Archive for July, 2006

Macao bank contained personal accounts of DPRK elites

Thursday, July 20th, 2006

From the Korea Times:

US Ties Macau Bank to Kim Jong-il

WASHINGTON (Yonhap) _ The U.S. government has figured out most of North Korea’s transactions in a Macau bank and believes they were mostly personal dealings involving Pyongyang’s leadership, a diplomatic source said Wednesday.

Washington has studied North Korea’s transaction records with the Banco Delta Asia, where about $24 million in cash was deposited by North Korea, but frozen by U.S. sanctions.

The bank in the Chinese territory froze about 40 North Korean accounts last year after it came to the brink of bankruptcy as U.S. banks stopped their transactions with it in response to Washington’s claim that Pyongyang was laundering its illicitly earned money there.

The U.S. found that the bank has produced handwritten transaction data regarding North Korea in addition to official computer records, the source said on condition of anonymity. The bank seemed to have used written records of the North Korean transactions as a way to hide them from official view, the source said.

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ROK allows its citizens to see Arirang this summer

Thursday, July 20th, 2006

From the Joong Ang Daily:

Seoul gives its blessing to view North’s festival

July 21, 2006-The Roh administration said yesterday it would allow a private delegation to participate in North Korea’s celebration of Liberation Day, the August 15 anniversary of Japan’s surrender in 1945. It will also allow South Koreans to attend the annual Arirang Festival that begins the same day and runs for two months.

The festival is widely seen by critics as an extended paean of praise to Kim Il Sung, North Korea’s founder and leader until his death in 1994.

Lee Jong-seok, the unification minister, told a news conference yesterday that non-governmental exchanges such as those for the holiday and the festival would go ahead “according to procedures.” He said no decision had yet been made on whether Seoul would send an official delegation to participate in the North’s Liberation Day rites.

After the press conference, a Unification Ministry official said permission to travel to North Korea would be given to all comers except for those barred by law from traveling there. The latter group once included those convicted of National Security Law violations or those under investigation for alleged violations of that anti-communist statute; now, only those involved in a current criminal investigation of any kind are barred.

Tensions in the region escalated rapidly after North Korea test-fired seven missiles on July 5. Ministerial talks a week later collapsed after Seoul refused to continue providing material aid, and the latest sign of tension came yesterday when Pyong-yang, following through on an earlier threat, told Hyundai Asan to repatriate 150 workers from the construction site at Mount Kumgang for a separated family reunion center.

The work, funded by Seoul, was scheduled to be completed in June 2007 at a cost of 50 billion won ($53 million). North Korea’s Red Cross told its counterpart in the South earlier this week that if rice and fertilizer stopped flowing north, the family reunions could not be held.

The decision to allow civilians to travel for the festivities is in line with Seoul’s expressed intention to keep channels with the North open, but critics said darkly that North Korea was certain to abuse that good will.

At the failed inter-Korean talks last week, Pyongyang demanded that Seoul end its restrictions on where South Koreans in the North can travel. It wanted those visitors to be able to visit what it called “holy places and landmarks,” a reference not to religion but to the cult surrounding Kim Il Sung and his son Kim Jong-il, his father’s successor as the country’s leader. Those “holy places” include Kumususan Memorial Palace, where Kim Il Sung’s mausoleum is located.

Critics also saw a train wreck, in their view, in North Korea’s contention at the recent Busan ministerial meeting that South Koreans are being protected by North Korea’s “military-first” policy. The Arirang Festival performances in recent years have been heavy in praising that policy, and some of those allegedly “protected,” they say, will be in attendance.

by Lee Young-jong, Ser Myo-ja 

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Japan prepares to bar remittances to DPRK

Wednesday, July 19th, 2006

from the BBC:

Japan’s government says it has begun work on its own set of sanctions on North Korea, in addition to those agreed by the UN Security Council. 

Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe says he has instructed officials to put in place procedures to ban cash remittances to the impoverished North.

