Fear and Loathing Updates

I posted a long, detailed update here at NKZone, which links to some great reporting from the Times of London. Today, at least, the Chosun seems to have better sources in Washington than in North Korea (where’s Kang Chol Hwan these days?), while the opposite is true of the Korea Herald. This Roger L. Simon blog post contains a summary of linked reports (admittedly from the Sankei Shinmun, not my favorite Japanese newspaper) that there is indeed a nascent resistance...

Fear and Loathing Updates

I posted a long, detailed update here at NKZone, which links to some great reporting from the Times of London. Today, at least, the Chosun seems to have better sources in Washington than in North Korea (where’s Kang Chol Hwan these days?), while the opposite is true of the Korea Herald. This Roger L. Simon blog post contains a summary of linked reports (admittedly from the Sankei Shinmun, not my favorite Japanese newspaper) that there is indeed a nascent resistance...

Fear and Loathing in Pyongyang

The Korea Herald reports that Pyongyang is growing increasingly desperate in its struggle to maintain control: [Yoo Ho-yeol, a professor of North Korean Studies at Korea University] also said Pyongyang has recently bolstered its border patrols to stop North Korean defectors from crossing into China, which could be a sign the regime has begun to perceive threats to its once iron-fisted rule. The action, he said, was a stark contrast to Pyongyang’s past negligence about controlling defectors because it knew...

Colder Weather Gathers Over Washington

Monday’s LiNK event in Washington, attended by congressmen and key congressional aides, was a glimpse of the shifting (or perhaps, newly revealed) thinking of influential Washington conservatives about North Korea and China. In addition to the powerful film Seoul Train, the event included a panel discussion that was blogworthy for its more open advocacy of regime change in North Korea, and for its hints that Congress is thinking, perhaps seriously, about wielding some economic pressure against China. Continued . ....

Fear and Loathing in Pyongyang

The Korea Herald reports that Pyongyang is growing increasingly desperate in its struggle to maintain control: [Yoo Ho-yeol, a professor of North Korean Studies at Korea University] also said Pyongyang has recently bolstered its border patrols to stop North Korean defectors from crossing into China, which could be a sign the regime has begun to perceive threats to its once iron-fisted rule. The action, he said, was a stark contrast to Pyongyang’s past negligence about controlling defectors because it knew...

Colder Weather Gathers Over Washington

Monday’s LiNK event in Washington, attended by congressmen and key congressional aides, was a glimpse of the shifting (or perhaps, newly revealed) thinking of influential Washington conservatives about North Korea and China. In addition to the powerful film Seoul Train, the event included a panel discussion that was blogworthy for its more open advocacy of regime change in North Korea, and for its hints that Congress is thinking, perhaps seriously, about wielding some economic pressure against China. Continued . ....

More Crushing of Dissent

The South Korean government issues an arrest warrant for a policeman who posted anti-Roh messages on the Web. Then they fire him. Would the Korean right do this if it were in power? Given the authoritarian instincts they showed during the Roh impeachment fiasco, I’d say “yes,” but for the most part, they aren’t in power, and after all, Uri is the party that claims to be different from the others because it’s open and free. Now, I can understand...

Stories from the Web War

In the spirit of South Korea’s spirited netizens, I decided to spend a few minutes tossing grenades over at OhMyNews tonight. One woman, embittered by the election result, wants to boycott products from red states. Helpfully, I suggested food. Another suggests that those who voted differently than he did were closed-minded, a unifying and winning message for the red states if I ever saw one. I commented on Kim Dae-Jung’s concern for the gap between rich and poor everywhere except...

More Crushing of Dissent

The South Korean government issues an arrest warrant for a policeman who posted anti-Roh messages on the Web. Then they fire him. Would the Korean right do this if it were in power? Given the authoritarian instincts they showed during the Roh impeachment fiasco, I’d say “yes,” but for the most part, they aren’t in power, and after all, Uri is the party that claims to be different from the others because it’s open and free. Now, I can understand...

Are the North Koreans Taking Down the Dear Leader’s Portraits?

ITAR-TASS has this interesting report from an ambassador from the inside of the North Korean embassy in Moscow: “A light rectangular spot and a nail in the wall were the only things that remained in the place where Kim Jong Il’s portrait had hung,” the agency cited the diplomat as saying. Other diplomats said nothing had changed, and ITAR-TASS isn’t what I’d call the most reliable source. Still, the significance of those pictures in North Korean officialdom can’t be understated....

Are the North Koreans Taking Down the Dear Leader’s Portraits?

ITAR-TASS has this interesting report from an ambassador from the inside of the North Korean embassy in Moscow: “A light rectangular spot and a nail in the wall were the only things that remained in the place where Kim Jong Il’s portrait had hung,” the agency cited the diplomat as saying. Other diplomats said nothing had changed, and ITAR-TASS isn’t what I’d call the most reliable source. Still, the significance of those pictures in North Korean officialdom can’t be understated....

Are the North Koreans Taking Down the Dear Leader’s Portraits?

ITAR-TASS has this interesting report from an ambassador from the inside of the North Korean embassy in Moscow: “A light rectangular spot and a nail in the wall were the only things that remained in the place where Kim Jong Il’s portrait had hung,” the agency cited the diplomat as saying. Other diplomats said nothing had changed, and ITAR-TASS isn’t what I’d call the most reliable source. Still, the significance of those pictures in North Korean officialdom can’t be understated....

South Korean Unions Teach Juche?

According to this article in the Chosun Ilbo, as originally outed by one Mr. Yoo, an official with the National Assembly. I’ll let him describe it: If you exclude the fact that Park’s writing doesn’t explicitly mention the ‘theory of the Leader,’ other than that, it’s almost precisely identical to North Korea’s Juche ideology and strategy of encouraging revolution in the South.” Specifically, he pointed out that pages 69-71 of the union’s educational material was an unadulterated version of the...

LiNK Events in Chicago, Washington D.C.

Midwest LiNK Symposium Saturday, November 13, 2004 Amerding Lecture Hall, Wheaton College, Chicago Session I – North Korea Awareness Session, U.S. Committee for Human Rights in North Korea 3:00 – Session I begins 3:20 – Jack Rendler – Chair of US Committee for Human Rights in North Korea – Presentation on North Korean society 4:30 – Helie Lee ““ author of In The Absence of Sun, Board Member of US Committee for Human Rights in North Korea 5:30 – one...

LiNK Events in Chicago, Washington D.C.

Midwest LiNK Symposium Saturday, November 13, 2004 Amerding Lecture Hall, Wheaton College, Chicago Session I – North Korea Awareness Session, U.S. Committee for Human Rights in North Korea 3:00 – Session I begins 3:20 – Jack Rendler – Chair of US Committee for Human Rights in North Korea – Presentation on North Korean society 4:30 – Helie Lee ““ author of In The Absence of Sun, Board Member of US Committee for Human Rights in North Korea 5:30 – one...

LiNK Protest Chinese Missions in NY, LA

Just got this press release from LiNK; more info on other activites to follow soon. On Friday, November 12th at 2:00 pm EST leading human rights groups for North Korea will rally in New York City and Los Angeles in front of the permanent Chinese mission to the UN and the Chinese Consulate in Los Angeles, at the second rally in two weeks organized by Liberation in North Korea (LiNK). They will be protesting China’s arrest and repatriation of 70...