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North Korean World Cup team faces harsh political-thought criticism. July 28, 2010

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The North Korean soccer team that lost all three games at the World Cup finals in South Africa came under official chastisement back home, according to a U.S. radio station.

North Korean authorities held a meeting in Pyongyang to discuss who was to blame for the team’s latest defeat, Radio Free Asia reported, citing a “well-informed Chinese businessman.”

“Japanese nationals Jeong Dae-se and Ahn Yong-hak, however, were not put under the ‘ideological criticism,’” he was quoted as saying by RFA.

The radio station funded by the U.S. Congress reported that the North’s deputy chief of the organizational guidance department under the Workers’ Party and the country’s Minister of Sports held a discussion session on the soccer players.

“Some 400 people including the country’s national team players of other sports and the sports department students of national universities took part in the closed-door meeting,” the source was quoted as saying.

“The representatives of the national teams and varsity teams criticized the soccer players and coach Kim Jung-hoon who were put on stage. Sports commentator Rhee Dong-gyu pointed out the flaws of each player, followed by criticism from other participants.”

Each player of the national soccer team was made to pass judgment on their coach Kim at the end of the meeting, according to RFA.

“Blaming the national team for letting General Kim Jong-un down, the meeting was about having someone take responsibility. I don’t think coach Kim Jung-hoon could have escaped punishment,” RFA said citing another source in Sinuiju.

North Korea had propagandized its soccer team’s entry into the World Cup finals as a result of Kim Jong-un’s leadership as the regime paves the way for the heir to succeed his father and incumbent leader Kim Jong-il.

North Korea also recently replaced the chief of its soccer association.

The state-run Korean Central News Agency referred to Trade Minister Rhee Ryong-nam as “chief of the soccer association” as it reported the completed remodeling of a dorm for the national soccer team last week, confirming the removal of his predecessor Moon Jae-chul.

North Korea threatened UN for Cheonan debate June 17, 2010

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North Korea brandishes threat at UN. Does it make sense?
Yesterday it said if UN dabates Cheonan warship sinking, it will respond militarily.
North Korea’s main newspaper Rodongsinmun said, “a minor accidental incident could trigger an all out war and develop into a nuclear war.”
It’s very ridiculous!  Now the case of Cheonan incident has been under discussion at UN Security Council.

What if UN decide to make any sanction against North Korea for sinking South Korean Cheonan warship, then, how would it behave?  Would they would shoot nuclear missile to South Korea, USA, Japan and all the contries which agreed to reprimand? please be assured.  There is little possibility that it would happen. Because Kim Jong il is smart enough to know that they use nuke missile,  it will be their last-ditch.    

Anyway, I think North Korea is not a country, but a gangster group. Their outlawed provocative behaviors disordering interational society other than Cheonan incident must be punished strictly.

North Korea will pay a price corresponding to its provocative acts May 25, 2010

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Obama backs South Korea stance on ship’s sinking

(CNN) — U.S. President Barack Obama on Monday directed military commanders to work with South Korean troops “to ensure readiness and to deter future aggression” from North Korea.

The White House statement came several hours after South Korean President Lee Myung-bak announced that his country was suspending trade with North Korea, closing its waters to the North’s ships and adopting a newly-aggressive military posture toward its neighbor in the wake of the sinking of a South Korean warship in March.

South Korean military officials Thursday announced the results of an official investigation into the sinking of the ship, the Cheonan, which concluded that North Korea fired a torpedo that cut the vessel in half.

“We endorse President Lee’s demand that North Korea immediately apologize and punish those responsible for the attack, and, most importantly, stop its belligerent and threatening behavior,” the statement said.

North Korea has denied that it sunk the warship, which went down on March 26, killing 46 sailors.

“We have always tolerated North Korea’s brutality, time and again,” Lee said in a nationally televised speech Monday morning. “We did so because we have always had a genuine longing for peace on the Korean Peninsula. But now things are different.”

“North Korea will pay a price corresponding to its provocative acts,” he said, according to an English translation of the speech provided by Lee’s office. “I will continue to take stern measures to hold the North accountable.”

