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North Korea

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Police Donate Goods to Teenage Defectors

Kang Mi Jin | 2015-02-10 17:35

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With the Lunar New Year holiday fast approaching, the Suseo Police Station in the Gangnam District of Seoul donated goods to a shelter for teenage North Korean defectors on Sunday, wishing them a warm and happy holiday. The goods were collected based on a wish list drawn up by the teenagers residing there.

Police officers from the Suseo Police Station and support groups handed out their gifts to each individual, wishing them the best in their resettlement and offering them words of encouragement.

“They told us to tell them if we need anything, not only during the holiday season but in daily life. This gave me a sense of warmth, like I would get from my parents back home,” one of the middle school students there said. “They always remember to bring us sebaetdon [small amounts of money handed out to younger people on New Year’s Day] and give us things that we need, so I wait for them when the holidays come around,” he added. Another teenager said the school bags they received ahead of the new school year reminded them of the deep love a child shares with his or her parents.

“We will do our best to help defectors settle down within the local community as soon as they can,” Park Jeong Ae, one of the officers from the Suseo Station said. “When the New Year holiday comes around, I hope not to see worried looks from these children because they long for their hometown.”


 


Cautious Optimism for Foreign Entrepreneurs in North Korea


Jonathan Corrado | 2015-02-09 14:05

Cautious optimism defined the mood at “Doing Business in North Korea,” a conference hosted by Kyungnam University’s Institute for Far Eastern Studies [IFES]. News cameras craned about as audience members filed in, packing the auditorium to capacity. It was the first gathering of its sort: a panel of entrepreneurs who risked financial ruin and more by engaging in “adventure capitalism” in North Korea.

Unification Minister Ryoo Kilh Jae kicked the event off with a congratulatory address in which he urged the ROK to mark the 70th anniversary of the division of the two Koreas by entering the age of unification. Minister Ryoo said this can only be accomplished by simultaneously evaluating the realities of North Korea and actively seeking out dialogue--goals which can often be at odds with one another. The Minister acknowledged that business ties are one way to strengthen the bilateral relationship, which have unsurprisingly soured since the 2010 Yeonpyeong bombardment.

This first thing to know is that doing business in North Korea is not easy. Venture capitalists normally expect to see a healthy return on 30% of their projects. One expert speaking at the event said that foreign investors into North Korea can expect to see a 10% rate. The next thing to know is that things are, very gradually, getting better, though not without significant growing pains. According to the Korea Trade-Investment Promotion Agency [KOTRA], North Korea is responding to a drop in foreign demand for its chief export, coal, by diversifying and innovating. Most importantly, they are looking for partners.

One industry on the up is textiles, which jumped from 17% of NK’s total exports to 27% percent over the past year. Mark Kim, a Korean American at the helm of Sunyang Shoe Company, struggled for seven years before setting up a 76 employee sneaker factory in Rasun, North Korea. Mr. Kim was initially denied permission because his company’s scale was too small. He took some time to build up a headquarters in China before receiving the requisite licenses. Only then could he take advantage of North Korea’s high quality workmanship and rock bottom labor costs. Illuminating one major concern of NK-based manufacturers, Mr. Kim said the sneakers he makes must be exported since most North Koreans don’t earn enough to purchase them.

Despite earnest effort, another speaker had difficulty paying his factory workers a fair amount. He intended to pay each employee 40 € a week, but the North Korean officials, in charge of converting and issuing payment to the workers on behalf of the company, used unrealistic conversion rates in order to skim off the top, leaving the employees with next to nothing. The speaker balanced the deficit out by supplementing the payment with rice and other goods.

Despite the lingering perception that North Korea is the world’s last stalwart of Leninist communism – characterized by rigidity and centralization – the truth is that the marketplace is becoming increasingly flexible and decentralized, according to many of the panel’s speakers. The July 2002 reforms and last year’s May 30th Measures introduced substantial economic reforms: graduated exposure to foreign investors and markets, increase in exporting manufactured goods, introduction of special economic zones, and decentralization of planning and regulatory agencies. Indeed, much business is now done on the local level by private companies who are contracted out by competitive, profit-seeking state officials. Instead of obeying top-down directives, a growing number of factories and enterprises will manage their own clientele, find their own raw materials, sell at market rates, and pay their own workers directly. This opens the doors to foreign involvement in ways that were previously unthinkable.

One speaker brought up the case of alleged fiscal reformer Cabinet Prime Minister Park Pong Ju, who has tended to clash with those looking to retain the status quo. In fact, Prime Minister Park was announced dead in 2009 during a particularly hardline conservative swing. He has since “risen from the dead” and reassumed the helm. The result of all this infighting is that the July 2002 reforms and last year’s May 30th Measures have been diluted by a 2005 free market crackdown and aggressive currency reform in 2009, according to a number of those presenting at the conference. Andray Abrahamian runs a nonprofit business training program in the North Korea, and believes the ebb and flow of reform and withdrawal will only die down when the policies of liberal reformers, like Park Pong Ju, bring sufficient financial return to the current system’s stakeholders-- the ones who announced him dead in 2009.

Acquiring the requisite licensing from the DPRK and remaining compliant with UN and country-specific sanctions is an arduous and time consuming process, the lecture revealed. Any money sent in and out of the DPRK is monitored by the US Treasury Department. The UN has had sanctions in place since 2009, with each country having additional, sundry regulations. Dual use goods, those that could potentially be used for military application, are monitored closely. Given that electricity is more luxury than commodity in the North, anyone hoping to set up shop will need to bring their own generator. This dual use item requires extra verification. Good Manufacturing Practice [GMP] clearance took two years for an entrepreneur in the pharmaceutical industry to acquire. Three years later, he finally got out of the red.

Since 2013, a number of Special Economic Zones [SEZs] have been unveiled. SEZs dedicated to tourism, agriculture, export, industry, etc. offer special economic incentives and tax advantages to local businesses. But the agency tasked with overseeing the SEZs [the Joint Venture and Investment Commission JVIC] has since been surpassed and swallowed up by the State Economic Development Commission [SEDC], which in turn was brought into the Ministry of Foreign Trade, which was renamed the Ministry of External Economic Affairs. In such a climate, members of the event’s panel explained that it can be confusing and frustrating for business owners to remain compliant and engaged with the right regulatory commission.

Simon Cockerell has been conducting tours for Westerners through Koryo Tours since 2002. Working closely with their NK partners at the Korea International Travel Company [KITC], Koryo has emerged as the market leader. While the tens of thousands of Chinese tourists who come annually enjoy scenic spots like mountains and rivers, Westerners are more interested in things like the Arirang mass games and the Kumsusan Memorial Palace. Cockerell says that many of the new SEZs created for tourism are not suitable in any practical sense. They show a misunderstanding of tourist preference, are difficult to get to, and lack infrastructure.