After days of talks the UN Security Council unanimously passed a resolution on Saturday which condemned the tests.

But it was a milder document than Japan’s original draft.

The resolution was tabled in response to North Korea’s decision to test-fire seven missiles earlier this month, including a long-range Taepodong-2, which is believed capable of reaching Alaska.

In the immediate aftermath of the test-firings, Japan imposed limited sanctions against North Korea, including a decision to ban a North Korean trade ferry from Japanese ports and a moratorium on charter flights from Pyongyang.

But now Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe has asked for an investigation into possible further sanctions.

“We have started preparations to properly achieve necessary steps involving financial restrictions,” Mr Abe told a news conference on Tuesday, although he added that Japan would consult with other nations before making a final decision.

He said he had instructed officials to start procedures to ban cash remittances by Koreans living in Japan who are sympathetic towards Kim Jong-il’s government – an important source of foreign currency for North Koreans.

Indications that Tokyo was about to take further steps against Pyongyang were reported in Japanese media on Monday, but now Mr Abe has made his intentions official in a press conference.

Japan could also place bans on bilateral trade and freeze North Korean assets, according to the newspaper reports.

Japan is one of North Korea’s most vehement critics – and takes a more hardline stance on Pyongyang’s activities than other countries in the region.

Chapter Seven dropped

The UN resolution passed over the weekend demands that North Korea suspend its ballistic missile programme, and bars all UN member states from supplying Pyongyang with material related to missiles.

It was passed unanimously by the Security Council after being revised to drop any mention of Chapter Seven of the UN Charter, which is legally binding and can authorise military action. The changes were made to appease China and Russia, which took a softer line than Japan and the US. China had threatened to veto the resolution in its original form.

As soon as the resolution was passed, North Korea’s ambassador to the UN rejected it and left the chamber.

A day later Pyongyang angrily denounced the resolution in a foreign ministry statement, and said it would continue to build up its military arsenal.

The statement described the resolution as the product of a hostile American policy and said Pyongyang would not be bound by it, and would “bolster its war deterrent” in every way.

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Are epidemics on the move in DPRK?

Wednesday, July 19th, 2006

Epidemic in North Korea spreads despite quarantine
From Yonhap
11/15/2006

Scarlet fever has been spreading fast in North Korea for nearly a month and is showing signs of becoming a full-blown pandemic despite efforts by North Korean authorities to contain the disease, a source close to the North said Wednesday.

The disease first broke out in the communist state’s northern Yanggang Province last month, but is quickly spreading to other parts of the country, the source told Yonhap News Agency on condition of anonymity.
 

From the Daily NK:
7/19/2006

It has recently been learned that such acute infectious diseases as Paratyphoid, Whooping Cough and Leprosy are going around Yangkang, Hamkyung, and Hwanghae provinces, and are beginning to spread all over the country.

This news came after a follow-up story reported by two special correspondents from the DailyNK, who examined N.Korean border areas and interviewed 17 North Korean residents from those areas.

“It is certainly a period of hardship. The North Korean people do not have enough to eat and so are malnourished. All kinds of unidentified epidemics are spreading out over the country. Two or three house in each area seem to have a few infectious cases. Tuberculosis is not considered as a serious disease. Women and the elderly come down with Paratyphoid, and children infected with Whooping Cough are confined in preschools”, said Choi Gil Yeo (pseudonym, 59, Haeju of South Hwanghae province).

“It is similar to what occurred during the ‘March of Tribulation’ 10 years ago”

Last spring, the diseases appeared in Hwanghae, Yangkang, and North Hamkyung provinces, and they have been spreading to inland areas since.

in addition, some people living in Yangkang province came down with ‘unidentified epidemics’ whose symptoms are oozing skin sores. resembling leprosy. Many in the North Korean government fear that the disease is a rection to infected beef or pork ingested by people who were subsequently stricken with the illness.