Lee said his country was adopting a posture of “proactive deterrence” toward the North, announcing that “combat capabilities will be reinforced drastically” and that he will focus on improving national security readiness and military discipline.

“If our territorial waters, airspace or territory are violated, we will immediately exercise our right of self-defense,” Lee said.

Addressing the alleged attack, Lee said, “Once again, North Korea violently shattered our peace. The sinking of the Cheonan constitutes a military provocation against the Republic of Korea by North Korea.”

Lee also admonished his own people, saying that until the attack “we had been forgetting the reality that the nation faces the most belligerent regime in the world.”

South Korea’s leader called on the North to apologize for the alleged attack and to punish those responsible.

Lee said the alleged attack violated the armistice and nonaggression agreements between the two countries, and he said he will refer the incident to the U.N. Security Council “so that the international community can join us in holding the North accountable.”

The White House said it supported bringing the issue before the council.

Tensions between the nations have escalated since the South released its report on the sinking.

On Monday, North Korea threatened it would fire at South Korean loudspeakers if they resume broadcasting along the heavily armed border between the new nations, South Korea’s Yonhap news agency reported.

North Korea threatened Friday to back out of a nonaggression pact with the South after Lee vowed “resolute countermeasures” against the North.

“Firstly, from now on (North Korea) will regard the present situation as the phase of a war …,” the North’s Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea said Friday, according to Yonhap.

Should South Korea take steps to retaliate, North Korea will “strongly react to them with such merciless punishment as the total freeze of the inter-Korean relations, the complete abrogation of the north-south agreement on nonaggression and a total halt to the inter-Korean cooperation undertakings,” the committee’s statement said, Yonhap reported.

Lee’s speech on Monday brimmed with references to the long history of acrimony between North and South Korea. He spoke from the War Memorial of Korea, the country’s main war history museum, and noted that this year marks the 60th anniversary of the outbreak of the Korean War.

“Permeating this War Memorial of Korea are the spirits of the soldiers of the Republic of Korea and United Nations who shed blood on this land,” he said. “Also dedicated here was the monument memorializing the 46 fallen warriors of the corvette Cheonan.”

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is scheduled to meet with Lee and his senior advisers on Wednesday as part of her weeklong Asia trip.

At a speech Friday in Tokyo, Japan, she sharply condemned the attack.

“I think it’s important to send a clear message to North Korea

that provocative actions have consequences,” she said. “We cannot allow the attack on South Korea to go unanswered by the international community.”

Sinking of navy ship Cheonan case could be brought to UN April 19, 2010

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Cheonan case could be brought to UN:
유명환 외교 “안보리 회부” 공식 언급
If North is found responsible, Yu says, speaking ‘hypothetically’
April 19, 2010
 
  Operations continue yesterday to lift the bow of the Cheonan at the sinking site near the disputed inter-Korean border in the Yellow Sea for the investigation into the cause of the accident. The stern, salvaged last week, arrived at the Navy base in Pyeongtaek, Gyeonggi, for further probe. [NEWSIS]

Despite North Korea’s denial of its involvement in the recent sinking of a South Korean Navy warship, Seoul’s foreign minister said yesterday that bringing the matter to the United Nations Security Council is an option if Pyongyang was found responsible.

It is the first time a senior Lee Myung-bak administration official commented on possible retaliation against the North since the March 26 sinking of the corvette Cheonan in the waters near the inter-Korean border.

An initial examination of the wreckage last week showed that an external explosion sunk the ship. Defense Minister Kim Tae-young’s characterization of the incident as a “grave situation of national security” has fueled speculation about a North Korean involvement.

“Although I am speaking about a hypothetical situation, the first thing that we can think about is taking the matter to the United Nations Security Council, if the North was proven to be behind the incident,” Foreign Minister Yu Myung-hwan said on the KBS’s “Inside the Issues,” yesterday morning.

Noting that the UN Security Council has authority to review matters related to a war, Yu said a discussion at the powerful UN organ in charge of the international security and peace is possible. The two Koreas are technically still at war because the Korean War ended with an armistice in 1953.