Since October 21st, the North Korean Non-permanent National Emergency Epidemic Prevention Committee has required anyone re-entering the North to sit in quarantine for 21 days. This policy, designed to protect the country from an Ebola outbreak, is wreaking havoc on foreign businesses and NGOs. Simon Cockerell recalled a similar episode when Koryo Tours had to stop operations for a matter of months in 2003 during the SARS outbreak. The panel’s speakers explained that these kinds of policy decisions distance North Korea from the exact types of individuals and businesses that they will need to develop relationships with if they hope to grow the economy.

During the question and answer portion of Simon Cockerell’s presentation, someone asked whether doing business in North Korea is equivalent to directly funding Kim Jong Eun’s regime. Cockerell responded that though Western tourism is a relatively small industry [about 5,000 visitors/year], his customers supply hundreds of jobs to hotel and restaurant employees. A nominal amount does end up in Party coffers, but he contends that it is certainly not enough to prop the regime up single-handedly. This reflected the attitude of most of the event’s speakers, many of whom took pains to treat their North Korean employees as well as possible.

T. James Min II is Global Head of International Trade Law for logistics company DHL, which has had successful operations in the Pyongyang since 1997. Mr. Min stated that continued economic cooperation and further growth is inextricably linked to the political question.

The event’s speakers asserted isolationism to be the sticking point moving onward, stating that without uninhibited communication between locals and foreigners, the market will never flourish. While it might seem straightforward that the Chosun Workers’ Party would like to see unbounded growth, the truth is not so simple. The speakers pointed out that the regime is justifiably wary to see the market become an unregulated zone of communication and potential political activity. They view an increased exposure to foreign ideals as a threat to the Juche ideology. They view the upward mobility that comes with free markets as a threat to the songbun [family political background and loyalty] system. It remains unclear how the Ministry of External Economic Affairs will deal with these perceived powder kegs in the years ahead. Those with experience in these matters that spoke at the event maintain this to be why liberalization efforts have been so jerky and arduous and why regulatory agencies are continually restructured - the regime is struggling to stay ahead of the country’s economic progress. One speaker went so far as to say, “Let capitalism do its job in taming North Korea.” Only time will tell if these early investors were wise to jump the gun and get in early, or mistaken to be so optimistic in the face of such diminutive odds.


 

North Korea has unveiled a list of 310 ridiculous new political slogans

AFP
Feb. 12, 2015, 7:19 AM

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A North Korean policeman stands near a wall of propoganda posters in Pyongyang© AFP/File Mark Ralston

Seoul (AFP) - North Korea unveiled Thursday an exclamation mark peppered list of 310 new political slogans covering every conceivable topic, from the glories of the ruling Kim dynasty and mushroom cultivation to the importance of dependable wives and "offensive" sports.

Oh, and the perennial need to wipe out US imperialist scum.

Political slogans are an intrinsic part of the relentless, daily propaganda formula that North Koreans are weaned on almost from birth.

Those published by the official KCNA news agency on Thursday were drafted by the ruling Worker's Party of Korea (WKP) to mark the 70th anniversaries of its founding and of the liberation of the Korean peninsula from Japanese rule.

Their tone was by turns aggressive, encouraging, comforting and threatening, and the style ranged equally widely from the oddly poetic to the laboriously clunky.

"Make fruits cascade down and their sweet aroma fill the air on the sea of apple trees at the foot of Chol Pass!" was one agriculture-themed offering, followed by:

"Let us turn ours into a country of mushrooms!" and "Grow vegetables extensively in greenhouses!"

Prominence was given to a long section of slogans hailing the legacy of late leaders Kim Il-Sung and Kim Jong-Il, and urging loyalty to the third generation Kim ruler, Kim Jong-Un.

Others covered military strength, the economy, farming, science and technology, education, the arts and sports.

Some like "Play sports games in an offensive way!" underlined the potential pitfalls of translating pithy ideology.

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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un waves to workers during a visit to the Pyongyang Children's Foodstuff Factory in this undated photo released by North Korea's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) in Pyongyang December 16, 2014.

Proof of loyalty

While much North Korean propaganda seems trapped in an echo chamber of rhetorical overkill and hyperbole, it's tone is perfectly familiar and normal to North Koreans themselves.

The slogans shore up the internally propagandised image of the North as a racially pure nation that must make every effort to protect itself from scheming enemies -- led by the United States -- who are bent on invasion and enslavement.

"We were permanently buried by an avalanche of slogans," said defector Lee Min-Bok who fled North Korea 14 years ago and now lives in the South.

"We had to memorise a lot of them to show our loyalty, but they slowly lost any meaning for anyone, especially after the famine in the 90s," said Lee, 57.

"That greenhouse one has been around for decades. The problem is nobody had any plastic sheets of glass to build them, or fuel to heat them," he added.

Some defector-run websites have run reports of how slogans have become the butt of private jokes among ordinary North Koreans who often amend them to reflect reality.

The 1998 slogan "Though the road ahead may be perilous, let's travel it laughing!" was changed to "Let them laugh as they go, why are they making us come too?"

But the slogans do offer some insights into the thinking and priorities of the North Korean regime, and a few ground realities are recognised.

One of those published Thursday, stressed the urgent need to increase food production, in order to "resolve the food problem of the people and improve their dietary life."

There was a special section devoted to the evil misdeeds of the US "warmongers" and another underlining the absolute necessity of maintaining a powerful military.

"Should the enemy dare to invade our country, annihilate them to the last man!" read one slogan in the military section, that also exhorted the wives of officers to "become dependable assistants to their husbands!"


 

Ebola quarantine in North to be lifted soon: RFA source

Pyongyang's sensitivity may be due to belief in American use of biological weapons: source

February 13th, 2015
Subin Kim

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North Korea’s ebola quarantine measures will soon be lifted, Radio Free Asia reported Thursday, citing a North Korean source.

“I heard that the quarantine measures to block the ebola virus will soon be lifted, directly from a related official,” RFA quoted the source as saying.

In advance of lifting the quarantine measures, the ruling Workers’ Party of Korea dispatched inspectors over the border areas to check its emergency measures system, the report said.

North Korea has taken strict measures over ebola since October, banning tourism to North Korea at first and following with a strict 21-day quarantine.

