I wasn’t there. I agree that it’s certainly good journalism to report that the government denied the story. That said, a denial from the (anti-) Unification Ministry doesn’t move the needle on my truth meter.

I have little regard for any denial by the (anti-) Unification Ministry when it comes to denials that it runs interference for North Korea. Only last week, the papers appear to have caught the Ministry telling a little white lie about an “expression of regret” to North Korea over South Korean press reports that described South Korean abductees as, well, “abductees.” Journalists reported that the Ministry tried to coerce or massage the journalists’ choice of words to avoid giving offense to Kim Jong Il. As a result, the journalists walked away en masse.

Robert goes even further, alleging that critics of the government have come dangerously close to slandering the government internationally.” OK, assume for argument’s sake that these allegations are all made up. Slander includes “defam[ing] and damag[ing] another’s reputation,” which I take to mean that the South Korean government is really some sort of maligned paragon of free expression. Consider that defense in light of a recent report by South Korea’s own National Human Rights Commission, in which nearly one in five defectors claimed that the South Korean government pressured them to keep quiet about what they saw in North Korea. And of course, the stories of this government trying to censor press coverage critical of North Korea are very old news by now.

Chung also reported some anonymous death threats, which past practice suggests probably came from the usual suspects — pro-Pyongyang thugs who always seem to have a good head start on the police, even after their dirty work is done. The Southern cadres of the Ministry of Public Security have had quite a presence in Seoul recently, including:

Chung has been telling about these threats since at least last November, and by February, someone was still being pressured/threatened by someone. Under those circumstances, the government had a duty to provide some meaningful protection.

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Where have we taken this discussion, then? Away from where it properly belongs: the merits of the indictment that “Yodok Story” presents. I suppose I should set a macro on my keyboard to repeat the obvious fact that you can’t definitively verify what the North Koreans would kill you for trying to tell the world. I’m not a great believer in presumptively denying undisputed, facially credible, and mightily important charges against those who are obviously keeping some very awful secrets.

It pains me to have taken this long to ask the questions that really matter: Do guards in the North Korean gulag arbitrarily execute prisoners? Rape female inmates? Kill “racially impure” babies? Starve and torture with abandon? Keep kids in the camps? Intentionally create the conditions in which thousands die every year? Gas a few of them, just to see how much longer the parents take to gasp out their last breaths than their kids? The evidence for those charges is compelling, though Pyongyang is always free to help Seoul deny them by letting us have a look at the evidence. And everyone, including me, is pissing about ad hominem minutiae? As opposed to the question of whether humanity has a conscience . . . or the will to follow it? In my book, that dwarfs who’s running for what and who’s earned the right to talk about this.

We should all be talking about this.

And thanks to “Yodok Story,” more of us are.

LiNK Learns Flash

The Jawa Report has a must-see flash movie from LiNK, whose sophistication at spreading a powerful message continues to grow. I spoke to Adrian Hong today, and I don’t believe he’d mind me saying that he sounds weary, like a man working himself to the point of sheer exhaustion.

If you have even a small amount of extra time or money on your hands, they could use it for a good purpose. Please hit their PayPal button or volunteer some time.

N. Korean Trade Official Defects

This guy no doubt can tell us where a few bodies are buried (not literally, one hopes):

A North Korean employee of a state-run company defected to the South with three family members recently, sources in the Foreign Ministry confirmed yesterday, correcting some media reports that the man was a diplomat. He worked at a trading company run by the government, the ministry sources said. They gave few other details of the matter, citing its sensitivity.

Unfortunately, it’s almost a sure bet the South Koreans will try to keep the Americans from debriefing him and getting anything embarassing on North Korea.  The story of what happened to defector Bok Ku Lee, also from a state trading company, is instructive:

Upon my arrival, I was debriefed by South Korea’s National Intelligence Service, and occasionally put in the hands of unsophisticated American questioners in Seoul. Remarkably, the South Korean officials made it clear to me that I would be in danger if I were to speak out about the WMD programs I had worked on or the atrocities I had witnessed. It soon became obvious that they feared my testimony because it might jeopardize South Korea’s “sunshine policy,” which seeks to keep the North’s repressive regime in power in order to avoid the economic consequences to the South were it to collapse.

Lee later evaded South Korean intelligence, made his way to the U.S. Senate, and told his story.  The South Koreans responded by harassing Mr. Lee’s wife, causing Lee to seek help from Senator Richard Lugar, who asked the South Koreans to kindly lay off.  After that, the story made its way to the Wall Street Journal’s editorial page.

N. Korean Pianist Defects

Kim [Chul-Woong], a former pianist who played in a state-run symphony orchestra in Pyongyang, risked his life to come to South Korea in 2002 for the sole purpose of playing jazz, which is ostracized in the North as “U.S. imperialistic reactionary music.”

“I liked jazz too much,” Kim, 33, said in a recent interview at a coffee shop in northern Seoul. “I needed the freedom of music.

[Link]

Brace Yourself for Labor Unrest (Unless You Own Slaves)

The strike season is starting.