The Blue House said yesterday President Lee will issue a special message to the nation today regarding the Cheonan’s sinking.

On the KBS program Yu also said it is important to strengthen and improve the joint defense posture of the United States and South Korea against the North. “In addition to that, it is important to cooperate with other friendly nations such as the European Union, Japan, China and Russia to deal with this matter,” Yu said. “We have to cope with the situation through bilateral cooperation with countries that share our views.”

“It’s premature to identify the accurate cause [of the sinking],” Yu said. “The government is preparing for all possibilities, but it is inappropriate to make public all the options at this point.”

The foreign minister’s remarks came as North Korea broke its silence on the incident to deny its involvement. “The military warmongers are getting more undisguised in their moves to link the accident with the North although it was caused by their fault,” the North’s military said in an English-language statement released Saturday. “This is all a plot against the DPRK [North Korea] and they are trying to create an international consensus against it.”

In an unusually lengthy statement, the unidentified military commentator of the North also claimed that the Lee government was trying to blame Pyongyang in an attempt to boost sagging popularity ahead of the local elections in June.

Investigators in the South began examining the salvaged stern of the Cheonan yesterday following its arrival at the port of Pyeongtaek, Gyeonggi, Saturday evening. The Cheonan was split into two pieces and the rear section of the ship was salvaged last week. Operations continued over the weekend at the sinking site near Baeknyeong Island to salvage the bow.

A scientific analysis on the 170 pieces of debris collected near the sinking site is currently ongoing by military and civilian experts, a military source said yesterday. Most of the fragments were believed to be parts of the Cheonan, and no splinters from explosives were discovered yet, the source said. The military will continue to find “meaningful debris,” he added.

By Ser Myo-ja [myoja@joongang.co.kr]

Why South Korea Matters? March 29, 2010

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Posted by Michael Schuman  TIME correspondent In Seoul
I’m writing this post from Seoul, South Korea, a city that holds very special meaning for me. Seoul was my first full-time overseas assignment as a foreign correspondent (for The Wall Street Journal), and I spent almost five years here, intensely immersed in the history, economy and culture of this fascinating nation. I used to joke I lived in Korea long enough to distinguish between different styles of kimchi (and have favorite ones, no less). The city has changed quite a bit since I moved on more than nine years ago, but I will always have a connection to the place. I met my wife here, and every time I return, I feel almost like I’m coming home.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              

Unfortunately, too few foreign journalists and economists have had the good fortune of such an in-depth experience with South Korea. Korea often gets lost in all of the noise about Asia’s giants, China, India and Japan. Those who do invest the time to study the place usually zero in on its six-decade face-off with Communist North Korea. And that’s a shame, since Korea has always offered priceless lessons in economic development, and continues to do so today.

Lesson One: If Korea can do it, any country can. Sitting in a (surprisingly pricey) Starbucks in downtown Seoul, surrounded by modern office towers and Hyundai-clogged streets, it’s impossible to comprehend how pitiful this country was less then 50 years ago. In 1960, Korea was poorer, on a per capita basis, than Iraq, Liberia and Zimbabwe, and, with hardly any natural resources or industry, its future prospects seemed dire. Yet today Korea is a proud member of the G20 and a leading manufacturer of microchips, LCD panels and automobiles. Of all of Asia’s rapid-growth economies, Korea has experienced the greatest increase in per-capita GDP since the mid-1960s.
Most analysts tend to credit Korea’s success to the heavy role of the state in making this miracle happen. But I prefer to see the Korea story as one created by the power of globalization. Back in the 1960s, Korea’s technocrats were smart enough to realize they could increase incomes at home by using their advantage in low-cost labor to export cheap manufactured goods to the industrialized world, and especially the United States. As wealth increased, the country could then afford investments in new, heavy and high-tech industries. South Korea is probably the best single example of how international market forces, if wisely tapped, can turn the poorest of nations rich in a remarkably short period of time. It’s proof that no matter how destitute a nation might be (such as an unfortunate number of African countries), the right mix of policies can get growth going and incomes rising, and transform hopelessness into hope.