Some argued that the measures would be short-lived, as they have hindered North Korea’s attempts to attract foreign investment but, until recently, Pyongyang has been sending signals that the measures would continue.

One frequent visitor to Pyongyang explained that fears of biological/chemical warfare greatly affected authorities’ decisions.

“They are very cautious about viral infections since (they believe) the U.S. practiced biological/chemical warfare in the Korean War,” pastor-cum-social worker Choi Jae-yeong said to NK News.

In December, the North Korean Pyongyang Times newspaper ran a story which claimed that the U.S. may have developed the ebola virus and intentionally allowed it to spread throughout West Africa and the rest of the world.

And on Thursday, the state-run Korean Central News Agency published an interview in which an official condemned the U.S. for waging “germ warfare” during the Korean War.

The KCNA also published pictures which it claimed to be clues of the germ warfare on Thursday.

Photo: Eric Lafforgue


 

North Korea cancels mass games for 2015

Tourism company confirms cancellation, no reason provided

February 13th, 2015
Hamish Macdonald

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North Korea has officially cancelled its Mass Games performances scheduled for 2015, a foreign tourism company announced via social media on Friday.

The Korea International Travel Company (KITC), North Korea’s state run tourism bureau, told Young Pioneer Tours that the iconic event series would not be taking place, providing no reason for the cancellation.

“We understand most tourists will be a little disappointed to hear this,” a statement on the Young Pioneers Tourist company website said.

“Although, we’d like to remind everyone that 2015 holds other exciting and unique events for the year such as the Pyongyang Marathon in April and the huge celebrations later this year of the 70th anniversary of Liberation Day and Party Foundation Day with a Korean People’s Army military parade,” it added.

The Mass Games is a highly choreographed performance event involving thousands of dancers, acrobats and children. Over the years it has become one of the most recognized features of the closed-off country.

The performances last took place in 2013 but were similarly cancelled in 2014, also without an official reason. Observers at the time speculated the cancelation was a result of ongoing refurbishments at the May Day Stadium, the venue the event is usually held in.

While the announcement comes as a surprise for a second year running, there had been recent speculation that the games would be altered and may not feature the symbolic human backdrop they are commonly known for.

The cancellation comes amid the continuation of Ebola quarantine measures implemented by North Korea, ostensibly designed to order prevent the virus spreading to the country.

As a result of the measures, the North Korean tourism industry has been suspended since October 2014, when the anti-virus precautions were first implemented.

The measures effectively banned tourists from entering the country while diplomats, with NGO staff and other individuals allowed to still visit forced to adhere to a 21-day quarantine period before being admitted.

The length of the Ebola ban has now extended far beyond initial estimates and there are increasing concerns that the Pyongyang Marathon, scheduled for April, could similarly be cancelled.

Reports in some media indicate that authorities are cracking down on those not following the domestic measures and diplomats within the country have also been warned by North Korean authorities not to hold gatherings or banquets, contrary to the stated rules.

Featured Image: Arirang Mass Game In May Day Stadium, Pyongyang, North Korea by Eric Lafforgue on 2012-09-06 14:02:27


 

Customs Expected to Close for Holidays


Seol Song Ah | 2015-02-13 17:54

Operations will halt at Sinuiju Customs House, the main portal to and from Dandong, in observance of late leader Kim Jong Il’s day of birth on February 16th, remaining closed through the Lunar New Year holiday. Dandong Customs House will also remained closed for the same duration of 10 days, as China observes North Korean holidays--and vice versa.

“Kim Jong Il’s birthday is celebrated as an official holiday on February 16th and 17th, and because the Lunar New Year holiday follows, it looks like we’ll be celebrating a double holiday,” a source in North Pyongan Province told Daily NK on Thursday. “The following Monday, February 23rd, is also a holiday, so the customs offices in North Korea and China will not work for ten days, bringing all trade to a halt.”

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Dandong Customs House
; North Korean trucks packed with goods in Dandong City.

Despite the quarantine put in place due to potential Ebola virus threats, people are still gearing up for the long holiday, so food, alcohol, and other goods to sell at the markets have been flooding the customs offices.

Traders and members of the public place more significance on preparing for the Lunar New Year over Kim Jong Il’s birthday, with increasing numbers of people flocking to the markets to buy gifts for their immediate and extended families. “Wholesale market vendors have been waiting at the office to receive goods from Dandong [China] coming in on trucks, so there’s a lot of commotion at times,” the source said.

A different source located in Dandong confirmed this movement, saying, “Lately trade has been up between the North and China [in this region], and especially ahead of these two holidays there has been a massive influx of manufactured goods flowing into the North.” A steady stream of fresh flowers for celebrations related to the birthday of Kim Jong Il is also flowing through the customs houses ahead of the holidays.

More are more trucks have been filling the city’s streets, packed with goods North Korean sellers are buying in bulk to take back into the North. “It’s easy to spot trucks with North Korean plate numbers in downtown Dandong,” she said.

*Translated by Jiyeon Lee


 

North Korea 'committed crimes against humanity, but not genocide': UN official


PUBLISHED : Wednesday, 18 February, 2015, 7:49pm
UPDATED : Wednesday, 18 February, 2015, 7:49pm

Agence France-Presse in Washington

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North Korean leader Kim Jong-un (centre) was reportedly informed of the UN panel's damning findings. Photo: Reuters

The head of a UN inquiry into rights violations in North Korea said Pyongyang’s actions, while constituting a crime against humanity, fell short of genocide.

Michael Kirby, the Australian former judge who headed the UN Commission of Inquiry into North Korea’s human rights violations that concluded last year, reiterated the panel’s finding that “crimes against humanity have been committed” by the North Korean government in its mistreatment of thousands of prison detainees.

“This is a very serious finding,” said Kirby, speaking to reporters in Washington.

“It imposed on the international community to make those who are responsible accountable,” he said, adding that the UN human rights body has made North Korea’s leader aware of their findings.

The investigation, whose findings were released a year ago, gathered testimony from 300 witnesses and corroborating evidence that documented a vast network of prison camps believed to hold as many as 120,000 people.

The report said atrocities carried out at the camp include torture, rape and summary executions.

The UN inquiry, which wrapped up last year, found that North Korea’s human rights violations were “without parallel in the contemporary world”.

The panel chairman said he was disappointed that the panel was constrained by a “narrow definition” of what constitutes genocide as they drafted their findings.

He expressed disappointment with the report’s “very narrow definition” of genocide.

“It is a 1948 definition and it was not wide enough for us to find genocide and we did not.”

The panel nevertheless urged the UN Security Council to refer Pyongyang to the International Criminal Court (ICC), and made its finding known to North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.