While still living in Korea, I had the inspiration for a new business model, “Demo Land.”  Your entrance fee of just W30,000 would cover equipment rental (signs, drums, headbands, riot shields, tear gas, fire bombs), bail, and E.R. treatment.  Great fun for those who mainly do it for the entertainment of it all, which seems to be most, with an occasional legitimate grievance to be found in there somewhere.  I’d put it somewhere near Yangjae, for easy subway access.
Oddly enough, though, actual slave labor isn’t on this year’s agenda and, South Korea’s corporate establishment is even fielding candidates to support the policies behind it.  Labor and management may fight to the bitter end over temporary workers, the FTA, and demands for pay hikes, but the entire establishment speaks with one voice on outsourcing South Korea’s manufacturing jobs to a high-tech forced-labor camp: “Arbeit Macht Frei.”  As if that were some kind of justification.
Someone tell the United Nations!

WANTED

Two U.S. senior congressional researchers say Washington could bring criminal charges against North Korean leader Kim Jong-il over his country’s alleged counterfeiting of U.S. dollars. The two authors of a Congressional Research Service report say the U.S.’s increasing keenness to back up its allegations with legal evidence is fueling speculation that it is considering going after Kim.

Well, that would certainly mark a decisive policy shift — one that it would extraordinarily difficult for future presidents to reverse.  “Earthquake” might be more like it.  The effect on the U.S. relationship with both Koreas could be dramatic.  South Korea would be forced to choose.  North Korea would come under very stong pressure.  It would likely mean an abandonment of our fruitless efforts to talk Kim out of his bomb, shifting toward treating Kim himself as the problem.

Image from here.

On Assimilation and the Rule of Law

If you read carefully enough, you will see this L.A. Times article telling you what the sheer numbers alone should make clear:  the overwhelming majority of those who rallied in L.A. yesterday were not “immigrants’ rights advocates,” they were themselves illegal aliens.  When half a million people who have no legal right to even be in the country can essentially sieze control of one of your largest cities, you have a big problem. 

Thankfully, the demonstrators didn’t riot and burn like the Arab mobs in France did.  This, despite the fact that most are only marginal stakeholders in a civil society.  But had even ten percent of them chosen to do so — to riot and burn — there’s little the cops could have done to stop them.  Regardless of what you think immigration policy should be, that ought to alarm you.

This isn’t really a discussion of what our immigration policy ought to be.  Several proposals I’ve seen have merit, although any of them has more merit than none of them (meaning a system that’s essentially unenforced, which is what we’ve had up to now).  The discussion here is more about our last chance to avert a long-term economic and political danger we face.  Presume a best case scenario, in which our society maintains a peaceful coexistence with the illegals among us. You can’t even presume that such numbers can be assimilated into American society if trends continue.  We’d be headed toward a society divided between two socioeconomic classes, each speaking different languages, watching different movies, and voting — if they can vote at all – for different candidates. Â A template for that social experiment already exists, fortunately, far from our shores, in France. Â A new WaPo piece illustrates the state in which France finds itself:  economic polarization of irreconcilable cultural groups that turn to street violence to break deadlocks that democratic politics can’t resolve.  (In the French case, the extraordinary cowardice of its politicians makes matters worse.)  A society divided between patricians and plebians is inherently unstable.  It’s probably too late for France to face that fact.  We must.

Of course, for far too long, our society has already been polarized by race.  For the last several decades, statistical trends told us that the black middle class expanded at a significant rate until it hit a wall around 1990, after which its expansion slowed (but did not stop).  Why?  Some evidence suggests that illegal immigration may be part of the problem.  With so many illegal aliens willing to work for much lower wages in building and manufacturing trades, it is the African-American and native-born Latino working class — once the gateway to the next generation’s prosperity — that’s been hardest hit.

Mexico suffers, too.  Contrary to the common assumption that Mexicans who come to the United States to work illegally are mainly unemployed, we’ve learned that most were already employed.  In other words, for the immediate gain of remittances from illegals, Mexico steadily loses its relatively more skilled workers to the United States.  This brings us to the question of how we can best help Mexico to develop a mature economy of its own, for which the price may well be the loss of more manufacturing jobs here to maquiladoras.  It’s reasonable that Mexican workers ought to be able to earn a living wage, for which increasingly open markets can help provide.

Japanese Authorities Connect South Koreans to Abductions

The police are revealing new details of how Tadaaki Hara was kidnapped to North Korea, and as it turns out, blood is thicker than politics.  At the center of the plot was the North Korean-controlled Chosen Soren, but several of those involved were or are connected to South Korea:

A North Korean agent wanted for the 1980 abduction of Tadaaki Hara received financial and other assistance necessary to conduct the abduction from at least 16 pro-Pyongyang ethnic Koreans living in Japan, according to police sources.

Metropolitan Police Department investigators plan to question those suspected of acting as accomplices and providing shelter to Sin Gwang Su, who sneaked into Japan many times between 1973 and 1985, to uncover the true scale of a network of North Korean agents that helped in the abductions of Japanese.

Among the 16 is a 74-year-old former senior official of an organization under the umbrella of the pro-Pyongyang General Association of Korean Residents in Japan (Chongryon), who owned a Chinese restaurant in Osaka where Hara worked before he disappeared.

According to investigative sources and trial records from Sin’s court hearings in South Korea, Sin, 76, was given the name of a North Korean woman living in Osaka by a superior before he came to Japan and told to persuade her to assist him.

One of the suspects is living comfortably on Cheju-do.  Others who helped (unwittingly, perhaps?) were members of a pro-South Korean association.  So what happens if Japan asks to extradite them?

Thanks to a reader for the tip.