On Assimilation and the Rule of Law

If you read carefully enough, you will see this L.A. Times article telling you what the sheer numbers alone should  make clear:  the overwhelming majority of those who rallied in L.A. yesterday were not “immigrants’ rights advocates,” they were themselves illegal aliens.  When half a million people who have no legal right to even be in the country can essentially sieze control of one of your largest cities, you have a big problem.  Thankfully, the demonstrators didn’t riot and burn...

Japanese Authorities Connect South Koreans to Abductions

The police are revealing new details of how Tadaaki Hara was kidnapped to North Korea, and as it turns out, blood is thicker than politics.  At the center of the plot was the North Korean-controlled Chosen Soren, but several of those involved were or are connected to South Korea: A North Korean agent wanted for the 1980 abduction of Tadaaki Hara received financial and other assistance necessary to conduct the abduction from at least 16 pro-Pyongyang ethnic Koreans living in...

Yongsan Fire Pics

Thanks to readers who responded to my request for more info on the Yongsan fire last week.  That fire destroyed three buildings on Yongsan or the adjacent Korean Service Corps compound.  Worse, it severely burned  three Korean workers.  One was  burned on 60% of his body and had to be put on a respirator.  Reader “Dan,” presumably a soldier, was living near the scene and ran out to take photographs.  He responded to my request for photos; you can see...

The Death of an Alliance, Part 35

Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld adds the second hint in about a week that more troops cuts are coming for South Korea.  U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said on March 23 that South Korea and the United States have agreed on the transfer of wartime command of South Korean forces to South Korea, and that the two nations are discussing a timetable. Rumsfeld confirmed this in a Pentagon news briefing yesterday and commented on the timing of the turnover, saying, “The...

The Forked Tongue of Lee Jeong-Seok

Newly installed  anti-Unification Minister Lee Jeong-Seok isn’t the fool his predecessor was.   Being as manifestly stupid as Chung  Dong-Young carries  an implicit excuse for  the feeble  defense of policies for which a more intelligent man, like Lee, would be called out for deceit.  This week,  Lee  deservedly gets called out for  his vicarious  “expression of regret” for South Korean  journalists’  use of the k-word, “kidnapping,” to describe North Korea’s kidnapping of South Korean citizens.  The reporters’ stubborn honesty resulted in...

Clouds Over the Minsk Spring

Who among us is as brave as these people? The crackdown began just after 3 a.m., when police officers wearing black riot helmets and masks arrived on six large trucks and surrounded the small encampment in October Square. The demonstrators, who had been protesting a rigged presidential election last Sunday, stood their ground while the officers dismounted and jogged into place in lines, cutting off any chance of escape. The US and EU have finally agreed on something; both will...

Brussels Update

The Chosun Ilbo reports: International pressure on North Korea to improve its dismal human rights record increased on Wednesday, when the European Parliament decided to link humanitarian aid to the issue while a conference highlighting abuses in the North opened in the EU capital Brussels. Thursday sees the first hearing on North Korean human rights before the European Parliament. At the conference, which was led by activist groups from the U.S. and across Europe, Hungarian member of the European Parliament...

Journalistic Integrity Thwarts the Thought Police

The Korean press earns heartfelt praise this week  for showing courage in its convictions, and refusing to let itself be censored  by the  North Korean thought police.  If only their government possessed the same clarity.  It all began with one of those tortuous, strictly monitored “reunions” the North permits between divided families — this one at Mt. Kumgang.  A number of those present on the North Korean side were in fact abducted South Korean citizens, perhaps hoping for a last...

Comrade Chung to Visit Kaesong

Must be an election coming . . . . He said he would also ask opposition party leaders to join the trip, and was pushing for a meeting with Kim Jong-il and other senior North Korean leaders.  The Grand National Party dismissed Mr. Chung’s invitation yesterday, calling a trip to North Korea an old-fashioned way for politicians to promote themselves before an election. As OFK alumni already know, Chung has a signed  pact with Satan, and I have the photo...

New Docu on S. Korea’s Abductees

I had no idea there were so many: [T]he director of “People of No Return”, a haunting documentary about 30,000 South Korean civilians abducted to North Korea during and after the war, has intentionally made his film dry to avoid political biases, and packs it instead with statistics, documents and footage from historical archives. The film, which took three years to complete, is to be screened at the New York International Film and Video Festival in May.

The Death of an Alliance, Part 33

Exasperation with the recently  awful state of things in South Korea has been a bipartisan  concern for a while now.  First we had the unanimous passage of the NK Human Rights Act, over the opposition of, and despite  lobbying by, both Koreas.  Then came the failure of what should have been a voice-vote resolution affirming the  50th Anniversary of the US-Korea alliance.  More recently, Hillary Clinton accused South Koreans of “historical amnesia.”  Now a former Clinton Administration official is comparing...

Korea’s ‘Arbeit Macht Frei’ Bubble

This week, several new reports, chiefly those from the New York Times and the LA Times, describe a journalists’ group tour of the Kaesong Industrial Park, possibly the only place on earth where the spirits of P.T. Barnum(*) and Lavrenti Beria cohabitate. A Paradise Within a (Worker’s) Paradise In North Korea, a nation that is essentially one vast open-air prison, Kaesong is the new prison laundry — a relatively cushier, marginally less despotic part of the institution into which you...

Supernotes Scandal to Hit Bank of China; NK Gov’t in Talks with U.S. on Counterfeiting

Via the Chosun Ilbo: The U.S. is preparing to seize more than US$2.67 million from three frozen bank accounts with Chiyu Banking, a subsidiary of Bank of China Hong Kong. The South China Morning Post reported the funds are believed to be the first known link between a Hong Kong bank and North Korea’s underground trade in “supernotes,” or high-quality fake US$100 bills. The accounts belong to an unemployed mainland Chinese woman named Kwok Hiu Ha. The Bank of China...

The NYT: Coming to a Supermarket Checkout Near You

If you’d like a case-in-point in media bias, look no further than this NYT piece on Christian human rights activists for North Korea by Norimitsu Onishi. There is plenty of good North Korea coverage at the Times, most of it written by James Brooke and David Sanger, but seldom by Onishi, who tends to write puff pieces about social trends and other more superficial matters. Part of Onishi’s problem is that he may be somewhat out of his league, but...