During the last 3 months of research, all of the North Koreans (11 defectors and 6 travelers) interviewed in the border areas around the Yalu and Tumen Rivers expressed the same opinion that, “Various epidemics are going around. It is similar to the March of Tribulation period (when numerous North Koreans died of starvation in the mid-90s). During the period, all kinds of epidemics were going around”.

Present travelers to China are already aware of the names, symptoms and causes of the epidemics thanks to local household educators and medicinal peddlers in Jangmadang, illustrating that the epidemics have already begun to spread all over the country.

People who are infected with Paratyphoid experience high fever, diarrhea and acute digestive problems. The epidemic seems to have began in Hwang Hae province and later spread to Pyongan and Hamkyung provinces. Deaths due to Paratyphoid have been increasing.

On June 12, Choi Gil Yeo, who came back from visiting her relatives in Dandong said that, “Since the end of May, the number of Paratyphoid patients and deaths has been rising in Haeju city, and the Chungdan district and Shinwon districts. I do not know how many people are infected, but at least 1 out of 10 households is infected with Paratyphoid”.

Prevention through nutrition: “the disease appears only in poor countries”

Whooping Cough is an acute respiratory disease which often affects children under the age of 10, and has spread to some areas of North Hwanghae, Hamkyung, and Pyongan provinces. In Hamheung province a few children have died from the illness.

Park Chul Man (pseudonym, 62, South HamKyung province), who came into China via Tomen maritime customs in Yanbian reported that, “Since the middle of April, Whooping Cough has been going around among children in preschools, and in June, a few infants died. In Hamheung and Chungjin provinces, even elementary school students are restricted from traveling due to fears of the disease spreading”.

In Haesan, in the Kim-hyeong-jik district of Hangkang province, unidentified epidemics are spreading.

Defector Lee Sung Hee (pseudonym, 25) said that, “Some infected cows and pigs were sold at butchers in Jangmadang, and people who ate the diseased meat showed symptoms of peeling and oozing skin. We do not yet know what it is, but people are calling it leprosy”.

Lee said that, “The North Korean government has restricted meat sales in Yangkang province. In addition, Haesan, Kim-hyeong-jik, Kimjongsook and Bochun districts are also under tight control in order to prevent the diseased meat from being introduced into those areas”.

In the meantime, defector Park Jeong Hwa (pseudonym, 36) added that, “I spoke with my family in North Korea over the phone and heard that leprosy was going around. Now, when people are issued a travel certificate by the police, a “personal hygiene certificate” from the health administration is also necessary”.

The North Korean government systemically deprives citizens of medicine provided by the international society

The North Korean people see malnutrition as the main cause of the epidemics.

Generally, diseases in North Korea have come from malnutrition, and are considered diseases that occur only in poor countries. An important note regarding the current epidemic is that the diseases are similar to the ones that prevailed during the period of famine in the mid-90s.

Kang Sun Mi (pseudonym, 59, Sariwon) from Yanji said that, “Tuberculosis, typhoid fever, paratyphoid, and whooping cough are the same diseases that prevailed during the March of Tribulation, which many people fear is beginning again”.

Defector Kim, working as a doctor in Longjing, said that, “North Korean hospitals do not have medicine or medical instruments, and doctors do not receive food rations, forcing them to go to Jangmadang or to work for the Foreign currency department”.

Kim said that, “officers working at National organizations monopolize all medicine and food aid so that normal citizens do not have access to them”.

Kim also said that, “medicines are light and small, and are therefore easy to exchange for cash. National organizations and the foreign currency department therefore want medicines more than food aid. if the international society would like to provide medicinal aid, it should be given to local clinics directly rather than big hospitals in cities”.

On the other hand, some North Koreans, including those interviewed since July 5, responded that it was natural for them to have been informed about the missile test from a wired broadcast aired by (North) Korean Central Broadcasting, the only broadcasting channel operated in the North.

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American tourists permitted in DPRK for Arirang

Wednesday, July 19th, 2006

Assuming the US does not impose tourist restrictions!

