Category: Uncategorized

Not Again . . . .

BEIJING, Oct. 17 KYODO The Japanese Embassy in Beijing issued a warning Monday to Japanese nationals in China about possible ”strong reactions” from the Chinese public following Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi’s visit to the war-linked Yasukuni Shrine. The warning, issued through e-mail to registered Japanese nationals, follows violent anti-Japan demonstrations in Chinese cities in April, in which the embassy was pelted with stones and water bottles. __________ In response to Koizumi’s fifth visit to the shrine since he took...

A Demonstration in Pyongyang?

This millenium’s Brass Balls Award will go to these people, if there’s any truth to this story: A group of human rights activists will attempt to stage a protest in North Korea after gaining access to the Stalinist country ostensibly to make up audience numbers for the “Arirang” mass calisthenics performance. The maverick human rights advocate Norbert Vollertsen said during a conference on North Korea’s human rights violations at the National Assembly the same day that the protest was planned...

Our Man in Seoul

Ambassador Alexander Vershbow has arrived: Acting as America’s face, another task for the new ambassador will be to interact with the South Korean public, particularly the younger generation that did not experience the Korean War. This is important because Seoul has increasingly been making clear in recent years that it wants to be treated as an equal partner in the bilateral relationship. Mr. Vershbow is also expected to push Seoul more on North Korean human rights, but exactly how much...

HRC Supports Defector’s Fight for a Passport

The National Human Rights Commission of Korea has recommended quietly to the National Intelligence Service not to oppose the issuance of a passport to Kim Tok-hong, a North Korean defector, an official with the commission said yesterday. Mr. Kim headed a state-run trading company in the North before he defected to the South in 1997, since when he has been an outspoken critic of the North’s regime. In 2003, he was invited by the Hudson Institute to speak on North...

The Death of an Alliance, Part 27

You Heard It Here First: The United States House of Representatives’ International Relations Committee is expected to hold a hearing on South Korea-U.S. relations, a source in Washington said yesterday. The source said the hearing will address calls for the removal of the statue of General Douglas McArthur from Incheon, reasons behind increasing anti-American sentiment and the lack of public diplomacy by Washington. I have some fairly good guesses on who the source was . . . if it wasn’t...

Tired of Terrorism: A Step Forward for Liberal Values in Iraq

Again, Iraqis have reminded us that liberal values cannot survive unless we are willing to defend them. The news today–a high turnout almost nationwide and very little violence–is a heartening antidote to the self-loathing flagellation and emotionalism of the surrender-to-everyone lobby, despite the media’s amplifification of that message so far beyond the proportions of its relevance. Initial results suggest that enough Sunni Arabs voted “yes” to pass the Constitution. Gateway Pundit has pictures and links to a Reuters (!) video....

Our Man in Seoul

Ambassador Alexander Vershbow has arrived: Acting as America’s face, another task for the new ambassador will be to interact with the South Korean public, particularly the younger generation that did not experience the Korean War. This is important because Seoul has increasingly been making clear in recent years that it wants to be treated as an equal partner in the bilateral relationship. Mr. Vershbow is also expected to push Seoul more on North Korean human rights, but exactly how much...

Joining the Debate

[Updated] Now this is what I’m talking about when I say that the South Korean right needs to join the public debate about North Korea instead of hiding behind morally and intellectually lazy censorship. Here is the full text of the letter, followed by Rep. Hwang’s press release: Letter of Protest To Mr. Li Zhaoxing, the Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs of China [OFK Update: A wel-informed source tells me Mr. Li is actually the Foreign Minister. Oops.]: In August...

Rising Pressure on China?

The Congressional-Executive Committee on China has released its 2005 Annual Report: The Chinese government forcibly repatriates North Koreans seeking refuge in China from starvation and political persecution, contravening its obligations to handle refugees as required by the 1951 Convention Related to the Status of Refugees and its 1967 Protocol. The Chinese government classifies all North Koreans in China as “illegal economic migrants” and denies the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) access to this vulnerable population. Living conditions of...

Korea’s Fading Dreams

Reunification. This is a case of either bad polling or bad reporting, on what should have been an interesting survey on South Korean attitudes about reunification. Unfortunately, it doesn’t publish enough facts about previous surveys and when they were taken, or why people don’t want immediate reunification, for me to tell. That leaves it open for academics to interpret this way: While more than eight out of ten people here still see reunification as important, over half of Koreans say...