Archive for the ‘Civil society’ Category

Festive mood grips N. Korea as late founder’s birthday nears

Friday, April 13th, 2007

Yonhap
4/14/2007

A festive mood was pervading North Korea Saturday as the birthday of the communist state’s late founder drew near, with a series of exhibitions and gatherings being held, the North’s state media reported.

Pyongyang has staged art, sports and dance events annually for the birthday of Kim Il-sung, which falls on April 15, and is also known as the Day of Sun. Kim died of heart failure on July 8 1994 at the age of 82, and his son Kim Jong-il took power afterward.

Art troupes from China, Russia, Japan, Kazakhstan, India and Indonesia staged performances in Pyongyang on Saturday, the third day of the country’s April Spring Friendship Art Festival, according to the North’s state media.

A flower exhibition for “Kimilsungia,” an orchid named after Kim, was opened Friday with the North’s and foreign officials in attendance. The exhibition will be run until Thursday.

The festive mood is expected to culminate when the North stages the pro-unification Arirang festival Sunday through May 20. It is one of the North’s major gymnastics events and is popular among both Western and South Korean visitors.

Foreign delegations also have arrived Pyongyang to celebrate Kim’s birthday, the state media reported.

An Indonesian delegation made a visit to the North’s Mansudae Assembly Hall on Friday and conveyed a present to the incumbent North Korean leader via Kim Young-dae, the North’s No. 3 leader. It also toured Mankyongdae, the birthplace of the late founder in a rural village near the North Korean capital.

A Russian delegation also paid homage to a Kim Il-sung statue at the Mansudae Assembly Hall, while a Mongolian delegation paid visits to art exhibition halls and other sites to commemorate the birthday.

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A Mission to Educate the Elite

Friday, April 13th, 2007

Science Magazine
Vol. 316. no. 5822, p. 183
DOI: 10.1126/science.316.5822.183
Richard Stone
4/13/2007

In a dramatic new sign that North Korea is emerging from isolation, the country’s first international university has announced plans to open its doors in Pyongyang this fall.

Pyongyang University of Science and Technology (PUST) will train select North Korean graduate students in a handful of hard-science disciplines, including computer science and engineering. In addition, founders said last week, the campus will anchor a Silicon Valley-like “industrial cluster” intended to generate jobs and revenue.

One of PUST’s central missions is to train future North Korean elite. Another is evangelism. “While the skills to be taught are technical in nature, the spirit underlying this historic venture is unabashedly Christian,” its founding president, Chin Kyung Kim, notes on the university’s Web site (www.pust.net).

The nascent university is getting a warm reception from scientists involved in efforts to engage the Hermit Kingdom. “PUST is a great experiment for North-South relations,” says Dae-Hyun Chung, a physicist who retired from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and now works with Roots of Peace, a California nonprofit that aims to remove landmines from Korea’s demilitarized zone. To Chung, a Christian university is fitting: A century ago, Christianity was so vibrant in northern Korea, he says, that missionaries called Pyongyang “the Jerusalem of the East.”

The idea for PUST came in a surprise overture from North Korea in 2000, a few months after a landmark North-South summit. A decade earlier, Kim had established China’s first foreign university: Yanbian University of Science and Technology, in Yanji, the capital of an autonomous Korean enclave in China’s Jilin Province, just over the border from North Korea. In March 2001, the North Korean government authorized Kim and his backer, the nonprofit Northeast Asia Foundation for Education and Culture (NAFEC), headquartered in Seoul, to establish PUST in southern Pyongyang. It also granted NAFEC the right to appoint Kim as PUST president and hire faculty of any nationality, as well as a contract to use the land for 50 years.

NAFEC broke ground in June 2002 on a 1-million-square-meter plot that had belonged to the People’s Army in Pyongyang’s Nak Lak district, on the bank of the Taedong River. Construction began in earnest in April 2004. That summer, workers–a few of the 800 young soldiers on loan to the project–unearthed part of a bell tower belonging to a 19th century church dedicated to Robert Jermain Thomas, a Welsh Protestant missionary killed aboard his ship on the Taedong in 1866.