In August-October 2005, the DPRK permitted American tourists to enter the country to see the spectacular Arirang performance.  I saw this performance, and Kim Jong Il, and it is not to be missed.  From the DPRK perspective, the experiment must have been a success so it is being repeated again this summer.  If you are interested in going, and I recomend you do, there are several operators that can take you:

Koryo Tours has been running tours for a long time.  Based out of Beijing, but run by two great English chaps, Simon and Nick, Koryo has great access to the country.  I have personally seen them in action and marveled at how efficiently they handled the multiple requests of their customers.  Nick and Simon have worked on two documentaries in the DPRK, the Game of Their Lives and A State of Mind.  They are currently finishing up their third, Crossing the Line.

Today I got an email from Walter L. Keats at Asia Pacific TravelHe tells me, “We are the only U.S. company to be directly authorized by the Korea International Travel Company (KITC) to bring American and other tourists to the DPRK during the Arirang period. You can see a copy of our letter of authorization on our website as well as a background sheet on our involvement with North Korea since 1995.”  (I am really surprised an American company could pull this off).

I have visited the DPRK twice with the Korean Friendship Association.  KFA trips are something else altogether.  The KFA is sponsored by a different DPRK ministry than the other tour companies and the agenda, aside from not being released until you are in Pyongyang, contains come political-ish activities that might make all but the hardiest of travellers blush.  And don’t expect to run for Congress when you get back home.  Still I had a great time and learned a lot.  The price is generally much cheaper, but more often than not, you will be staying in the isolated Sosan hotel.

If you visit the DPRK with any of these groups this summer, please let me know how it went and what you learned.  Don’t forget to tell them I sent you!

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US could reimpose pre-1999 sanctions

Wednesday, July 19th, 2006

Joong Ang Daily
7/19/2007

The Bush administration is weighing the reinstatement of trade sanctions on North Korea that were lifted during the Clinton administration. A visiting U.S. Treasury Department official, Stuart Levey, described Washington’s policy direction to Korean government policymakers during a visit here from Sunday through Tuesday. Yesterday, a government official described those discussions to journalists, and the Treasury posted a cautious statement by Mr. Levey on its Web site.

The Treasury’s undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence had planned his visit before the July 5 North Korean missile tests, but the incident added urgency to the consultations. Giving no details of the content of the discussions, Mr. Levey said in his statement he and Korean officials had discussed issues including “the new United Nations Security Council resolution that requires all member states to prevent the transfer of any financial resources in relation to DPRK’s missile or WMD programs.”

Mr. Levey is also stopping in Tokyo, Hanoi and Singapore on his swing through Asia. Seoul was his first stop. The trip came at a time when Japan is planning its own sanctions, perhaps including a ban on cash remittances to the North.

A government official said yesterday that the undersecretary met with Vice Foreign Minister Yu Myung- hwan and officials from the Ministry of Finance and the Blue House. The official stressed that the meeting was not a consultation on policy toward the North. He said the topics included many international financial issues, but did not touch in any detail on Seoul’s participation in the Kaesong Industrial Complex and tourist trips to Mount Kumgang, both of which are revenue sources for North Korea.

Another official said Mr. Levey responded only with a nod to explanations of the purposes and justifications for those inter-Korean projects.

The Korean officials said the U.S. sanctions Mr. Levey mentioned had been lifted in 1999 by President Bill Clinton as U.S.-North Korea tensions eased. They included trade restrictions and licensing requirements and strict limits on the amount of money U.S. travelers to North Korea could spend there.

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DPRK suspends family reunions

Wednesday, July 19th, 2006

Well, since the ROK has suspended further food/fertilizer aid to the DPRK in response to the current missle situation, the DPRK has suspended family reunions.

From the Joong Ang:

In a tit-for-tat reaction to Seoul’s decision to suspend rice and fertilizer aid, Pyongyang yesterday canceled a separated family reunion and said future ones were in jeopardy.

