Archive for the ‘Civil society’ Category

One Ton of Coals Let Them Rest at Home

Sunday, March 18th, 2007

Daily NK
Park Choel Yong
3/18/2007

Rigorous Military Training is Killing North Korean Students
Buying food from outside the camps is, however, the privilege only for the wealthy students. Students who came from privileged families often are excluded from the military trainings for one or two months. The training is notorious for hardness, and hence students from the high authorities offer bribes with money or goods to military officers in return for taking rests at home.

For instance, if one ton of coals were offered to a training camp, a student can rest for a month; a box of cigarette, the “Cat” which costs 1,500 won (approx. US$4.8), is worth a day’s break.

With wealthy students out of training, the rest of students suffer from more than double the hardness. Often, poor students end up patrolling for 8 to 10 hours during national holidays and New Year’s Day.

Girl students in the training have their hair cut shortly and cannot keep private things; even cosmetics are not allowed. Therefore, wealthy girl students take their time at home with bribery.

Even during the training period, the students must take lectures. The basic subjects taught during the training are “The Unification History of the Fatherland” and “History of the Invasion of Japanese Imperialism,” and also includes a few majors.

The lectures, however, are often cut off to make room for the farm supporting activity and national performances.

According to the educational schedules, the college lasts four years, not including the training period; however, the time for lectures generally take only two of those years.

In spring and fall, students take part in the farm supporting activity to transplant rice for 40 days in spring and to harvest for 30 to 40 days during fall. Additionally, students from nationally renowned universities are often brought to various national performances. For six to eight months, students do not take lectures in order to practice military parades for Kim Jong Il’s birthday on the 16th of February and Kim Il Sung’s birthday on the 15th of April.

For torchlight processions, students take practices for two to three months. The torchlight processions are held usually in the Foundation Day of the State and the North Korean Workers’ Party, with more than ten thousand university students participating in the event. Students also practice dancing for another two to three months for students’ dancing party at the Kim Il Sung Plaza, which is held during the Chinese New Years’ Day.

That is not all, however. Working in the subsidiary farms that belong to the universities takes students a few months. Students who make the survey on the revolutionary historic spots and the Korean War landmarks are also exempt from the lectures for a few months.

In the end of a semester, reducing the day for lectures is not a special thing. The students do take lectures more intensively and even on Sundays to remedy this as necessary.

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Cause of Barren Mountains: Imperialism-Natural Disaster-Officers

Friday, March 16th, 2007

Daily NK
Han Young Jin
3/16/2007

“I ordered trees to be planted. Why are the mountains bare!”

North Korean authorities released a publication on the 6th which summarized that, “We must work hard in forestry in order to make our country beautiful.” This order was made by Kim Jong Il on March 6th 2002 to authorities, the state, military and the elite. 5 years on, authorities now honor and remember the words spoken by the dear leader through a propagandist publication that is published whenever the state deems necessary. The content of this publication was also revealed on the official North Korean website “Uriminzokkiri (amongst our nation).”

The document usually contains the comprehensive ideologies and theories made by Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il that need to be passed on to the people.

Following are a few of the decrees found in the publications.

“The nation is experiencing economic difficulty due to coupling natural disasters and imperialists who are trying to isolate us. Trees are growing sporadically in the hills and mountain regions. The mountains are also becoming barren….”

“For the past few years, I have been telling you to work hard afforestation and have encouraged you at every opportunity.”

“However, an forestation has not met the criteria of authorities and is not going according to plan.”

Kim Jong Il’s Analysis

What Kim Jong Il is trying to say is that, “The reason afforestation is not working is because of the people’s reckless slash-and-burn cultivation, as well as the inefficiency of officers unable to block it.”

After the food crisis in ’95, people uprooted vines and trees to suffice their underfed diets, as well as cultivating illegal farms for food. Further, to save themselves from freezing to death, people used trees as firewood.

At the time, people were desolate, battling between life and death. If, however, these people were controlled and prohibited from such actions at the time, defectors say that many of those people would not be alive today.