NAFEC’s fundraising faltered, however, and construction halted in fall 2004. The group intensified its Monday evening prayers and broadened its money hunt, getting critical assistance from a U.S. ally: the former president of Rice University, Malcolm Gillis, a well-connected friend of the elder George Bush and one of three co-chairs of a committee overseeing PUST’s establishment. “He made a huge difference,” says Chan-Mo Park, president of Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH), another co-chair. South Korea’s unification ministry also quietly handed PUST a $1 million grant–more than it has awarded to any other North-South science cooperation project. This helped the school complete its initial $20 million construction push.

At the outset, PUST will offer master’s and Ph.D. programs in areas including computing, electronics, and agricultural engineering, as well as an MBA program. North Korea’s education ministry will propose qualified students, from which PUST will handpick the inaugural class of 150. It is now seeking 45 faculty members. Gillis and other supporters are continuing to stump for a targeted $150 million endowment to cover PUST operations, which in the first year will cost $4 million. Undergraduate programs will be added later, officials say. PUST, at full strength, aims to have 250 faculty members, 600 grad students, and 2000 undergrads.

PUST hopes to establish research links and exchanges with North Korea’s top institutions and with universities abroad. “It is a very positive sign,” says Stuart Thorson, a political scientist at Syracuse University in New York who leads a computer science collaboration between Syracuse and Kimchaek University of Technology in Pyongyang. “Key to success will be achieving on-the-ground involvement of international faculty in PUST’s teaching and research.”

Some observers remain cautious, suggesting that the North Korean military could use the project to acquire weapons technology or might simply commandeer the campus after completion. A more probable risk is that trouble in the ongoing nuclear talks could cause delays. At the moment, however, signs are auspicious. Park, who plans to teach at PUST after his 4-year POSTECH term ends in August, visited Pyongyang last month as part of a PUST delegation. “The atmosphere was friendly,” he says. “The tension was gone.” The Monday prayer group continues, just in case.

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Ten-day Film Show Opens

Tuesday, April 10th, 2007

KCNA
4/10/2007

A ten-day film show opened Tuesday on the occasion of the Day of the Sun. 

Films dealing with the immortal revolutionary exploits of President Kim Il Sung and personality of Kim Jong Il as a great man will be screened at cinemas and cultural houses in Pyongyang and other parts of the country during the period. 

Among them are documentaries “Honor of Our People Holding the Great Leader in High Esteem”, “They Are Together in the Course of the Great Songun Leadership” and “Under the Guidance of the Great Brilliant Commander” and feature films “Star of Korea” and “Mt. Paektu”.

An opening ceremony took place at the Pyongyang International Cinema House.

Kang Nung Su, minister of Culture, made an opening speech.

At the end of the ceremony the participants watched newly-released documentary “Finding Himself among the People All His Life” (Part 1). 

Similar ceremonies were held in provinces on the same day.

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Koreas agree to repatriate remains of independence fighter

Tuesday, April 10th, 2007

Yonhap
4/10/2007

South and North Korea on Tuesday agreed to dispatch a joint team to China to disinter and repatriate the remains of a prominent independence fighter buried there.

They will also push to organize joint commemorative events for the 100th anniversary of the death of the freedom fighter An Jung-geun in 2010, according to a statement released by the Unification Ministry.

The agreement came at the end of the one-day working-level talks held in the North Korean border city of Kaesong. The talks were resumed after a 13-month hiatus.

“The joint excavation team will be sent to China for about a month beginning in late April. We will work out details for the dispatch later at the truce village of Panmunjom,” the statement said.

An was executed in Dalian in 1910, a year after assassinating Hirobumi Ito, Japan’s first resident-general in Korea, on a railway platform in Harbin. His remains are still buried near a former prison run by Japanese authorities in Dalian.

An’s assassination of Hirobumi was an attempt to prevent Japan’s annexation of Korea, but the Korean Peninsula was formally colonized by Japan from 1910 to 1945.

During the Japanese colonial period, millions of Koreans are believed to have been killed or sent into forced labor, including sexual servitude for the Japanese military.

The South Korean delegation was headed by Lee Byeong-gu, director general of the Ministry of Patriots and Veterans Affairs, while Chon Chong-su, deputy bureau chief of the Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of the Fatherland led the North Korean team.

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20 Questions From North Korea’s Young Football Aces

Monday, April 9th, 2007

Choson Ilbo
4/9/2007

“Why are so many crosses out there?” “Why do most children wear glasses?” “Can I see your mobile phone?” These were just a few of the many questions North Korea’s youth football squad had over the weekend. On the pitch, they are not different from young South Korean players. But moving around by bus or train, they were full of curiosity about the things they saw. Twenty-three members of the under-17 football team have been staying in South Korea for 20 days.

