Monthly Archive: November, 2005

U.S. Soldiers Reprimanded for Fatal Accident; Yonhap-Rodong Sinmun Intregration Plan Proceeds Smoothly

On June 10, 2005, 51 year-old Kim Myung-Ja was pulling a yogurt cart across a street in Tongduchon, near Camp Casey. Kim pulled her cart into an intersection, in front of a U.S. Army deuce-and-half truck that was sitting at a stoplight. When the signal changed from red to green, 19 year-old Private First Class Jeffrey Bryant, who could not see Kim over the engine, pressed the accelerator, striking and killing Kim Myung-Ja. That day, Roh Moo-Hyun happened to be...

Kaesong Loses a Market, and a Political Booster

This looks like excellent news: James Lilley, a former U.S. ambassador to Korea, said yesterday that it will be hard for the United States to import products made in the Kaesong Industrial Complex for “geographical” reasons. According to Mr. Lilley, one of the major trade issues that South Korea and the United States will face in the near future is U.S. imports of Kaesong-made products. “The United States cannot regard those goods as “˜made in South Korea’ because they were...

Would You Take Fashion Advice from this Man?

Update: It’s even worse than I thought. If I saw this guy near the Metro station, I’d offer him my uneaten sandwich. ————– If you live in North Korea, you’d damn well better take it. SEOUL, South Korea – North Korea’s communist government is urging women in the country to wear traditional Korean clothes instead of pants, according to a North Korean monthly magazine. “Keeping alive our dress style is a very important political issue to adhere to specific national...

That’s Diplomacy! (a/k/a Bastardgate)

Suzanne Scholte forwarded this to me yesterday, regarding a North Korean diplomat who went postal in a hallway on Capitol Hill last week: An unexpected face-to-face encounter — in the hallowed halls of Congress, no less — turned downright ugly when North Korea’s deputy chief to the United Nations, Ambassador Han Song-ryol, purportedly threatened the life of a North Korean defector, Kim Seung-min, director of Free North Korea Radio. Our story begins last Thursday, when Republican Reps. Christopher H. Smith...

Great Famine Update

While most of the papers appear to be on the bandwagon as accepting that North Korea’s harvests are up by 10% this year, I strongly question that because of a dubious chain of transmission–one that originates with the North Korean government and has been “laundered” through the highly credulous Richard Ragan of the World Food Program. If you want to see dissenting views, here is one, and here is another from a person I know to be truthful and who...

Rising International Pressure Raises Profile of N.K. Human Rights in S. Korean Politics

The EU’s resolution condemning human rights conditions in North Korea has reached the floor of the General Assembly: The resolution calls for an end to North Korea’s egregious and systematic human rights violations including torture, illegal detention, public executions and forced labor. It lashes out at Pyongyang’s brutal treatment of defectors who are caught or repatriated. The General Assembly is expected to vote on the resolution between Nov. 17 and 23. Meanwhile, back in Korea, score one for the GNP....

More on the Uri Crackup

A “Young Turks” faction is challenging Roh for control over the Uri party: As main players during 1970s and 1980s activism against military regimes, this faction has purposely remained separate from President Roh Moo-hyun and his supporters. After Mr. Roh took office, they were ousted from the party mainstream, as the president’s close aides exerted more influence within the party. Now taking the crushing by-election defeat as a call to arms, they are raising voices against the president and his...

Minister of Historical Amnesia

Updated again Nov. 3; thanks to reader usinkorea for the hat tip; thanks to the Marmot for linking and to his readers for stopping by. Once again, anti-Unification Minister Chung Dong Young has opened his mouth, and once again, nothing good came out of it. The latest nominal justification for giving Chung a supply of ink so far out of proportion to his intellect is the 55th anniversary of the Korea Times. Chung’s first sentence, however, makes it apparent that...

Three Blind Men and an Elephant, Part I

I don’t mean “blind” in a perjorative way; I use the term to signify the studied opacity and manipulation that are so evident from visitor accounts to the country. This post, more than anything else, is about the difficulty of measuring economic and political trends in the North, and how the biases of the writer and those he speaks with can quickly lead from three small and different datasets to three wildly different conclusions. The course of North Korean society,...

Three Blind Men and an Elephant, Part II

Next is Time’s Donald Macintyre of Time Asia, who writes perhaps the best piece to emerge from North Korea’s propaganda disaster known as Arirang. I still don’t have time to give this piece the justice it deserves, but will give you the best grafs and urge you to read the rest on your own. His impressions of the cross-border trade couldn’t be more different when approached from the direction of Pyongyang: Our group, Western journalists granted a rare visit to...

Three Blind Men and an Elephant, Part III

Of the three correspondents, Andrei Lankov, writing in the Korea Times, has the greatest depth of experience. Lankov focuses on the aspect of North Korea’s reforms–unstoppable if you believe Brooke and abortive if you believe Macintyre–that interests me most, the psychological impact on the North Korean people. Lankov finds that materially, things have changed not at all or gone backwards, but that psychologically, North Koreans are much more open than in the past. He begins near his alma mater, Kim...