The destruction of mountains Kim Jong Il argues resulted from cunning imperialists isolating North Korea and the severe natural disasters that continued to plague the country. Yet, there is no evidence to support this claim.

The international community did not enforce pressure to the extent that North Korea could not resolve its problem of firewood. Rather, after the 1994 Geneva Agreement, 50,000 tons of fuel was provided annually. Despite this, Kim Jong Il always redirects the responsibility of lack of energy on the international community and the failure of public welfare on the U.S.

Even evidence to support that natural disasters caused a downfall to the economy has become obscure. It is true that North Korea was hit with drought and flood during 1995~1997, however there has not been any major natural disasters since this time and in 2002 when these decrees were first made. Instead, North Korea should have re-planted much of the mountain trees, though reality is not the case. Rather, Kim Jong Il is blaming the failure of national construction and forestation on mother nature.

Without resolving the food crisis, the mountains will remain bare

Every year, for about a month during the spring (early March~April) and fall (early Nov~Dec) seasons, North Korea enters a time of national construction where the rivers and waterways are cleared and trees planted. This national construction first began in March 1996.

North Korea has aimed to plant a billion trees and has been planting this number of trees every year. Following 10 years of national construction, what is the current state of North Korea?

If national construction had worked as planned, North Korea’s mountains should be dense in trees. However, the cause of North Korea’s mountains being so bare is evidence that the food crisis has not yet been solved.

North Korean authorities ordered citizens that they had the right to eat the tree saplings and cereals as it had been cultivated on the mountains which were illegal grounds. On the other hand, the people are continuously angry as trees are overtaking the land in which their grains should be planted. As a result, whenever a tree has grown a certain height, people uproot the trees and plant a smaller sapling in its place. In the end, though the idea of planting trees has been fulfilled, the mountains are still barren.

Ultimately, it seems that North Korea’s empty mountains will continue until the food issue is resolved.

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Dining with the Dear Leader

Thursday, March 15th, 2007

Asia Times
Bertil Lintner
3/15/2007

Video of the Restaurant on Youtube: 1, 2, 3

Its undoubtedly the liveliest and most popular Korean restaurant in town. Packed for lunch and dinner, the Pyongyang Restaurant is famous not only for its cold noodles and barbecue served with kim chi, but also for its talented wait staff, which when not serving are dancing to traditional Korean tunes played on violins and electric piano.

But the Pyongyang Restaurant in Cambodia’s capital Phnom Penh is no ordinary Korean eatery. For one, it’s owned and run by the North Korean government, a capitalist enterprise that sends its profits directly to state coffers in Pyongyang. As with most other upper-crust restaurants in Phnom Penh, the meals have to be paid for in US dollars, not in riel, as the local currency is not convertible outside Cambodia.

When the international community imposed economic sanctions against North Korea after its nuclear tests last October, the Pyongyang authorities were able to continue to run a string of small-scale companies and businesses across the region that kept foreign-currency earnings flowing back home. Restaurants such as the Pyongyang Restaurant in Cambodia have in no small way helped keep the North Korean government afloat during tough diplomatic times.

And the establishments’ often booming business are proving North Koreans are no slouches as capitalists. Government-backed North Korean eateries are mushrooming across the region. For years there have been various North Korean-themed restaurants in Beijing, Shanghai and other Chinese cities. But the first was opened in Southeast Asia only in 2002 in the Cambodian town of Siem Reap, a popular tourist destination because of its proximity to the Angkor Wat temple complex.

It became an instant success – especially with the thousands of South Korean tourists who flock to see the ancient Angkor ruins every year – so successful, indeed, that Pyongyang decided to open a second venue in Phnom Penh in December 2003. Most of the clientele there are South Korean businessmen who work in Cambodia as well as a smattering of homesick South Korean tourists who drool over the authentic Korean eats. And while severe food shortages still plague North Korea itself, the fare in Phnom Penh is good and plentiful.