The Korea Central News Agency broadcast a letter from the North Korean Red Cross to its counterpart in Seoul. The letter said Seoul had refused to talk seriously about a family reunion the North had proposed be held during the Chuseok holidays in October. “Furthermore,” the letter continued, “the South refused to ship rice and fertilizer, one of the inter-Korean humanitarian projects that are conducted on the basis of reciprocity.” Pyongyang, the letter went on, sees no reason to continue family reunions.

“We want to make clear that the video conference call reunion, scheduled to mark August 15, and the construction of a reunion venue at Mount Kumgang will be terminated,” the letter concluded. The Japanese surrendered on Aug. 15, 1945, to end World War II. Both Koreas celebrate a Liberation Day holiday on that date. Although reunions have been held frequently at Mount Kumgang, the two Koreas had agreed to build a permanent reunion site there rather than using tourist hotels.

The Unification Ministry said it would do its best to restart the reunions. It said it anticipated that reaction by Pyongyang but regretted it.

And from the BBC:

The North accused the South of “sacrificing” humanitarian co-operation under pressure from Japan and the US.

Seoul announced the suspension of rice and fertiliser deliveries after inter-Korea talks collapsed last week.

The talks followed North Korea’s missile tests on 5 July, which have raised international concern.

Pyongyang test-fired seven missiles, including a long-range Taepodong-2 believed capable of reaching Alaska.

South Korea says it will not discuss further humanitarian aid with its neighbour until progress is made on resolving issues relating to the missile tests and the North’s nuclear ambitions.

After the high-level talks in Busan fell apart last week, the delegation from Pyongyang issued a statement warning of consequences for inter-Korean ties.

In the latest statement, North Korea’s Red Cross head Jang Jae-on accused the South of “abusing the humanitarian issue for meeting its sinister purpose to serve the outsiders”.

“Our side is, therefore, of the view that it has become impossible to hold any discussion related to humanitarian issues, to say nothing of arranging any reunion between separated families and relatives between the two sides,” he said.

A video reunion meeting scheduled for 15 August would not take place and the planned construction of a reunion centre in the North’s Mt Kumgang was “impossible”, he said.

The reunions bring together families divided by the partitioning of the Korean Peninsula in 1953. The policy has been a key part of reconciliation efforts between the two Koreas.

Earlier, South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun told a meeting of security advisers that Pyongyang’s missile tests were “wrong behaviour” that increased regional tensions.

But he warned against overreacting, saying: “An excessive response to North Korea’s missile tests creates unnecessary tensions and confrontation.”

On Tuesday, the Japanese government said it had begun work on its own set of sanctions for North Korea, in addition to those agreed by the UN Security Council.

The council unanimously passed a resolution on Saturday which condemned the missile launches, but it was softer than the draft initially proposed by Japan.

Japan would look into banning cash remittances to the North from Korean residents, Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe told reporters.

But on Wednesday, Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi said he would not rush to impose more sanctions.

“We should wait and see for a while whether North Korea will seriously respond to the (UN) resolution,” he said.

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New York Times finally gets journalist into Kaesong Zone

Tuesday, July 18th, 2006

Most of the big papers got into Kaesong back in February.  The NY Times got it in July.  Better late than never.  I am adding it to this blog so I can reference it later:

South Brings Capitalism, Well Isolated, to North Korea
By NORIMITSU ONISHI

KAESONG, North Korea — Just north of the demilitarized zone dividing the Korean Peninsula, in possibly the world’s most heavily guarded special economic enclave, 500 managers from the South and 7,000 workers from the North are engaged in a capitalist experiment that is anathema to the United States.

The South Koreans recently gave a tour of the enclave, the Kaesong Industrial Park, to 200 foreign business executives, diplomats and journalists. The hosts expressed optimism that it would bring peace to the peninsula, then they led the visitors through factories churning out goods for markets in the South and elsewhere.