Many questions
The lobby of the Suncheon Royal Tourist Hotel at 9 a.m. on Saturday. The North Korean soccer squad look trim in their black uniform, shoes in hand. They had countless questions for the South Korean officials of the Sports Exchange Association accompanying them. “What is the cross for?”, one asks, and when told asks again, “What is a church?” The answer seemed to baffle them. When an official explained that many young South Koreans wear glasses because they use computers a lot, one team member said, “In North Korea, only few children and scholars who read lots of books wear glasses.”

The players were particularly taken by mobile phones. They wondered how people could make calls without lines and play games or take pictures with their phones. Whenever officials from the association used their mobile phones, the North Korean youngsters gathered to see their phones.

When shown magazine photos and asked to pick the most beautiful among actresses, Jeon Ji-hyun, Song Hye-gyo and Beyonce Knowles, they chose Beyonce Knowles, still insisted they didn’t care.

◆ They enjoyed playing chess and cards when taking a rest.

The squad had three meals in their hotel restaurant and only left the hotel for training for three hours in the morning and afternoon. In the hotel, they spent most of the rest of their time playing Chinese card games and chess. They did not watch TV except football games. When the team was moving to Suncheon by bus, one player started reading a memoir by former North Korean leader Kim Il-sung, and others asked to borrow it.

Ri Chan-myong, the head of the North Korean youth squad, and the other eight North Korean officials accompanying them drank together with South Korean officials of the sports exchange association. The North Korean officials drank a lot, finishing off 200 bottles of soju or Korean distilled liquor during their 11 days in Jeju.

◆ “I miss my parents”

Five members got wounds in the middle of training. Those players sometimes said, “I miss my parents.” North Korean soccer players, who did not talk much when they first arrived in Jeju, began talking on the third days. At first, North Korean soccer squad ate only Kimbab(rice rolled in dried laver) and Kimchi, now they eat sushi, sliced raw fish, cake and fruits such as banana, apple and pineapple. North Korean soccer squad will move to Seoul on April twelfth and depart for North Korea on twentieth after having a friendly match on fourteenth. Kim Kyung-sung, chief executive member of the South and North Korean Sports Exchange Association, said, “North Korean soccer team is considering going out before they leave but nothing is confirmed.”

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Anniversary of Chondoism Observed

Monday, April 9th, 2007

KCNA
4/5/2007

The “Heaven Day Ceremony” was held in Pyongyang Thursday to commemorate the 147th anniversary of the foundation of Chondoism.

Present there were Chairwoman Ryu Mi Yong, Advisor O Ik Je and officials of the Korean Chondoist Church Central Guidance Committee and Chondoists in Pyongyang.

Vice-chairman of the committee said in his speech at the ceremony that Chondoism, the indigenous religion of the Korean nation, enunciated such patriotic ideas as “Broad salvation of the people,” “Paradise,” “Rejection of West and Japan” and “Promotion of the National Interests and Welfare of the People” after its foundation and has since worked hard to materialize them for the past nearly one and half centuries.

It is the long-standing desire and tradition of Chondoism, he added.

Noting that it is important to glorify the June 15 era of reunification by attaching importance to the nation, defending peace and achieving unity in order to accomplish the historic cause of national reunification, the cause of national historical significance, he said to do so is the only way of realizing the desire of Chondoism and means genuine patriotism.

The participants prayed for the withdrawal of the U.S. forces from south Korea and the earliest possible achievement of national reunification so that the desire of Chondoism can come true.

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Game of their Lives…the story continues…

Monday, April 9th, 2007

An old shirt stirs memories
Joong Ang Daily
Jeong Young-jae

Li Chan-myong, 62, the director of the North Korean youth soccer team, had a big surprise last week when he saw a uniform that a North Korean soccer player wore during the 1966 World Cup games in England.

“Right, this is right. Clearly it is the uniform we wore,” Li said, feeling the cloth. “There are none in the North and I didn’t expect to see one here in the South.”

The North Korean youth team has been training here, in preparation for the FIFA U-17 World Championship 2007 that will be held in South Korea.