The choice of Cambodia for this North Korean capitalist experiment was, of course, no coincidence. Norodom Sihanouk, the country’s erstwhile strongman – first as king, then as prince, later as leader in exile and finally king again from September 1993 until his abdication in October 2004 – is a longtime close friend of North Korea.

He met the late North Korean leader Kim Il-sung in 1961 at a Non-Aligned Movement meeting in Belgrade. Four years later, Sihanouk was invited to visit Pyongyang, and a personal bond developed between the two leaders. When Sihanouk was ousted by his own military in a coup in March 1970, he was immediately offered sanctuary in North Korea.

Sihanouk’s government-in-exile, which included senior Khmer Rouge cadres, was in Beijing. But by 1974, Kim Il-sung had built a special private getaway expressly for Sihanouk about an hour’s drive north of Pyongyang. A battalion of North Korean troops worked full-time for nearly a year on the palatial residence and, when it was finally finished, only specially selected guards were allowed anywhere near Sihanouk’s 60-room home away from home. Overlooking scenic Chhang Sou On Lake and surrounded by mountains, the Korean-style building even included its own indoor movie theater. Like the “Great Leader”, Kim Il-sung, and his son, “Dear Leader” Kim Jong-il, Sihanouk loved to watch movies.

Sihanouk returned to Cambodia after the government of Lon Nol was overthrown in April 1975 and Sihanouk’s communist allies, the Khmer Rouge, came to power. But when the Khmer Rouge put him under virtual house arrest in the royal palace in Phnom Penh, from where he narrowly managed to escape when the Vietnamese invaded in January 1979, Sihanouk was flown out on a Chinese plane and returned to his grand North Korean residence.

When Sihanouk triumphantly returned to Phnom Penh in 1991, he came with North Korean escorts, both as personal bodyguards and as diplomats, who took up residence in a huge new embassy built for them near the Independence Monument in downtown Phnom Penh. And in 1993, when Sihanouk was officially reinstalled as the king of Cambodia, he surrounded himself in the civil-war-torn country with people he knew he could trust – North Korean bodyguards.

So it is not surprising that hanging prominently on the wall at Phnom Penh’s Pyongyang Restaurant is a picture of Sihanouk, his wife Monique and their son King Norodom Sihamoni. According to locals familiar with the restaurant’s opening, the Cambodian royal family was among the first guests to dine there.

Business opportunities are still fairly limited in Cambodia, so last year the North Koreans opened an even bigger restaurant in neighboring Thailand. Its first day of operation was auspiciously chosen as August 15, coinciding with the anniversary of Japan’s surrender in World War II. The Bangkok branch of the Pyongyang Restaurant is tucked away down a side alley in the city’s gritty Pattanakarn suburb, far from areas Westerners usually frequent but very near the North Korean Embassy.

Inside, the walls are decorated with paintings of Kim Il-sung’s alleged birthplace, a peasant hut in Mangyongdae near Pyongyang. An all-women’s band, dressed in traditional Korean dresses known as hambok and in the North, chima jogoiri in the South and, of course, with little Kim Il-sung badges on their blouses, plays upbeat music on electric guitars, drums and electric piano.

It’s not exactly a tourist attraction, but it’s a colorful backdrop for businessmen and diplomats to cut deals or exchange the information that has in recent years helped to make Thailand into North Korea’s third-largest global trading partner after nearby China and South Korea. There are no signs of economic sanctions or deprivation here, but rather, perhaps, a tantalizing glimpse of a one day more prosperous and joyful North Korea.

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Koreas to Resume Family Reunions

Thursday, March 15th, 2007

Korea Times
Lee Jin-woo
3/15/2007

South and North Korea on Thursday agreed to resume the reunions of families separated since the Korean War by the two sides’ heavily fortified border, this May, Seoul’s Red Cross said.

After ending a two-day working-level inter-Korean meeting in Kaesong, the Korean National Red Cross (KNRC) in Seoul announced each side will have 100 separated family members meet their long-lost relatives at Mt. Kumgang, a scenic resort, in North Korea between May 9 and 14.