In one of the 15 factories, Taesung Hata, a cosmetics company, about 500 workers wearing dark blue uniforms and white hats operated machines that produced plastic cosmetic containers. Next door, 1,500 workers sat in rows of desks with sewing machines, below ceiling fans and decorative red flowers, making orthopedic shoes called Stafild that were described as “Shoes for Unification.”

To hear the South Korean hosts tell it, when the special economic zone is completed in 2012, it will be bigger than Manhattan, house 2,000 companies and employ 700,000 North Koreans. Yet Kaesong’s significance is larger still, they say, because it will nudge the North toward embracing economic reforms and opening up to the world, the way Shenzhen did in China two decades ago, and open the path, as the shoes suggest, toward reunification.

[The hosts also said they had considered canceling the June 22 tour, which coincided with rising tensions over North Korean preparations for a missile test on July 5, but decided against it.]

Kaesong is South Korea’s biggest project in what some here call unification by “small steps,” or “de facto” unification. The South does not want formal unification for a few more decades, but its strategy is to narrow the yawning gap of half a century of division through various projects, from manufacturing here in Kaesong to uniting the two Koreas’ different Braille characters for the blind and sign language for the deaf.

“It’s de facto unification,” said Ko Gyoung-bin, who oversees the 18-month-old Kaesong project at the Ministry of Unification in Seoul. “It’s already under way. Unlike the German model, it won’t happen suddenly.”

The two Koreas agreed on building Kaesong in June 2002 when the South Korean president at the time, Kim Dae-jung, and the North’s leader, Kim Jong-il, met in Pyongyang. Since then, the exchanges have become so routine that sports authorities on both sides are moving toward fielding a unified team for the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics.

With cultural, academic, business, political or military exchanges going on between the Koreas nearly every week, 80,000 South Koreans visited the North last year. That did not include South Korean visitors to Kumgang Mountain, a North Korean resort opened to foreigners eight years ago. Kumgang has been visited by 1.25 million South Koreans.

South Korean regional and local governments, regardless of political leanings, have also undertaken projects with counterparts in the North. More than 60 private organizations now send South Koreans north to assist on agricultural, health and other projects.

“We go to North Korea, where we work with our counterparts to show them how to use certain agricultural machines or how to breed better cattle,” said Kang Young-shik, director of the Korean Sharing Movement, a private group that has undertaken the Braille and sign-language projects. “They need help from us, though they also feel the need to compete with us.”

Cho Yong-nam, a director general in the Unification Ministry, said South Korea had projects in 27 of 206 cities and counties in the North. The common theme, he said, is to raise standards in the North so that, in a unified Korea, North Koreans would not constitute “a displaced, misfortunate minority group.”

Companies that have come to Kaesong, which is managed by Hyundai Asan, a private company, have received tax breaks and other support from the South Korean government.

A new highway and railroad traverse the DMZ before reaching Kaesong, about 40 miles northwest of Seoul. Soldiers stand watch on either side of the demilitarized zone, with its barricades, barbed wire fences and land mines.

In working with North Koreans, South Koreans have said, they have encountered the sometimes unexpected effects of their division: North Korean construction workers, for example, were rated only one-third as efficient as their counterparts from the South; many North Koreans, with little experience handling machines, have required extensive training.

Sometimes, South and North Koreans had trouble communicating because the language spoken on either side of the DMZ has changed significantly. (One project supported by the South is a unified dictionary with new words that have appeared, or words whose meanings have changed, since the division of the peninsula after World War II.)

Last year, the activity here expanded trade between the Koreas to more than $1 billion for the first time, though only a few companies here are believed to be profitable.

Kaesong has also become an obstacle in negotiations between South Korea and the United States over a free-trade agreement. The South wants products made here to be included in the agreement, arguing, so far in vain, that most of the materials derive from the South.

The Bush administration, which has tried to isolate the North instead of engaging it, recently criticized Kaesong after long withholding judgment. It accused the South of economically propping up the North, as the United States was financially squeezing the North elsewhere.