Lesson Two: Liberalize and internationalize. When I lived in Korea in the late 1990s, there was real fear that the economy was going to get overrun by China. Chinese firms were charging hard into the industries in which South Korea specialized, such as shipbuilding and electronics, and competing with even lower costs. But Korea has managed to maintain a clear edge over China by starting to make the “leap” from a developing economy based on manufacturing stuff into a more advanced one increasingly based on innovation. Korean companies are becoming adept at R&D, branding, design and marketing. This “leap” is extremely difficult. I can’t think of any other emerging market in recent years that has made it. (Japan did back in the 1960s and 1970s; Taiwan might be close on Korea’s heels today).
How is Korea “leaping”? In my opinion, the reason is the increasing liberalization of South Korea, across all aspects of society.

When I first moved to Seoul, in 1996, the city was a tightly wound, provincial place. The country was in the early stages of democratization (the last dictator conceded to free elections in 1987) and vestiges of the old system of state control remained. The financial sector was still manipulated by the bureaucracy. Big business conglomerates were well protected by compliant bankers, regulators and government officials. Foreigners were generally unwelcome. I had to venture onto the U.S. army base, located in the middle of Seoul, in search of an American breakfast. A midnight curfew remained in force, after which all of the clubs and bars had to shut. Seoul was an interesting place, but not necessarily a vibrant one. For a nation so dependent on the outside world for its growth, Korea was surprisingly removed from it.

Today, Korea is in many respects a much more liberal environment. The economy is more market-oriented after the Asian financial crisis of 1997-98 broke apart the cozy links between government, finance and business. That forced the big companies to be more independent, profitable and transparent, and laid the groundwork for the explosion of Korean firms like Samsung, Hyundai and LG in the global marketplace. More and more Koreans are educated overseas and are exposed to a wider range of influences. The economy is more welcoming to outsiders; many of the senior management posts at consumer electronics giant LG are now filled by non-Koreans, for example. The rise of “creative” industries, such as film, video games and pop culture, has filtered into the corporate world, where it shows up in niftier design and marketing. It’s hard to imagine the Korean economy making these advances under the closed system imposed by the strict dictatorships of old. I can’t prove that, but Korea does suggest that a more open society can become a more innovative one.
Korea has much work left to do. Its companies struggle to invent the “breakthrough” technologies they’ll need to compete in the future and the economy needs to become even more open to foreign investment and competition. Some of its biggest firms still must modernize their corporate management practices, as shown by Samsung Electronics today, which restored Lee Kun Hee, the current patriarch of Samsung’s founding family, as its chairman even though he resigned from that post amid a scandal two years ago. But Korea is much farther down the path towards becoming an advanced, U.S.-style economy than I thought possible a decade ago.

Lesson Three: Don’t forget the BRICs. Korea shows the growing importance of links between emerging markets in today’s global economy. Hyundai, Samsung and LG have been aggressive, and in most cases, early investors in India and China and are now top brands in local car and electronics markets. To a great degree, they’ve outmaneuvered the slower-moving Japanese in these key economies. That puts them in a position to switch from followers in the global economy, who latch onto market trends set by American or Japanese firms, to leaders, able to direct where these industries are headed.
In this way, Korea is again pointing the way forward for the world’s remaining poor countries. When Korea was on its drive to wealth, the U.S. was the primary source of customers. However, today’s developing nations, can increasingly rely on each other to both drive growth and offer opportunities for their up-and-coming corporations to gain international prominence.

South Korea comes of age with G20 leadership March 22, 2010

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As South Korea prepares this week to assume the presidency of the Group of 20 leading economies, officials in Seoul are eager to use the city’s rare foray into the international limelight to win acceptance as the capital of a developed economy.

“Korea will come into global focus as a host of the G20 summit and, by taking on that responsibility, will become a genuinely developed nation,” said Lee Myung-bak, South Korea’s president.

                       default_2edblondon-g20-summit-washington

The presidency is a point of national pride for a country that was razed by war in the 1950s and had annual income per capita of less than $100 in the early 1960s. Income is now about $20,000 (€14,000, £12,500) and South Korea is among the world’s largest exporters and manufacturers.