The two sides confirmed the date and other details about the reunions over the telephone and through liaison officials at the truce village of Panmunjom, it said.

They will exchange the whereabouts of the people next month and will disclose the final list of participants on April 27, it said.

The agreement came about two weeks after the 20th inter-Korean ministerial talks in Pyongyang. During the four-day meeting, the two Koreas agreed to resume face-to-face family reunions in early May, but did not set a date.

Since the historic inter-Korean summit in June 2000, South and North Korea have held 14 rounds of face-to-face family reunions.

At the Kaesong meeting, both sides failed to narrow differences on a trial run of cross-border trains, said Yang Chang-seok, spokesman of the Ministry of Unification.

“There were differences on when to start the joint cooperation project with the light industry and natural underground resources. Both sides agreed to continue the dialogue in the near future,’’ he said.

During the Cabinet talks earlier this month, Seoul and Pyongyang also agreed to carry out the test-run in the first half of this year although no exact schedule was set.

Last May, Pyongyang unilaterally notified Seoul that it would postpone the test-run just a day before the scheduled date, May 25, under apparent pressure from its hard-line military.

The Stalinist state cited two reasons for canceling the run _ the lack of security guarantees on both sides and the “extremely confrontational” climate in the South.

The aborted test-runs also nullified an economic accord under which South Korea was supposed to provide raw materials in exchange for access to the North’s minerals deposits.

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US cartoons ‘made in North Korea’

Wednesday, March 14th, 2007

Asia Times
Sunny Lee
3/14/2007

North Korea is well known for its nuclear ambitions. But it is relatively little-known fact that the country is a hidden outsourcing mecca for the international animation industry, producing such well-known movies as The Lion King.

Even while North Korea has been under US-led sanctions that include a ban on commercial trade, several US animated films have allegedly been outsourced to the country, according to Beijing-based businessman Jing Kim, who says he was involved with American animation producer Nelson Shin’s filmmaking business in the Stalinist pariah state.

Shin, a 67-year-old Korean-born American, is best known for the television cartoon series The Simpsons, which was actually drawn in Seoul by a team of animators led by him since its premiere in 1989.

Shin and Kim first met in Singapore in 1999 at an international animation film fair, where Kim led the North Korean delegation. There, Shin asked Kim to help him to connect with the North Korean animation industry, Kim said.

China-born Kim, 47, has been doing business with North Korea for nearly 20 years and owns a restaurant in Pyongyang. Through his company in Singapore, where he holds a resident permit, Kim used to sell North Korean products to South Korea during a period when direct commerce between the two ideologically opposed neighbors was not possible.

After seven years of cooperation with North Korea’s state-owned SEK Studio, employing as many as 500 North Korean animators out of its staff of 1,500, and 18 visits to the country, Shin finally completed Empress Chung in 2005, a famous Korean folk tale about a daughter who sacrifices herself to a sea monster to restore her blind father’s eyesight. It was the first cartoon jointly produced by the two Koreas.

Apparently, however, according to Kim, Empress Chung was not the only film made by North Korean cartoonists. Shin, who heads Seoul-based AKOM Production, a unit of KOAA Film in Los Angeles, allegedly outsourced to North Korea part of the animation contracts that his firm had originally received from the United States.

On one occasion, for example, North Korean animators employed by Shin came to Beijing from Pyongyang to work exclusively on several US animation movies, staying there for months, according to Kim.

When asked whether any of the movies were actually broadcast in the US, Kim said, “Oh, a lot, a lot. The ones that I participated in were as many as seven.”

But Kim declined to name the US films, citing the sanctions imposed on North Korea. “If the names of the US companies are known, they will be screwed,” said Kim.

Kim said “many people will be hurt” if he went into details, adding, “We worked very carefully.”