“We wrote a letter to the Supreme leader warning him that the officials of his government and possibly he himself might be accountable,” Kirby said, in remarks made at the Center For Strategic and International Studies, a Washington think tank.

The council, following the report, also convened its first-ever meeting on Pyongyang’s rights record, which was held despite opposition from China.

Kirby expressed disappointment with some aspects of the final report, including the limited contact with officials from North Korea.

“We tried in every possible way ... to engage with them, but they wouldn’t engage with us except on very limited terms favourable to them,” he said, repeating his call for the case to be brought before the ICC.


 

NSA chief: We traced the Sony attack to North Korea through software analysis


Mike De Souza, Reuters
Feb. 19, 2015, 9:45 PM

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In this Dec. 17, 2014 file photo, a poster for the movie "The Interview" is carried away by a worker after being pulled from a display case at a Carmike Cinemas movie theater in Atlanta.

The U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) identified North Korea as the source of the recent cyberattack on Sony Pictures Entertainment after analyzing the software used in the intrusion, NSA Director Admiral Michael Rogers said on Thursday.

Speaking to a Canadian security conference, Rogers explained that the discovery was part of the agency's efforts to develop software to counter cyberattacks.

"We ultimately ended up generating the signatures to recognize the activity ... used against Sony," Rogers said. "From the time the malware left North Korea to the time it got to Sony's headquarters in California, it crossed four different commanders' lines or areas in the U.S. construct."

Sony's network was attacked by hackers in November as the company prepared to release "The Interview," a comedy about a fictional plot to assassinate North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. The attack was followed by online leaks of unreleased movies and emails that caused embarrassment to executives and Hollywood personalities.

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National Security Agency (NSA) Director Michael Rogers testifies before a House (Select) Intelligence Committee hearing on "Cybersecurity Threats: The Way Forward" on Capitol Hill in Washington November 20, 2014.

North Korea has described the accusation as "groundless slander."

Rogers said that cyberthreats are different from physical threats since they travel beyond geographical boundaries. He said the cyberthreats are also blurring the line between the public and private sectors, sometimes prompting new and unexpected partnerships.

"If you had told me (in the past) that I was going to be spending time working on an offensive act against a motion picture company, I would have thought: 'What? What does that have to do with me?' And yet that's the world we find ourselves in."

(Editing by Andrew Hay)


 


100,000 North Koreans sent abroad as ‘slaves’

Wages of thousands of “state-sponsored slaves” are used to buy luxury goods and bankroll Pyongyang’s construction boom, activists say

The North Korean dictator is now believed to weigh at least 20 stone as a result of his fondness for heavy drinking and imported Swiss cheese

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Accruing foreign currency became of “paramount importance” in 2012 after Kim Jong-un took control of a country with “no economic stability”, the North Korea Strategy Centre, an activist group, said in a report released that year Photo: Rodong Sinmun/EPA

By Tom Phillips, Beijing

11:10AM GMT 20 Feb 2015

Tens of thousands of impoverished North Koreans have been sent abroad to work as “state-sponsored slaves” whose wages are confiscated and used to buy luxury goods for the regime, human rights activists have claimed.

The practice, used since the 1980s to help fill the hermit kingdom’s coffers, has reportedly accelerated under Kim Jong-un, who took power following the death of Kim Jong-il, his father, in 2011. Until 2012 there were thought to be up to 65,000 North Korean workers around the globe, often in terrible conditions. That number has since risen to around 100,000, activists told The New York Times.

Ahn Myeong-chul, the head of NK Watch, a Seoul-based rights group, told the newspaper Pyongyang was “exploiting their labour and salaries to fatten the private coffers of Kim Jong-un.”

“We suspect that Kim is using some of the money to buy luxury goods for his elite followers and finance the recent building boom in Pyongyang that he has launched to show off his leadership.”

North Korea has been sending workers overseas for decades and stepped up the practice during the 1990s as the country slipped into economic chaos and famine.

The practice now appears to be expanding once again, activists claim, partly as a result of heightened international sanctions that mean the cash-strapped regime is looking for new sources of revenue.

The wages of such workers, paid in foreign currency, provide a stream of income that is seen as vital to keeping Kim Jong-un’s Workers’ Party in power.

Accruing foreign currency became of “paramount importance” in 2012 after Kim Jong-un took control of a country with “no economic stability”, the North Korea Strategy Centre, an activist group, said in a report released that year.

Pyongyang’s growing thirst for cash means thousands more North Koreans are being shipped overseas where rights activists and former workers claim their experiences are often tantamount to slavery.

“There is no contract, they say they will give us health insurance and heating access but we never receive anything,” one North Korean worker who in Russia was quoted as saying in the North Korea Strategy Centre report. “In reality we earn about 300 rubles but they end up taking it all away.”

The group named Russia as the biggest recipient of North Korean labour with at least 20,000-25,000 workers. There were an estimated 15,000 workers in the Middle East and the same number in South East Asia. China and Africa had up to 8,000 each.

In China many North Koreans are sent to work gruelling hours in sweatshops where they are watched over by security guards. In the Middle East they are often forced to toil in sweltering and potentially deadly temperatures on building sites. When they are not at work they are kept completely isolated from the country around them.

“The North Korean workers are trapped in wired fences so we have never met any other Koreans,” a male worker in Kuwait was quoted as saying.

Qatar, the cash-flush host of the 2020 World Cup, has faced particular criticism for its alleged exploitation of North Korean workers as it embarks on a construction blitz ahead of the mega-event.

There are around 2,800 North Koreans in the tiny Gulf state some of whom have reportedly been put to work building Lusail, a skyscraper packed city that is being created to host the World Cup final and is known as Qatar’s “Future City”.

Developers claim their multi-billion dollar project, which is being built from scratch in the desert outside Doha, will be a "modern and ambitious society”.

However, activists say the North Koreans involved in this project and others like it receive almost nothing in exchange. “We are here to earn foreign currency for our nation,” one North Korean worker told The Guardian last year.

Malaysia has also come under fire for its treatment of North Koreans working in the country’s mines.

The miserable and largely hidden plight of those workers came to light last November when one North Korean was killed in an explosion at a coalmine where more than 40 North Koreans were employed.

In the wake of the disaster a top Malaysian government official said North Korean workers were “disciplined, dedicated and tough” and, more importantly, were prepared to do “very dangerous and tough” jobs that locals refused to perform.

“There are many people from communist countries working in our country and having businesses here. All we require is that they come here legally, work legally and stay free of trouble with our laws,” said Datuk Seri Wan Junaidi Tuanku Jaafar, the deputy home minister.