Li met Lee Jae-hyoung, 45, a collector of soccer memorabilia, last Tuesday at the Hotel Castle in Suwon, where the youth players were staying.

Li was the goalkeeper for the North Korean team during the 1966 England World Cup, in which the team reached the quarterfinal.

Lee purchased the uniform in 2004, in Britain. The uniform, bearing the No. 10, was worn by striker Kang Yong-un. It was a remarkable experience for Lee to see a soccer shirt that had last been in the possession of one of his teammates 41 years ago.

Li said there are no uniforms in North Korea that had been worn by team members. “The British were fascinated by North Korean players,” he said. “They took all of our uniforms, shoes and socks.”

At the time Li was 165 centimeters tall (five feet five inches) and thus was taller than most other North Korean players, whose average height was 162 centimeters.

The North Korean team fought and beat the Italian team, whose players were much taller. It was one of the most shocking upsets in World Cup history.

“I trained myself to jump higher until I was exhausted and could barely move, so I would be strong enough to overcome our disadvantages,” said Li, recalling the past. “I thought, if I missed the ball, I would embarrass the entire North Korean nation.”

The North Korean team beat Italy 1-0 in Middlesborough, during the last game of group four on July 19, 1966. North Korea became the first Asian country to reach the quarter-finals of the World Cup.

In the quarterfinal, North Korea scored the first three goals against Portugal, but could not stop Eusebio da Silva Ferreira from scoring more. North Korea lost to Portugal 5-3.

“Eusebio’s shooting was the strongest I have ever seen,” Li said. “Portugal was down by three goals by the 24th minute of the first half, and the Portuguese players were upset. I was dizzy because they were driving us so hard.”

Li was a member of the North Korean national team between 1964 and 1975, but he has never played against a South Korean team.

For the qualifying rounds of the 1966 competition South Korea did not participate, because North Korea had a much stronger team.

Lee was given the title “people’s hero” in North Korea. He was the coach for the North Korean team during the 1976 Montreal Olympic Games and led the team to the quarterfinal.

The North Korean youth team began training on March 24 on Jeju Island and has been touring South Korean cities, including Suwon and Changwon, for the last 20 days.

“We have been treated well here and it is very comfortable,” he said. “I hope there will be more soccer-related exchanges between North and South Korea.”

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Cash delivered to North for video reunions

Sunday, April 8th, 2007

Joong Ang Daily
Lee Young-jong and Ser Myo-ja
4/7/2007

South Korea hand-delivered $400,000 in cash to North Korea yesterday for Pyongyang’s purchase of video communication equipment. The North will spend the money to buy computers and display screens to reunite families separated for more than a half century by the demilitarized zones through video conference calls.

Two South Korean Red Cross officials boarded a cargo ship in Incheon for Nampo of North Korea Thursday morning. They carried a suitcase containing 40 bundles of one hundred, $100-dollar bills. The ship arrived in North Korea yesterday morning.

According to Red Cross officials, the cash was handed over to their North Korean counterparts at the port. “We told the North Koreans to inform us of the specific spending of the money,” an official was quoted as saying, adding that he received a receipt from the North Koreans for the cash.

The two Koreas’ Red Cross societies agreed last year that the South will fund the equipment for high-tech reunions and the promise was reaffirmed in March. South Korea was unable to provide equipment directly to the North because of U.S. regulations banning the export of dual-use goods to the North. Under the U.S. export administration regulations, strategic goods that include more than 10 percent of U.S.-made components or technology are banned for export to state sponsors of terrorism.

The money was from the inter-Korean cooperation fund. The Unification Ministry wired it to the South Korean Red Cross bank account and informed the Bank of Korea about taking the large sum of foreign currency out of the country. The money had to be hand-delivered because North Korea has had trouble accessing the international financial system since its funds were frozen at the Banco Delta Asia.

“It is sad that the North Koreans do not have a proper bank account that we can wire money to,” a Roh administration official said. “It shows the unfortunate reality of North Korea as an outsider of the international community.”

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Marathon Race for Mangyongdae Cup Held

Sunday, April 8th, 2007

KCNA
4/8/2007

The 20th International Marathon Race for Mangyongdae Cup was held here on the occasion of the Day of the Sun.

Its opening ceremony was held at Kim Il Sung Stadium Sunday.