When asked whether the US film companies involved actually knew that their cartoons had been made by North Koreans, Kim said: “They don’t want to know. If they knew, it wouldn’t be fun. After they make contracts with the South Koreans, they just assume that it is made there. They only care about the delivery [of the products] and their quality. It is too much for them to ask where they were actually made. We don’t have the obligation to tell them, either. The only thing they claim is the copyright.”

However, Nelson Shin denied the allegation. “There were no American cartoon movies made in North Korea,” Shin said from Seoul. “As far as I know, there were some Italian and French movies made in North Korea. But I am not aware of any American cartoons made in North Korea.”

Shin also noted the technical difference of production origination between “made in” and “made by”. He took the example of The Lion King. “It’s a Disney film. However, if Disney Europe, not the Disney company in the US, gave North Korea the production order, then it is not a deal placed by an ‘American’ company.”

Kim in Beijing, however, said his cooperation with Shin led them to employ eight North Korean animators in 2005 to come to Beijing, where the North Koreans stayed for six months, from June 10 to November 18. That was followed by a second group of North Korean animators, who came to Beijing and stayed for much of 2006, returning to Pyongyang on December 27-28, according to Kim.

When it was noted that Kim mentioned all these dates without referring to any written memo, he tersely said: “That’s how I make my living.”

Kim said he didn’t pay the North Korean artists in person for their work. Rather, he wired US$170,000 to North Korea directly for their 2006 assignments.

Kim said most North Korean animators are highly educated, including graduates from the prestigious Pyongyang College of Arts.

Animation involves the grueling job of grinding out tens of thousands of drawings for a single 22-minute cartoon. “They worked without complaint,” Kim said, while also praising the quality of their work. He said hiring North Korean artists meant that the usual company benefits, such as medical insurance, welfare and overtime, did not need to be provided.

“It’s a system that is doable,” Kim said.

North Korea’s cartoon industry has become quite sophisticated as a result of its cooperation with France and Italy in their animation projects since 1983. North Korea’s animation skills now rank among the world’s best, experts say.

“They are highly talented. That’s something I can say,” said Shin in Seoul.

South Korea itself was once the largest supplier of television animation in the world during its peak in the 1990s, churning out more than 1,000 half-hour episodes. However, its status has since declined with the rise of labor costs there, pushing animation companies to find alternatives such as India, the Philippines and North Korea. The Chronicles of Narnia, for example, used Indian animators for some characters. It’s unclear how much North Korea contributes to the world animation market today.

Meanwhile, when asked about the similarity of cartoon characters between Empress Chung and the ones seen in recent US animation movies, Shin said, “It’s inconvenient to talk about it on the phone.”

However, Shin said he is working on a new joint North-South Korea animation movie called Goguryeo, the title a reference to an ancient Korean kingdom that existed until AD 68. He expects it will take about two years to complete.

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South will give money directly to North Korea

Sunday, March 11th, 2007

Update: the money went missing.

South Korea criticizes North Korea for failing to disclose how aid was used
Herald Tribune
2/11/2008
 

South will give money directly to North Korea
Joong Ang Daily

Lee Young-jong and Ser Myo-ja
3/12/2007

Although South Korea does not allow cash to be given directly to North Korea, it made a deal of its own.

The two countries announced Saturday that Seoul would give Pyongyang cash to buy video conference equipment. A South Korean official said yesterday the amount will be $400,000.

North Korea will use the money to set up video conference calls between families separated during the Korean War, according to a joint statement issued Saturday by the two countries.

The South Korean government has strictly banned humanitarian groups ― as well as all residents ― from giving cash to the North due to concerns the money could be spent for other purposes.

“We decided to assist the North to smoothly resolve the separated family issue,” the official said, adding that the government will thoroughly monitor the spending of the money and the use of the equipment.

The cash payment agreement was first made at a Red Cross meeting in June 2006, but never publicly announced. The money was not exchanged because North Korea conducted a missile test the next month, temporarily freezing inter-Korean relations.

After progress in the recent six-party talks designed to make North Korea nuclear-free, South Korean Red Cross officials pledged again on Saturday at a meeting at a Mount Kumgang resort to give Pyongyang the money, the official said on condition of anonymity.

