Monthly Archive: September, 2005

Kang Cheol-Hwan Meets British Foreign Secretary

Thanks to Freedom House’s Jae Ku, who accompanied Kang, for the tip. The picture, from the Foreign Ministry’s site, shows Kang with British Secretary Jack Straw, who made this statement: ‘It was an honour to meet Mr Kang Cheol Hwan, who has experienced at first hand the despicable human rights abuses committed by the North Korean regime. North Korea is rightly considered to have one of the worst human rights records in the world, with arbitrary detention, political executions, torture,...

Rice: Lefkowitz to ‘Raise the Profile’ of NK Rights Issues

The U.S. government is also talking about this issue publicly, but for reasons that are probably beyond anyone’s control, it’s not having the desired effect here. Given the scale of what’s happening along the Gulf Coast, you can’t really blame either the State Department or the media for not paying more attention to this. Give Secretary Rice credit for making her first sincere effort to make a public issue of human rights. First, the : SECRETARY RICE: Good morning. I...

This May Require Some SOFA Revisions . . .

But where can the farmers send their claims? South Korea has sent a letter of protest to North Korea after water released without warning from a dam north of the border flooded farmland in the south, officials said Tuesday. Seoul’s Unification Ministry said the Imjin River that runs into the south from the north burst its banks last week causing more than 80-million won ($78 430) in flood damage to South Korean farmers and fishermen. We may soon learn the...

NK Sticks to Plan to Eject Food Aid Workers

From the same N.Y. Times story that covered the Leach-Lantos visit comes what is arguably a bigger story, the North’s continuing demand for the departure of international food aid workers, something I first noted here, and which World Food Program officials later denied. The two congressmen also met with aid groups that provide food and other support to the North Korean people. In the past week, North Korean officials informed the groups that they should finish their aid work by...

Sol’s Thoughts on Life

One person can’t create a cultural rebirth alone, but as North Koreans try to grasp the conscience of South Korea by the collar, it’s good to see them begin the participate in Korea’s cultural life and break the stereotype that North Koreans are all soulless, deadened automatons. Right after graduating from elementary school, he made the first attempt to escape from North Korea and sneaked into Chinese territory. But he was caught by Chinese police and sent back. Since then,...

Is South Korea Considering a Partial Withdrawal from Iraq?

So far, it floats like a trial balloon: A ruling Uri Party MP [Rep. Kim Sung-Gon] said he believes it is possible to bring about 1,000 troops home from Iraq as other countries are also considering downsizing their troop presence. “It is unavoidable to reduce the number of troops, considering the worsening public sentiment about the troop dispatch and the fact that other coalition nations, such as the United States and Britain, are also pushing for withdrawing or reducing troops,”...

The Return of Norbert Vollertsen?

Via a reliable source, to whom I will leave the option of identifying himself if he chooses, comes word that Norbert Vollertsen will be back in Korea for a few days this week to attend a meeting at which some new video recently smuggled out of North Korea will be shown. The significance of Norbert’s return depends on whether you considered his recent expulsion from Korea to be politically motivated, as he had claimed at the time, or the simple...

Talks to Restart on September 13; Leach: “I Do Not Rule Out Optimism”

This is an updated post. With the news that the talks are now on again, apparently for September 13, the odds dim that substantial progress will result. Begin with this money quote on South Korea’s position: “South Korean officials are pinning their hopes on a U.S. concession.” That hope appears misplaced. The New York Times published some blunt comments from Reps. Jim Leach and Tom Lantos, who represent the moderate views of both parties in the House International Relations Committee,...

An Ice Cream Economy?

The Chosun Ilbo has printed a summary of a Financial Times story that may change your model of the North Korean economy, but not much. The story suggests that changes in economic policy in 2002 have in fact launched a limited number of small private businesses, and that those businesses are substantially enriching the people who run them. The World Food Program’s North Korea director Richard Ragan told the paper the wealthy are concentrated in five cities, including Pyongyang. They...

Police Question Pro-North Korean Professor

How do you transform a raving moonbat into a respected dissident? Have the cops invoke the National Security Law on him, that’s how! It’s the prerogative of the university and the students who select their courses to decide whether the propogation of idiocy is the purpose of academia, but if they guy isn’t plotting violence, why not just let him blather on in the intellectual ignominy he has earned? Speaking of paying way too much attention to one silly person,...

South Korean Gets Three Years for Illegal Arms Exports

The Boston Globe reports: A South Korean man was sentenced to nearly three years in prison on Tuesday for his role in a scheme to buy military engines for Black Hawk helicopters and then divert them to China. Kwonhwan Park and his Malaysian company, SGS, claimed that the two engines were either for the Malaysian Army or the South Korean Army in an application to the State Department but the shipment actually was sent to China from Malaysia. U.S. District...

Feds Take Down Korean Brothel Ring

Who says Roh Moo-Hyun has no love for America? His war on prostitution has it positively cascading into the United States, in this case, the Los Angeles area: A federal grand jury handed down indictments today charging 24 persons for their role in a sophisticated human smuggling scheme that allegedly brought hundreds of South Korean women into the United States to work as prostitutes. Named in the two multi-count indictments issued today are 23 individuals originally charged in the investigation...