In a recent op-ed piece in The Wall Street Journal, Jay Lefkowitz, President Bush’s special envoy for human rights in North Korea, said projects like Kaesong strengthened Kim Jong-il by pumping “hundreds of millions of dollars into the North, with more to come.” Mr. Lefkowitz also said he had doubts about whether the North Korean workers actually got their wages.

Mr. Ko, of the Unification Ministry, rejected such accusations, saying the North Korean workers had to sign their names when they received their wages. The wages average $57 a month, nearly triple the average in the North, he said.

According to Hyundai Asan, employees work 48 hours a week. They were picked by North Korean officials, then approved by South Koreans. About 80 percent are high school graduates.

Visitors were allowed to speak freely to the North Korean workers, but the presence of supervisors and North Korean guides on the tour discouraged anything but innocuous answers.

Peter M. Beck, who is the Northeast Asia director for the International Crisis Group in Seoul and took part in the tour, said that he was impressed by the facilities but that it was still unclear how much of the wages went to the workers.

At Shinwon, a garment manufacturer, 300 North Korean workers were cutting and sewing shirts, dresses and blouses in a large, brightly lighted, air-conditioned factory.

“I’ve seen factories of this type in Kenya, Bangladesh, India and Papua New Guinea, and the conditions here compare very favorably,” said Frank Gamble, a retired banker and an official with the Australia-New Zealand Chamber of Commerce in Seoul, as he toured the Shinwon factory. “What South Korea is trying to do here in Kaesong, we’ve already seen in China and Vietnam and elsewhere. The United States was against investing in Vietnam, but now they’re beating down doors to get there.”

A North Korean official accompanying the visitors expressed anger at criticism from Americans.

“I think they’re ignorant,” he said, refusing to give his name. “They just criticize everybody, including China on human rights. They just want to impose their standards on the world.”

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Self-reliance or isolation?

Monday, July 17th, 2006

Joong Ang Daily
7/17/2006

At the end of “the hermit kingdom,” or Joseon Dynasty, the outer world tried hard to force Korea to open its doors.

Japan forced the Joseon leaders to sign the Treaty of Ganghwa, or Korea-Japanese Treaty of Amity, and then used force to enter Korea.

The United States also eagerly wanted to secure a market here. When the U.S. ship the General Sherman was attacked by infuriated Koreans, the United States used the incident as an excuse to force Korean to open its doors and also sign a trade treaty.

Russia intensified its fleet at Vladivostok in preparation for a southward expansion.

The Qing Dynasty couldn’t stand the idea of its tributary state being under the influence of other countries and thus gave Li Hongzhang, a Chinese politician and general, exclusive power to interfere in domestic affairs inside Korea.

What is the right way to keep self-reliance in the face of outer forces’ attempts to open a nation’s doors?

To this question by Emperor Gojong, a booklet titled “Joseon Chaengnyak,” or “Korean Strategy,” gave an answer.

The book was written by He Ruzhang, a Chinese minister of the Qing legation stationed in Japan.

The author advised that Korea should consult on all matters with China, engage with Japan and sign a trade treaty with the United States in order to keep Russia in check. (From “World Diplomatic History,” by Kim Yong-Koo.)

But Japan was brutal, the United States was too far away to help and Russia was insidious.

Self-reliance means balancing power between nations and that first requires the possession of a certain amount of power. Lacking that, there was little that Emperor Gojong could do.

One hundred and twenty years have since passed. But the foreign policy of Emperor Gojong and that of President Roh Moo-hyun look similar, except that Korea has gained a little bit more capability since those deplorable days.

Both leaders have emphasized self-reliance and a minimum of intervention by other countries. Both have tried to become mediators and secure a leading position through the balance of power.

Does President Roh then have more options in the midst of the current missile crisis?

There is little proof that international order has become more advantageous to us than during the times of Emperor Gojong in the late 19th century.

Except Japan, the other three powers ― the United States, Russia and China ― have become permanent members of the United Nations Security Council.