According to the joint statement, the two Koreas agreed that video conference call reunions will be expanded. The two Koreas also agreed a video conference call reunion center will be built in Pyongyang, separately from the reunion center under construction at Mount Kumgang, and that Seoul will provide construction material and equipment. The material and money will be released at the end of March, the agreement said.

Neither the joint statement nor the press release specified the amount of money, but the Seoul official said it will be $400,000. The construction material to be provided to the North is worth another $3.5 million, he said.

The South Korean government was unable to give the video conference call equipment, such as liquid crystal display monitors and computers, directly to the North because of United States regulations banning the export of dual-use goods to North Korea. Under the United States export administration regulations, strategic goods that include more than 10 percent of United States-made components or technology, are banned for export to state sponsors of terrorism, which include North Korea.

According to the official, South Korea advised the North to purchase the items from China with the cash. Washington could make an exception to the export ban, presumably at Seoul’s request, but it would take time to do so.

In addition to the cash, the $3.5 million worth of goods, such as trucks, construction materials, air conditioners, heaters and cables, will be provided to build a video conference call center in Pyongyang.

At the Red Cross talks, the North also agreed to resume the construction of the reunion center on Mount Kumgang on March 21. The two Koreas began the construction in August 2005, but the work stalled last July. The buildings are about 30 percent complete.

Last week’s Red Cross meeting was scheduled for only one day, for about two hours. Due to the North’s persistent demands for cash and materials, the talks went on for a second day, the government official said.

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Koreas to hold Red Cross talks to resume construction of family reunion center

Thursday, March 8th, 2007

Yonhap
3/8/2007

Red cross officials from South and North Korea are to meet this week on resuming the construction of a family reunion center on the North’s scenic mountain bordering the South along the east coast, South Korean officials said.

The one-day meeting, slated to be held at the North’s Mount Geumgang resort on Friday, will also address the next family reunions via video link to be held on March 27-29.

Last week, the two Koreas agreed to resume reunion events for families separated by the border since the end of the Korean War. The next face-to-face family reunions will be resumed in early May.

Shortly after the North conducted its missile tests in July, the South suspended food and fertilizer aid. In retaliation, the communist nation immediately suspended inter-Korean talks, family reunions and the construction of the family reunion center.

“The construction has been put on hold for about eight months, so we will have to resume construction after checking whether there are technical problems. The construction will likely be completed next year, far later than the originally scheduled April of this year,” a South Korean Red Cross official said on condition of anonymity.

High on the agenda will be discussions on when to resume construction, how to check the facilities needed for construction, and how to provide supplies and dispatch engineers, the official said. The South Korean delegation will be headed by Hwang Jeong-ju, while Pak Yong-il will lead the North Korean team.

The two sides started the construction at a village near the scenic mountain resort in August 2005. The envisioned 12-story building will house two reunion halls and serve as the venue for family reunion events.

The two Koreas have held 14 rounds of family reunions. More than 90,000 people from South Korea alone have remained separated from their loved ones since the end of the 1950-53 Korean War.

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Defector’s dating service unites North women with South men

Monday, March 5th, 2007

Joong Ang Daily
Choi Hyun-jung
3/5/2007

Kang Hak-shil left a husband and a child in North Korea when she defected here in 2002. Completely alone, she hoped to remarry to settle into Korean society.

However, the men she met often lied about themselves, she said, some pretending to be single when they were married. A friend finally introduced her to her husband, whom she married in 2005. She decided to help North Korean women like her.

In July 2006, she established the Korean Council of Human Rights Solidarity for Women Out of North Korea. Finding many female defectors, she also established a matchmaking agency.

She named it Nam-nam-buk-nyeo, ― South man, North woman ― which is an old Korean saying claiming that men from the South are good-looking and women from the North are beautiful.

The company provides services pro bono for more than 500 North Korean women, but male patrons have to pay 1.3 million won ($1,390) when they find a match.