The ceremony was attended by Kim Jung Rin, secretary of the Central Committee of the Workers’ Party of Korea, Tong Jong Ho, minister of Construction and Building-Materials Industries who is chairman of the DPRK Marathon Association, Pak Kwan O, chairman of the Pyongyang City People’s Committee, officials concerned, working people in the city, sports fans, foreign guests and overseas Koreans.

Marathoners of Namibia, Russia, Malaysia, Botswana, Switzerland, Ethiopia, China, Zimbabwe, Kenya, Poland and the DPRK competed at the race.

Pak Song Chol and Jong Yong Ok of the DPRK came first at the men’s and women’s race.

N. Korea holds int’l marathon to celebrate late leader’s birthday
Yonhap

4/8/2007

North Korea hosted an international marathon Sunday as part of the early events commemorating the birthday of the country’s late founder, Kim Il-sung, the North’s state media reported.

Kim died of heart failure in 1994 at age 82, but his birthday, dubbed “The Day of Sun,” is still celebrated as one of the most important holidays in North Korea, together with the birthday of his son, the current leader Kim Jong-il.

The 20th International Marathon Race for Mangyongdae Cup, named after the birthplace of Kim Il-sung, drew marathoners from Namibia, Russia, Malaysia, Botswana, Switzerland, Ethiopia, China, Zimbabwe, Kenya and Poland, according to the North’s Korean Central News Agency, monitored in Seoul.

North Korea’s Pak Song-chol and Jong Yong-ok clinched first place in the men’s and women’s races at the Kim Il-sung Stadium in Pyongyang, it said.

South Korean marathoners earlier left for North Korea to take part in the race, but the North Korean news agency didn’t report their names.

Kim’s birthday falls on April 15, and in past years, the North has usually begun drumming up a festive mood by holding art festivals, sports activities and dance galas one or two weeks before his actual birthday.

The two Kims hold god-like status in the North, as all North Koreans are required to wear lapel pins with their images and hang their portraits side-by-side on the walls of their homes.

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Kaeseong’s N.K. workers have warmed up to S.K. bosses

Friday, April 6th, 2007

Hankyoreh
4/6/2007

At first reclusive, North’s workers are smiling, eating together with Southern counterparts

Two years after the Gaeseong (Kaesong) Industrial Complex began operations, the attitude of North Korean workers toward their South Korean employers has significantly changed for the better, according to heads of South Korean plants located in the joint Korean industrial park.

Ra Sang-jin, 66, the plant chief of Daehwa Fuel Pump, which started operations at Gaeseong in June 2005, said North Korean workers’ attitude toward their South Korean employers has changed. When Ra came to Gaeseong, North Koreans disliked South Korean employees coming to restaurants for the Northern workers, for at Gaeseong, the restaurants are divided along the lines of ’North’ and ’South,’ as the North Korean workers were at first reluctant to dine with Southerners. Currently, however, Ra frequently visits North Korean restaurants and is asked by North Korean workers to join in a a meal.

“It seemed to take seven to eight months to remove the wall,” Ra said. North Korean workers are also adapting to the lifestyle at Gaeseong at a faster pace than before. “Recently, some North Korean workers are smiling after only three or four months,” Ra said.

North Korean workers’ reclusive habits – having not met any South Koreans before – have changed, as well. Hwang U-seung, 46, the plant chief of Shinwon, said, “When I meet a North Korean worker on the street and ask which company she is working for, she answers me. That was impossible in the early days [of the Gaeseong complex],” Hwang said. Baek Yeong-ho, 59, the plant chief of Pyeonghwa Shoes, “In early days, the North Korean workers didn’t go to the bathroom alone,” like some sort of old-fashioned social habit. “But they do now. They also don’t step aside when South Koreans are passing.”

Some Korean cowerkers are picking and choosing from the language of the other country, as the language in the North and South has been rendered different after more than 50 years of separation. For example, some South Korean workers call a toilet ‘wisaengsil,’ the North Korean term, and Some North Korean workers call the toilet ‘hwajangsil,’ the South Korean term.

Meanwhile, at first only North Koreans used their common phrase, “Ileopseupnida,” which to them means “no problem” but has a slightly rude meaning in South Korea, akin to “I don’t care.” Now, Northerners and Southerners alike use the phrase. A South Korean who has been working alongside North Koreans at Gaeseong said that “my family in South Korea sometimes tells me my accent has become a little strange.”

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