Seoul’s mayor has proposed building a floating island in the middle of the Han river that bisects the capital as a venue for the November summit, which will coincide with ceremonies marking the 60th anniversary of the outbreak of the Korean war.

For those who know the country for its mighty Samsung Electronics and the world’s biggest shipbuilders, it may comes as a surprise to hear South Korean officials insist that they still have a toehold in the developing world.

Yet the United Nations Development Programme is closing its office in South Korea this week as the Asia-Pacific region’s fifth biggest economy becomes recognised as an important international donor.

On the environmental front, diplomats reckon the successor to the Kyoto Protocol on carbon emissions will place South Korea among the developed economies required to cut CO2 output, unlike developing countries that will be free of such commitments. Determined to lead the G20 by example, Seoul recently announced a 2020 target of cutting emissions by 4 per cent from 2005 levels.

South Korea plans to tap its transitional status as it steers the G20. “Korea hopes to act as a bridge between advanced and developing countries,” said Kim Young-hak, vice-minister for trade, energy and resources at the ministry of knowledge economy.

Key figures

$100

South Korean annual per capita income in 1960s

$20,000

Annual per capita income in 2009

4%

Targeted cut in CO2 emissions by 2020

Mr Kim said Seoul’s G20 presidency would try to reconcile differences between rich and poor nations on when to implement exit strategies from economic stimuli, and would seek ways to avoid protectionism and explore more environmentally friendly economic practices.

Other officials have said South Korea will lead the G20’s efforts to lessen market volatility caused by speculation.

Some bankers and diplomats say South Korea is more interested in the kudos of G20 leadership than focusing on financial policy. “As far as they are concerned, they have already been successful,” said one senior foreign banker. “It’s like when Korea was awarded the Olympics – it’s a symbol.”

Diplomats say they have been impressed by the responsiveness of South Korean officials to adapt quickly to roles they have never held before, but say weak English skills are slowing preparations as the Koreans seek to handle communications in writing rather than orally.

Mr Kim said South Korea was fully aware of its G20 responsibilities. “We are willing to take the initiative in discussions,” he said.

The G20 presidency comes amid Mr Lee’s drive to create a national brand for a country that many people dismiss as a “little China” or “little Japan”. So far the campaign has focused on “soft power” – exporting Korean music, film and cuisine.

But Mr Lee realises that a greater global role demands more visible “hard power”, too. South Korea sent a warship to help combat Somali piracy this year, and Mr Lee is aiming to send 350 troops to guard Afghan development work.

Lee Seung-hoon’s Challenge and Success For Olympic Gold February 26, 2010

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Korean speed skater Lee Seung-hoon won a gold medal in the men’s 10,000 m speed skating at the Richmond Oval in Vancouver with a new Olympic record on Wednesday.

The 22-year-old skater clocked 12:58.55 in the longest distance event, breaking the previous Olympic record set by Jochem Uytdehaage of the Netherlands at the 2002 Salt Lake City games of 12:58.92. 

Lee Seung-hoon reacts after recording a new Olympic record in the mens 10,000 m speed skating at the Vancouver Winter Olympics on Wednesday. /Yonhap Lee Seung-hoon reacts after recording a new Olympic record in the men’s 10,000 m speed skating at the Vancouver Winter Olympics on Wednesday. /Yonhap

Lee, who had already won a silver medal in the men’s 5,000 m on day 2 of the Olympics, skated in the fifth out of eight groups on Thursday, and finished more than a lap ahead of his partner Arjen van de Kieft of the Netherlands who finished at 13:33.37.

Dutch favorite Sven Kramer, who had won gold in the men’s 5,000 m, appeared at first to have won the gold again this time with a new Olympic record of 12:54.50, but was disqualified for crossing a lane.