News of the horrific conditions overseas-based North Korean workers face comes after photographer Mark Edward Harris completed his tenth trip to the secretive state. He left North Korea late in 2014, just before fears about the Ebola virus lead to borders being closed to foreigners.

In 2013 Harris' book North Korea was named Photography Book of the Year at the International Photography Awards. The book features incredible photographs of everyday life in a country rarely seen by the outside world.


 

North Korea bans foreigners from Pyongyang marathon over Ebola fears

PUBLISHED : Monday, 23 February, 2015, 11:42am
UPDATED : Tuesday, 24 February, 2015, 2:22am

Samuel Chan [email protected]

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Foreign and North Korean runners take off from the starting line inside Kim Il Sung Stadium at the beginning of the Mangyongdae Prize International Marathon in Pyongyang, an annual race. Photo: AP

At least 40 Hong Kong residents will miss the chance to jog along the broad avenues of Pyongyang after North Korea barred foreigners from joining the capital's marathon because of Ebola travel restrictions, according to a travel agency that specialises in the reclusive state.

Nick Bonner, co-founder of Beijing-based Koryo Tours, told the South China Morning Post that a North Korean sports official based in Beijing as well as a business partner in Pyongyang yesterday confirmed the race would be off limits to foreigners.

"It's just Ebola, not anything else, not political reasons," said Bonner. "We've got 500 runners waiting to go; it's a big hit for us." Some 120 joined the Pyongyang marathon through the agency last year, he said.

The annual race, which this year takes place on April 12, was open to foreign recreational runners for the first time last year, with 225 amateurs and a number of professionals taking part.



About 500 competitors had signed up with Koryo for this year's event, with tours listed at €790 (HK$6,985) for a three-day trip or €1,690 for one week.

Bonner said 40 were Hong Kong-based expatriates and about five participants held Hong Kong passports.

The competitors were of various nationalities, he said, including 23 per cent from Britain, 20 per cent from the United States and others from mostly Western countries.

The agency does not accept applications from mainland Chinese.

But the company remains hopeful that two runs in North Korea planned for later this year - a 10km charity run in Pyongyang in June and a half-marathon in Mount Paektu, the supposed "sacred" birthplace of former leader Kim Jong-il, in August - will go ahead as planned for those marathon competitors who signed up for them as alternatives to a full refund.

Since North Korea shut its borders to foreign tourists in October as part of its Ebola clampdown, all foreign visitors allowed in and even senior North Korean officials returning from trips abroad have been subject to quarantine.

No cases of Ebola have been reported near North Korea but state media have suggested the disease was created by the US military as a biological weapon.

A Hongkonger who joined last year's race told the Post at the time that the Pyongyang marathon was unusual in the sense that runners had to repeat the same lap four times, which he suspected was a way to "control what runners saw".

Additional reporting by Associated Press


 


The FBI has identified scores of 'cyberthreat' groups linked to foreign governments


Reuters and Armin Rosen
Feb. 24, 2015, 10:10 PM

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Thomson Reuters
Illustration file picture shows a man typing on a computer keyboard in Warsaw


The FBI is aware of 60 different cyber threats groups linked to nation-states, a senior bureau official said on Tuesday, according to Reuters.

Joseph Demarest, head of the FBI's cyber crime division, also said the bureau learned within a month of Sony Pictures first report of a large-scale cyber attack that North Korea was behind it.

On Tuesday the FBI and State Department also announced a $3 million reward for information leading to the arrest or conviction of Evgeniy Bogachev, who is charged in the United States with running a computer attack network called GameOver Zeus that allegedly stole more than $100 million from online bank accounts.

FBI officials said the $3 million reward for Bogachev, who is believed to be in Russia, is the highest offered in a US cyber crime case.

Hackers linked to rival governments present a unique and emerging challenge to the US. Under NATO's definition, a cyberattack can only be considered an act of war and warrant a military response if there is loss of life or physical damage resulting from it.

But the Sony Hack — one of the most prominent examples of a state-sponsored cyber-attack against a US target — was disruptive and economically damaging without clearly meeting this standard.

The US had only limited options for responding to the Sony hack and ended up implementing additional sanctions on already heavily sanctioned North Korea, indicating a certain lack of policy options around responding to state-sponsored hacks. The FBI believes there are now scores of government-linked groups out there, suggesting that this dilemma is bound to resurface.

 

Blacklisted North Korean shipping firm ‘disguised ships to operate illicitly’: UN panel


PUBLISHED : Thursday, 26 February, 2015, 4:23pm
UPDATED : Thursday, 26 February, 2015, 4:36pm

Reuters

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The council blacklisted shipping company Ocean Maritime Management Company (OMM) for arranging an illegal shipment on the Chong Chon Gang ship (above), which was seized in Panama and found to be carrying weapons. Photo: EPA

A UN-blacklisted North Korean shipping company has renamed most of its vessels in a bid to disguise their origin and continues its illicit shipments in violation of United Nations sanctions, according to a UN experts report seen by Reuters.

The UN Security Council’s Panel of Experts on North Korea, which monitors implementation of sanctions on Pyongyang, also said in the 76-page report that North Korea “continued to defy Security Council resolutions by persisting with its nuclear and ballistic missile programmes”.

North Korea is under UN sanctions because of its nuclear tests and missile launches. In addition to arms, Pyongyang is banned from importing and exporting nuclear and missile technology and is not allowed to import luxury goods.

The experts’ report also said the sanctions have not curbed food or humanitarian aid to the impoverished hermit state, but it recommended that the United Nations spell out which items for such use are exempt.

Last July, the council blacklisted shipping company Ocean Maritime Management Company (OMM) for arranging an illegal shipment on the Chong Chon Gang ship, which was seized in Panama and found to be carrying arms, including two MiG-21 jet fighters, hidden under thousands of tonnes of Cuban sugar.

“Following the designation of OMM ... [North] Korea acted in order to evade sanctions by changing the registration and ownership of vessels controlled by the company,” the report said.

“Thus far, 13 of the 14 vessels controlled by OMM have been renamed, their ownership transferred to other single ship owner companies [with names derived from the ship’s new names] and vessel management transferred to two main companies,” it added.

North Korea’s UN mission in New York did not respond immediately to a request for comment on the report. Reuters was not able to verify the panel’s allegations.

The report said OMM worked with individuals and entities based in countries such as Brazil, China, Egypt, Greece, Japan, Malaysia, Peru, Russia, Singapore and Thailand.