The format of the four countries has become two sided — the United States and Japan versus China and Russia.

On top of this, North Korea has been added as a rogue country that is a beneficiary of China and Russia’s strategic protection.

In this post-modern era, the legacy from the previous era remains clearly in the Asian region. People in Korea have vivid memories of the colonial era and strong nationalism recalls the nightmares of past imperialism.

Under these complicated circumstances, North Korea fired its missiles as if publicly displaying its political beliefs.

Borrowing the North Korean leader Kim Jong-il’s rhetoric, that was a “revolutionary force that will crush imperialism.”

The head of North Korea, Kim Jong-il, wants to get through this situation, although it may require him to resort to extreme methods.

After shocking international society, he has remained low-profile, as if asking, “What will you do now?”

South Korea is in the trickiest position. Seoul had told the world powers that it would resolve the North Korea problem in its own way and asked them to wait, while approaching Pyongyang.

Seoul must now feel that it was betrayed after giving aid to the North.

To the South Korean unification minister who revealed this feeling, the head of the North’s delegation delivered his leader’s message that South Koreans also benefit from the North’s military-first policy.

Whether the head of the South Korean delegation became speechless at that remark or not, if a serious statement condemning the insane aspects of that claim is not released, the United States and Japan will assume that South Korea is not much different from the North.

If the North’s intention was to separate South Korea from an alliance with the United States and Japan, or to make publicly obvious the South Korean government’s sympathy for the North, it has achieved some of those goals by launching its missiles.

When President Roh, who has remained quiet on the missile incident, condemned Japan for talking about the possibility of a pre-emptive attack on the North, Kim Jong-il must have worn a smug face.

Kim Hong-jip, who claimed that Korea should engage the Japanese, was beaten to death by a public crowd in downtown Seoul. Emperor Gojong had to endure the collapse of the Joseon Dinasty.

Although 120 years have passed since the “Joseon Chaengnyak” was written, Koreans are still confused which country they should stay close to, which country to engage with and which country to reach out to.

The government set its strategy for peaceful co-existence to achieve self-reliance and to become a mediator.

It also kept providing aid to the North, arguing that it should help North Korea to stay afloat in order to avoid a war. These arguments were crushed by the North’s missile launchings.

Seoul seems unable to turn its head when Pyongyang asks for supply of electronic power and rice.

As the United States and Japan are likely to push North Korea further away, labeling it a rogue country, South Korea’s cooperation with the two countries does not seem probable either.

If there is no chance to work with other countries, South Korea will be adrift in the middle of a turbulent sea for a good while, with its flag of self-reliance flapping.

Japan is sly, the United States has adopted a hardline and China and Russian call themselves the big brothers of North Korea.

I wonder what is the “new Korea strategy” that can rescue the vessel named “Roh Moo-hyun”.

by Song Ho-keun 
Professor of Sociology at Seoul National University
Translation by the JoongAng Daily staff

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Korea Telecom in deal DPRK firm

Monday, July 17th, 2006

Korea Times
7/17/2006

KT, South Korea’s leading fixed-line telecom carrier, signed a 360 million won ($380,000) outsourcing contract last week with a North Korean agency to develop six smart software programs.

A Ministry of Unification official yesterday said the deal between KT and Samcholli General Corp. was struck last Thursday as planned (see the front page of The Korea Times, July 13 edition).

“Samcholli agreed to develop six computer programs in such fields as next-generation networks and voice recognition by the end of this year for 360 million won,’’ said the ministry official, who declined to be named.

“Under the contract, KT can refuse to pay the promised money, if Samcholli fails to meet pre-set requirements by the operator,’’ he added.

However, the two sides could not reach an agreement on the pilot run of value-added processing this year with a pair of telecom items _ polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and splitters _ for some reason.

They initially planned to ink a deal on the test run of the value-added processing, under which KT will provide raw materials while Samcholli will crank out final products in return for commission.

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