Category: Uncategorized

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More union corruption exposed: The Korean Federation of Trade Unions has suspended its president Lee Soo-ho in a bid to combat corruption in its ranks. The decision came in an executive committee meeting on Saturday after former vice president Kang Seung-kyu was arrested on charges of taking W81 million (US$81,000) in kickbacks from the Association of the Taxi Industry in Korea. I wonder what it cost the North Koreans to keep them quiet about low wages and unsafe working conditions...

Minster Chung’s Loyalties Are Beyond Question

Via Yonhap: SEOUL, Oct. 6 (Yonhap) — A member of South Korea’s main opposition Grand National Party (GNP) on Thursday denounced the government and its unification minister, claiming they are working to aid the country’s main enemy, North Korea. Rep. Kim Yong-kap stopped only short of accusing Unification Minister Chung Dong-young of treason, claiming the minister has been working to meet what he claimed to be unreasonable demands of the North since taking office in June 2004. “Ever since Chung...

Highly Unstable Deal Would Install Merkel as Chancellor

I’m actually reasonably pleased with this result: BERLIN – Conservative leader Angela Merkel said Monday she had reached a “good and fair” deal that will make her Germany’s first female chancellor in a power-sharing agreement that would end Gerhard Schroeder’s seven years in office. Under the agreement, which ends a three-week political deadlock, Merkel would have to give most of the seats in the new Cabinet to Schroeder’s Social Democrats as the price of governing, including top jobs such as...

Amb. Hill Threatens NK with “Concrete Measures”

Threats seem to work better after you’ve asked the other fellow to step outside. Hill, perhaps under some pressure after a tough day before the Congress, leaked some other encouraging statements: Washington’s chief negotiator in six-party talks on North Korea’s nuclear program, Christopher Hill, reportedly said the Stalinist country must discuss its human rights record, plans to develop biochemical weapons, support for terrorism and other illegitimate activities before the U.S. is ready to normalize ties. Which could mean nothing whatsoever....

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No Top-Down Revolution in China: What happens when you challenge a corrupt official in rural China? This happens. Mao was wrong about many things, but he may have been right when he spoke of the rural peasantry as a prime breeding ground for revolution. China’s next revolution will have to come from the bottom. Update 10/11: Gateway Pundit has the tragic ending to the story, and much more. The punishment of these one-party felons may yet arrive in a swarm...

NY Times on the Great Famine of 2006

The New York Times, via the superb James Brooke, has published a lengthy and detailed report on North Korea’s growing food crisis, combined with its bizarre decision to cut off outside food aid. The regime, perhaps stung by the growing criticism and the negative reaction to its requests for “development aid” instead, took Brooke and dozens of others on a guided tour: “All people in the D.P.R.K. are now out to give helping hands to the farmers in harvesting,” the...

The Kim Jong Chol Killer File

I try to avoid offering predictions about North Korea, but here is one I’m willing to stake my reputation on: the Kremlinology and palace intrigues over North Korea’s succession struggle will supply generations of plotlines for TV dramas. For the good of us all, and of the North Koreans in particular, pray that all will be filmed on location at Mandsundae. The good news–for those who seek the regime’s self-subversion, as well as for lovers of Ancient Romans and modern...

Chris Hill Testimony at the House Int’l Relations Committee

I snuck out during my lunch hour and caught the last half of Hill’s appearance (with Amb. DiTrani at his side), and spoke to my extremely well-placed source. I also picked up copies of the statements by Reps. Hyde and Lantos. Hyde’s, in particular, is a blockbuster. I don’t have time to write it all up now, but will do so later. Here are your headlines: 1. Hyde thinks the Beijing statement is a blueprint for Agreed Framework II, and...

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Maintenance problems at the USFK? I’m always suspicious when I see the anti-war media banging the “hollow army” drum, so I’ll withhold full judgment until I read the GAO report. Which, as this point, might be never. The answer may be to remove the stocks entirely. I see few circumstances under which we’d want to be involved in a ground war in Korea. Our ground war contingency plan for Korea should be limited to the rescue and evacuation of American...

Iron Glove, Velvet Fist

The Washington Post reports that Chris Hill, laying the groundwork for his testimony before the House International Relations Committee today, is stressing the importance of full disclosure by the North Koreans: With the fragile framework of a nuclear agreement in hand, President Bush’s envoys now plan to push North Korea to begin disclosing the extent and locations of its secret development programs right away to test the sincerity of Pyongyang’s commitment to give up its pursuit of atomic weapons. As...

Kim Jong Il to Designate a Successor?

The Washington Times reports: North Korea may call a congress before the end of the year to select a successor to leader Kim Jong Il, the Russian news agency ITAR-Tass reported Wednesday. Citing “a reliable diplomatic source in Pyongyang,” North Korea’s capital, the news agency reported that the selection of the nation’s next leader by a regular congress of the Korean Workers’ Party would ensure political and social stability in the country. “If the name of the present leader’s successor...

Two Cheers for the U.N.!

After years of silence about human rights, best embodied by disgraced U.N. Special Envoy Maurice Strong and disgraced U.N.H.C.R. chief Ruud Lubbers, the new face of the United Nations on North Korea is Special Rapporteur Vitit Muntarbhorn, and what an improvement he is over the other two: “The general sentiment is that the situation in 2005 remains critical. There is a drastic shortfall of food produced in the country and possible humanitarian aid from outside,” the report says. It calls...

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The Reality of Famine: This report is two years old, but I don’t recall having seen it before. The witness is a Japanese-Korean who escaped after the last great famine: “In winter during the peak of the famine in 1994, I remember seeing heaps of bodies being thrown off at a station. They had died on the journey. “There were dead bodies everywhere that winter, children, women and especially the old. “The bodies would be left over the winter. The...

Hub of Bigotry

I think Andy Jackson, a/k/a the Flying Yangban, has more work for the Human Rights Commission: When my wife and I went up to the loan officer and asked about it. He politely informed us that foreigners can’t get loans. He was so confident in that assertion he didn’t even have to consult anyone. Because my wife isn’t working (baby due in January) she couldn’t get a loan either. I’m dead serious about this. I hope he files a complaint,...

NK Moves to Control Grain Sales

Either you believed North Korea’s markets and food price hikes represented reform, or you believed they represented the state’s attempt to stay ahead of the disintegration of its own failing system. To the extent there was reform, the L.A. Times reports that the experiment appears to be over: SEOUL — Rolling back some of its economic reforms, North Korea is banning the sale of rice and other grains at private markets and strengthening its old communist-style public distribution system under...

Japane Court: Yasukuni Visits Illegal

As much as I sympathize with the court’s sentiment, this NY Times story suggests activism in the extreme: TOKYO, Sept. 30 – A Japanese court on Friday handed a rare victory to opponents of Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi’s visits to a war shrine, ruling that the visits violated Japan’s constitutional separation of religion and the state. Experts said the ruling by the Osaka High Court probably would not force the Japanese prime minister to stop visiting the Yasukuni Shrine, which...