The panel recommended that the council’s sanctions committee blacklist 34 OMM entities (shell companies), including Chongchongang Shipping Co, Amnokgang Shipping and Biryugang Shipping. It also recommended sanctioning OMM Vice President Choe Chol Ho, Chongchongang Shipping President Kim Ryong Chol and three Chongchongang directors.

It said that North Korean diplomats, officials and trade representatives played key roles in illegal weapons and missile deals. They often were involved in illegal funds transfers.

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North Korean cargo ships docked at the country's Rason port. Photo: AFP

The panel also said North Korean intelligence agents aided the movement of money believed to be linked to weapons transactions.

The report said agents of the Reconnaissance General Bureau (RGB), North Korea’s main intelligence agency, had worked at international organisations and were using those positions to support activities aimed at skirting sanctions.

It cited as an example the French government’s decision to freeze assets of Kim Yong-nam, an RGB officer working under cover as an employee at Unesco, the UN cultural and scientific organisation in Paris, and his son and daughter. His son Kim Su-gwang, also an RGB officer, was working at the UN World Food Programme.

The panel said Kim Yong-nam’s daughter, Kim Su-gyong of the Korean United Development Bank, “was engaged in financial activities under false pretences in order to conceal the involvement of her country”.

The panel also opened its first inquiry into the use of drones. Between October 2013 and March last year, South Korea found wreckage of three drones it determined were from North Korea and had been spying on military facilities.

The Security Council has banned the supply, sale or transfer of complete armed or surveillance drones with a range of at least 300 kilometres. The panel said it was unclear if the recovered drones were acquired abroad or made in North Korea.

The experts found “no incidents where bans imposed by the [UN] resolutions directly resulted in shortages of foodstuffs or other humanitarian aid”.

“National legislative or procedural steps taken by [UN] member states or private sector industry have been reported as prohibiting or delaying the passage of certain goods to [North Korea],” the report said. “It is sometimes difficult to distinguish these measures from United Nations sanctions.”

The UN Security Council says the sanctions are not intended to harm North Korean civilians, but there is no exemption mechanism. For that reason, the experts recommended that exemptions be proposed “provided that such items are confirmed to be solely for food, agricultural, medical or other humanitarian purposes”.

North Korea has said the sanctions are illegal and aimed at toppling the country’s reclusive government. A UN inquiry last year reported systematic torture, starvation and killings by the country’s leaders that are comparable to Nazi-era atrocities

 

North Korea shifts more responsibility to factories, farmers in effort to ignite economy


PUBLISHED : Thursday, 05 March, 2015, 7:19am
UPDATED : Thursday, 05 March, 2015, 7:19am

Associated Press in Tokyo

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Economist Ri Ki Song said Pyongyang aimed to prod North Korean managers and farmers to "do business creatively, on their own initiative". Photo: Reuters

North Korea is trying to invigorate its hidebound economy by offering more control and possibly more personal rewards to key sectors of its workforce in the country's biggest domestic policy experiment since leader Kim Jong-un assumed power.

The measures give managers the power to set salaries and hire and fire employees, and give farmers more of a stake in out-producing quotas.

The changes were introduced soon after Kim took over in late 2011, codified last May and, according to North Korean economists are now being expanded to cover the whole country.

The focus is on management, distribution and farming, said economist Ri Ki Song of the Economic Science Section at Pyongyang's powerful Academy of Social Science, in an interview last month. Ri said the goal is to prod North Korean managers and farmers to "do business creatively, on their own initiative".

Pyongyang has not formally disclosed details of the measures, believed to have been approved on May 30 last year. But according to the North Korean economists, these are some of the major points:

- Managers can now decide on salaries without following state-set levels. Once an enterprise has paid the state and reinvested income to expand production, develop technology and pay for the "cultural welfare" of its employees, it can use the remaining funds to determine various pay levels.

- Factories or other enterprises can directly negotiate trade deals with foreign entities and hire or fire workers at their discretion. They can also decide what materials to buy and from whom and negotiate prices.

- On cooperative farms, sub-units of four or five people have been set up so that each farmer has a greater stake in producing a better yield from their plot.

South Korea's central bank reported the North's economy grew at just over one per cent in 2012 and 2013. It estimated North Korea's GDP at about US$30 billion. In lieu of official numbers from the North, figures compiled by South Korean agencies are often regarded as the next best thing, though they are dismissed by Pyongyang and taken with a grain of salt by foreigners.



 


North Korea opens borders to foreign tourists after four-month ban over Ebola scare

PUBLISHED : Tuesday, 03 March, 2015, 10:44am
UPDATED : Tuesday, 03 March, 2015, 2:06pm

Associated Press in Tokyo and Lana Lam

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Runners take part in the annual Pyongyang Marathon last year. Officials have already announced that foreigners will not be able to participate in the Pyongyang marathon next month, although they might have time to reverse that decision. Photo: Kyodo

North Korea has lifted severe restrictions on foreign travel it imposed last year to keep the Ebola virus from crossing its borders.

Beijing-based tour company Koryo Tours confirmed that it applied for 15 tourist visas this morning, with the first group tour to arrive in Pyongyang on Saturday March 14.

“We’re pleased to announce that today marks the first time in more than four months that tourism to North Korea begins to resume as normal,” Nick Bonner, co-founder and director of Koryo Tours told the South China Morning Post.

“We are still waiting for absolute confirmation from our partners that these visas will be issued without any restrictions or caveats, and that the tour will proceed as normal.

“But all the signs so far are looking good, and we expect more concrete details on this tonight or tomorrow.”

The already isolated country virtually closed its borders to foreigners last October, halting all non-essential visas and requiring those few foreigners allowed in to undergo three weeks of quarantine. The rules applied to diplomats, NGO workers and even senior North Korean officials returning from overseas trips.

Officials in Pyongyang said the restrictions and quarantines would continue for visitors from Ebola-affected countries in Africa and those countries that have borders with them.

North Korean media had suggested the Ebola virus was created by the US military for use as a biological weapon.

North Korea’s decision to set the restrictions despite the lack of any real threat has been a disaster for foreign travel agencies that specialise in bringing tourists to the North. There have been no Ebola cases in Asia, and North Korea has very little exchange with the African countries that have been most impacted.

A statement from North Korea’s state emergency quarantine committee obtained by the Associated Press today said tourists from Ebola-hit countries such as Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, and their neighbouring countries would still be placed in the three-week quarantine, while tourists from other countries would be able to enter with routine medical checks.

North Korea had been pushing tourism in hopes of gaining much-needed foreign currency and has over the past few years tried to improve its tourism infrastructure.