Kim Yuna, The daughter of South Korea, Surprised World Again February 24, 2010

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Kim Yu-na breaks world record, tops rival in short program
She won 78.50 score,  1st ranked
February 24, 2010
 
   

In the first day of the Winter Olympics women’s figure skating competition, Kim Yu-na broke her own world record in the short program with a score of 78.50.
Kim was the 23rd skater to perform at and executed her signature triple lutz and triple toe loop combination smoothly to earn 44.70 points in the elements score and 33.80 points in the factored components portion of the scoring.
Competing one spot ahead of Kim, Mao Asada of Japan ? Kim’s chief competition – landed both her triple axel jumps to earn her season high score of 73.78 points.
Korea’s other competitor Kwak Min-jung scored 53.16 points in the short program.

춘설에 덥힌 紅 梅 花 February 19, 2010

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눈내리고 내려 쌓여 소백산자락 덮어도
매화 한 송이 그 속에서 핀다
나뭇가지 얼고 또 얼어
외로움으로 반질반질 해져도
꽃봉오리 솟는다

어이하랴 덮어버릴수 없는
꽃같은 그대 그리움
그대 만날 수 있는날 아득히 멀고
폭설은 퍼붓는데
숨길 수 없는 숨길 수 없는
가슴속 홍매화 한송이

桐千年老恒藏曲(동천년로항장곡)
오동나무로 만든 악기는
천년을 묵어도 자기 곡조를 간직하고,

 

梅一生寒不賣香(매일생한불매향)
매화는 일생을 추워도 그 향을 팔지 않는다
月到千虧餘本質(월도천휴여본질)
달은 천 번을 이지러져도 본바탕은 변치 않으며,
柳經百別又新枝(유경백별우신지)
버드나무 가지는 백번 꺾여도 새 가지가 돋아난다

 

 
 

 

President Lee Myung-bak decorated Newsweek’s front page February 4, 2010

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Lee Myung-bak Wants South Korea to Be the Center

Newsweek

By B. J. Lee

For years now, South Korea has been known internationally for its blazing economy—but not much else. President Lee Myung-bak plans to use the economic crisis to change that. As China rises and the U.S. stagnates, Lee aims to exploit the gap between them, in the process transforming South Korea from a self-involved Asian tiger into a respected global power that can mediate between rich and poor nations. It’s a bold vision, and one that, if successful, will move his country “away from the periphery of Asia,” as Lee put it recently, “and into the center of the world.”

None of this would be possible if not for Lee’s shrewd handling of the economic downturn. Early on, his country was battered like everyone else, but many of South Korea’s current leaders are veterans of the 1998 Asian crisis, and knew how to manage a free fall. Lee’s team immediately guaranteed bank debt and secured foreign reserves, among other steps; as a result, South Korea will grow 4.4 percent this year, faster than any other wealthy country.

Lee is now leveraging that success on the diplomatic front. While many other leaders have succumbed to protectionist pressures, he wants to revive a slew of global free-trade deals. At the same time, he’s establishing South Korea as a leader in the fight against climate change, agreeing to cut emissions by 30 percent by 2020—one of the most aggressive targets in the world. South Korean firms made big gains in global market share in 2009 thanks to a weak currency, and Lee is also using this to his advantage, positioning his country as a democratic alternative to China. This is particularly attractive to other Asian countries that want a less harsh partner than Beijing. Vietnam, for instance, is now sending civil servants to Seoul to learn how to develop strategic industries like steel. And officials from Cambodia, Indonesia, and Uzbekistan regularly visit South Korea for training in economic and business management.

South Korea is doing more than just exchanging diplomats. Last year it officially became the first former recipient of international aid to graduate to the donor ranks, sending $1 billion to poor countries. It plans to triple that sum within five years. Likewise, it will more than double its deployment of peacekeeping troops to 10 global hot spots, including Pakistan.

Partly as recognition of these successes, Seoul was chosen to host the next G20 summit, in November, and Lee plans to use it as a coming-out party of sorts. As his opponents are quick to point out, a three-night conference will not change the fate of the nation. But it may be a lesson to smaller, poorer countries that South Korea is an example worth following

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