Last year, it opened its first luxury ski resort and it has announced the establishment of a number of special tourism zones across the country. It is mainly targeting tourists from China, but an increasing number of tourists are coming from the West as well.

But the lifting of the restrictions appears to come too late for one of the year’s biggest tourist events.

Officials have already announced that foreigners will not be able to participate in the Pyongyang marathon next month, although they might have time to reverse that decision. The marathon was opened to foreign recreational runners for the first time last year and was a big success, with some 225 amateurs and a number of professionals taking part alongside local runners.

Travel agents said they expected hundreds of runners from abroad to join this year, but had to cancel their bookings at the last minute.

About 40 people from Hong Kong were due to join the marathon but had to cancel the tour.

Koryo's Bonner, who said his tour company aims to build on cultural engagement with North Korea, welcomed the reopening.

“This is not just good news for those tourists interested in visiting one of the world’s most mysterious countries, but also in terms of the work that can now continue in breaking down the barriers and misunderstanding that still exist,” he said.

North Korea has also indicated that it will not hold its popular Arirang mass games extravaganza this year. The mass games are another big tourist attraction.


 

The mysterious Ri returns, urbane survivor of North Korea purge

French-speaking 75-year-old foreign minister, once rumoured to have been executed, is now the face of the regime on the international stage

PUBLISHED : Monday, 02 March, 2015, 11:28pm
UPDATED : Tuesday, 03 March, 2015, 8:35pm

Reuters in Seoul and Geneva

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Ri Su-yong is 'not a thug'.

The young Kim Jong-un may be the public face of isolated North Korea, but the man who officially represents Pyongyang on the international stage is an urbane 75-year-old who lived under an assumed name for decades and survived a vicious purge over a year ago.

Now North Korea's foreign minister and one of the most powerful men in the regime, Ri Su-yong was rumoured to have been executed along with his mentor, Jang Song-thaek, Kim's uncle, and several of his aides.

But the French-speaking Ri, who acted as Kim's father figure when he was attending a Swiss school, is touring international capitals again, defending his country's nuclear capability and trying to parry allegations of human rights abuses.

Like Jang, Ri is known as a powerful and close family confidant, open to economic reforms. But Jang fell afoul of the various factions around Kim, possibly because of his rapid rise to power.

Ri returns to Switzerland this week, where he spent two decades as North Korea's envoy to Berne and the United Nations in Geneva and became doyen of the diplomatic corps.

Today, he will make North Korea's first address to the UN Human Rights Council, whose independent inquiry last year accused the regime of committing violations tantamount to crimes against humanity.

"He always struck me as very savvy and sophisticated for a North Korean diplomat. Sophisticated in the sense that he knows the score," said one Geneva-based official who had attended frequent diplomatic meetings with Ri.

Unlike other diplomats from North Korea, Ri refrained from prefacing his statements with the ideological lectures and ranting against the West that are a hallmark of Pyongyang.

"His formulations were always within acceptable parameters. He was politically correct towards his own country," the official said. "He was keeping open channels of communication."

"He was very pleasant, urbane, not a thug. He was always reputed to be the family's fixer, whatever needed fixing."

Until 2010, he was known as Ri Chol and was a close aide and friend of Kim Jong-il, Kim Jong-un's father, and by popular account his money-man in Europe. Ri was recalled to Pyongyang in 2010 and in one of the last published photographs of Kim Jong-il before his death in 2011, he is seen standing close to him, with slicked-back hair and thick-rimmed spectacles.

"It's kind of a mystery why he called himself Ri Chol," said Michael Madden, an expert on the Pyongyang leadership. "There are several of these senior guys that are close to the centre in Pyongyang, and they use different names."

A career diplomat, Ri was dispatched to Switzerland in the early 1980s to establish an official North Korean presence, records held by South Korea's Ministry of Unification show.

But according to a memoir written by Song Hye-rang, the aunt of Kim Jong-un's half-brother, Ri was first sent to the Alpine country with another role - to serve in loco parentis to Kim Jong-il's eldest son, Kim Jong-nam, who now lives in effective exile.

It was Jang Song-thaek who recruited Ri to travel to seek out a suitable residence and school in Switzerland, wrote Song, who later defected in Geneva.

But driven by paranoia that South Korean spies might kidnap the dictator's son, Ri spent his early Swiss days in a rented apartment across the road from the school's main gate, which he monitored through binoculars, according to the memoir.

Ri later chaperoned a young Kim Jong-un, who in the 1990s attended the International School of Berne under the pseudonym Pak Chol, but who spent much time at home or dining out with Ri. "We can safely say that Ri Chol is a father figure to Kim Jong-un," said Madden.


 



N. Korea 'apologises' to Bangladesh over gold-smuggling diplomat

AFP
March 10, 2015, 7:01 am

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Dhaka (AFP) - North Korea apologised to Bangladesh on Monday after one of its diplomats was caught trying to smuggle 27 kilograms of gold into the south Asian country, a Dhaka official told AFP.

Son Young Nam -- the first secretary of the North Korean embassy in Dhaka -- tried to sneak in the bullion, worth around $1.7 million, using diplomatic immunity on Friday.

But armed police and customs officers challenged the official and seized the gold at Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport after Son arrived in the Bangladeshi capital on a flight from Singapore.

On Monday, Bangladesh's foreign ministry summoned North Korean envoy Ri Song Hyon, the director general of the ministry Jashim Uddin told AFP.

An official, who asked not to be named, said that Ri had apologised and assured Dhaka that appropriate action would be taken against the diplomat.

The envoy added that Son had left Bangladesh on Sunday night, just hours before the Bangladeshi government issued an order expelling him. Dhaka had released him on Friday under the Vienna Convention.

Bangladesh does not allow gold weighing more than two kilograms to be carried in and local customs authorities recently said they have seen a big rise in illegal gold movement.

Customs intelligence teams have seized nearly one tonne of the precious metal in the past 22 months, compared with just 15 kilograms captured over the previous five-year period.

The gold is mostly smuggled in from Gulf nations and then sent to India through the country's porous 4,000 kilometre (2,500 miles) land border.

Smuggling is thought to have increased largely due to India's imposition of strict import duties on gold.



 

The two Koreas: A shared language but a people separated by vocabularies

They share a common language, but decades of economic and political separation between the nations have created very different vocabularies

PUBLISHED : Sunday, 15 March, 2015, 3:36am
UPDATED : Sunday, 15 March, 2015, 8:56pm

Associated Press

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Illustration: Henry Wong

North Korean defectors are often baffled by all the English-based words they hear in South Korea, like "shampoo," "juice" and "self-service" - none of which is used in the reclusive North.

South Koreans, meanwhile, are puzzled by homegrown North Korean words like salgyeolmul, which literally means "skin water." (That's "skin lotion" south of the border.)

The two countries share a language, but the Korean Peninsula's seven-decade split has created a widening linguistic divide that can result in misunderstandings, hurt feelings and sometimes laughter. The gap has grown so wide that scholars say about a third of everyday words used in the two countries are different.

North and South Koreans are generally able to understand each other given that the majority of words and grammar are still the same. But the differences show how language can change when one half of the country becomes an international economic powerhouse and the other isolates itself, suspicious of outside influences.

America's huge cultural influence through its military presence, business ties and Hollywood has flooded the South Korean vernacular with English loan words and konglish, which uses English words in non-standard ways, like "handle" for steering wheel, "hand phone" for cellphone and "manicure" for nail polish.

In North Korea's view, all that is just further evidence that the South is an American cultural colony.

When Pak Mi-ok arrived in South Korea after her defection in 2002, she was told by a waitress at a restaurant that water was "self-service," an English phrase she had not heard before. Too shy to admit she didn't understand, she ended up going without water during her meal.

"I worried the waitress would look down on me," said Pak. She started out working at restaurants but struggled to understand customers. "I thought they spoke a different language," she said.

Pak gradually picked up on the new lingo, and in a recent interview she used words like "stress" and "claim" that aren't heard in the North.

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It took time for Pak Mi-ok to speak like a South Korean. Photo: AP

The North's isolation and near-worship of the ruling Kim family has also skewed the language. Suryong is the revered title for the North's founding leader and his son, Kim Jong-il, the father of the current ruler, Kim Jong-un. But in the South it simply means a "group leader".

Pyongyang is so eager to "purify" its language under its guiding philosophy of self-reliance that it vigorously eliminates words with foreign origins and uses home grown substitutes. Hence shampoo is meorimulbinu, or "hair water soap," and juice is danmul, or "sweet water." Such differences fascinate and amuse South Koreans, who love to examine them on quiz and comedy shows.

Misunderstandings can arise to seemingly innocuous Korean phrases like, "Let's do lunch sometime," which those in the South frequently use as a friendly ending to conversations, even with casual acquaintances. But newly arrived North Korean defectors take such invitations literally, and are often dismayed or offended when they don't get a follow-up phone call.

"If someone uses such empty words in North Korea, they'll see their relations with others cut off and be branded as a faithless person," said a defector who asked not to be identified for fear of putting family members in the North at risk.

Linguists say it takes about two years for North Korean defectors to feel comfortable conversing in South Korea.

The communication gap widens when it comes to technical terms used in medical and technological settings, according to Han Yong-un, a South Korean linguist. About two-thirds of medical terms were different, he said . "I don't think North and South Korean doctors could work together in the same operating theatre," he said.

In the past 10 years, there have been efforts to produce a joint dictionary containing 330,000 words from both countries - a rare example of cooperation.

But, as is often the case, political tensions have interfered with progress. The meetings only resumed last July after a more than four-year hiatus following the 2010 sinking of a South Korean warship. A new round of meetings, tentatively set for last month, hasn't been held as North Korea bristled over the annual springtime joint US-South Korea military drills.

Even language experts from the two countries have trouble understanding each other.

During last year's meeting in Pyongyang, South Korean linguist Kim Byung-moon said he tried to explain how South Koreans use the English word "glamour" as a noun to refer to a voluptuous woman, but North Korean scholars had difficulty understanding its usage.

Given the completely different political and economic systems between the two countries, it also takes a while to learn the connotations and associations that some emotionally laden words have.

In South Korea, "spec" refers to qualifications and credentials that college students need to land a good job. While defectors can quickly learn what the word literally means, it took much longer to understand the immense stress associated with the word for young job-seekers in South Korea's ultra-competitive society, said Jeon Young-sun, a research professor at Seoul's Konkuk University.

Those in the South, meanwhile, may struggle to understand the emotional impact of saenghwal chonghwa, the regular meetings in the North at which people are required to reflect on their behaviour and criticise each other. The phrase, which literally means "group discussions on daily lives," isn't used in South Korea.

"We were sick and tired of it," Pak said. "I still get goose bumps whenever I hear that word."


 

North Korea to hold rare parliament session; analysts say food shortage will top agenda

Observers are also closely watching whether there will be a political reshuffle


PUBLISHED : Friday, 20 March, 2015, 2:02pm
UPDATED : Friday, 20 March, 2015, 2:05pm

Agence France-Presse in Seoul

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North Korean leader Kim Jong-un attending the plenary meeting of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea in a file photo from 2013. Photo: AFP

North Korea announced today that it would convene a rare parliamentary session next month, which analysts said would likely rubber-stamp policies outlined by leader Kim Jong-un in a bid to resolve chronic food shortages in the country.

“The 3rd session of the 13th Supreme People’s Assembly of the DPRK [North Korea] will be convened in Pyongyang on April 9,” state-run Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) said.

It gave no other details, including on the session’s agenda.

The Supreme People’s Assembly (SPA) meets only once or twice a year, mostly for day-long sessions to rubber-stamp budgets or other decisions made by the ruling communist party.

In a closely-watched New Year speech, leader Kim Jong-un called for renovations in agriculture, fisheries and livestock industries aimed at improving people’s living standards and resolving the country’s chronic food shortages.

He also urged managerial reform in state-run businesses to allow them to operate on their own initiative and with greater spontaneity.

“SPA is likely to pass laws and approve policies aimed to support at supporting goals set forth by Kim Jong-un in his New Year speech,” Professor Yang Moo-jin of the University of North Korean Studies, said.

“There might also be personnel changes,” Yang said.

In particular, Yang said it would be worth watching to see whether the current government cabinet, headed by Prime Minister Pak Pong-ju, would remain in place, and whether the North’s nominal head of state Kim Yong-nam, who heads the SPA but who is well advanced in age, will keep his post.

Kim Jong-un was a no-show at the last SPA session in September last year.

The North’s state media said afterwards that he had been suffering “discomfort” during a three-week absence from the public eye. Video footage showed him walking with a limp and a cane for several weeks last year.

The current SPA was elected in March last year. Kim, who took over after the death of his father Kim Jong-il in 2011, was elected to the body by a 100 per cent, no-abstentions poll victory in the country’s stage-managed parliamentary elections.

North Korea says it will press ahead with its policy of simultaneously pursuing both nuclear and economic development in order to fend off what it claims are attempts by the United States to topple its regime.


 
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