She strictly checks the identification of the men before accepting them as members because, she said, they often lie. Therefore, in order to be considered for membership, men need to bring ― among other things ― personal identification papers, family registration papers and proof of education and employment.

“I think the fundamental idea behind this company is good,” said Park Jung-ran, of the Seoul National University Institute for Unification Studies.

“But it is likely that the matches will fall apart if South Korean men have the wrong idea about North Korean women, and vice versa. Participants must try to look beyond stereotypes and strive for a true understanding of one another.”

According to Ms. Kang, most of the men who join the service are over the age of 30. They work in various fields and come from various backgrounds. “The men are often not good enough for our women,” she said, smiling. “These ladies are domestic, pretty and ready for marriage. Sometimes the men are not as nice.”

Currently, there are 30 male members, and 20 successful matches have been made.

One such couple is Park Su-yong and Hong Seung-woo, both 39. Park Su-yong crossed over into South Korea from Cheongjin, North Korea, via China with her father almost five years ago. At first she settled in Ulsan and worked at a noodle shop. She met two or three men, one of whom hid the fact that he was divorced.

She had known Ms. Kang from her days in Hanawon, the government-run rehabilitation facility all defectors go through before being released to South Korean society. When she learned Ms. Kang was running a matchmaking company, she sought out her help. She met her husband, Hong Seung-woo, through Nam-nam-buk-nyeo.

The couple dated just three times before tying the knot two times, once in October at a small ceremony with family members, and again in December at a joint wedding with other defector couples.

“Neither of us is that young, so there were none of the love games that you normally have to go through. We knew each other’s objectives clearly enough.” Mr. Hong said.

Mr. Hong, who works as a bus driver and can speak Chinese, had initially thought about marrying a Korean-Chinese woman or taking a foreign wife. When a friend introduced him to the matchmaking company last year, he was delighted with the results. He had divorced his wife in 2004 and lived with his two sons, aged 7 and 9, and his parents before meeting Ms. Park. The couple now lives in a small apartment complex in Incheon.

Although the boys acknowledge Ms. Park as their stepmother, they do not know she is from North Korea. The couple feels the boys are not yet ready to handle the truth. They will tell them when they are ready. When Ms. Park occasionally lets slip a North Korean word, the kids assume it’s because she’s a foreigner.

“She is very pure of heart, and she’s very domestic, unlike many South Korean women these days,” Mr. Hong said of his wife. He said she was the first North Korean person he had ever met. People he knew were equally fascinated with the nationality of his new wife. “My friends want to know what she’s like. I teach them a new North Korean phrase every day; they love it.”

Ms. Park emphasizes that when North Korean women defect, most are all alone. “Because we are in South Korea, it’s natural for us to look for a South Korean husband,” said Ms. Park. “Marriage has helped me adjust into Korean society,” she said.

The two do not plan to have any more children, and said they are happy. “We have no reason to fight,” Mr. Hong said.

When Ms. Kang’s younger sister crossed over into South Korea, she also got married through the company. “No one wants to be alone when they cross over. They are all looking to settle into society and the best way is through marriage,” she said.

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S. Korea Refuses North’s Request for Restored Aid

Saturday, March 3rd, 2007

washington Post
3/3/2007

South Korea on Friday added pressure on North Korea to comply with an international disarmament agreement, refusing the impoverished nation’s demand to restore full aid shipments until after its main nuclear reactor is shut down.

At the first high-level talks between the two Koreas since the North’s underground nuclear test in October, the communist nation “agreed to make joint efforts for a smooth implementation” of its pledge last month to take initial steps toward dismantling its atomic program, according to a final statement.

The North and South also agreed to resume family reunions of relatives split by their border and planned test runs of railway lines between the countries.

North Korea and the International Atomic Energy Agency have agreed on March 13 as the starting date for a two-day visit by the agency’s chief, Mohamed ElBaradei, U.N. officials said Friday. The officials asked for anonymity because they were not authorized to reveal specifics of the trip, which is expected to help alleviate some misgivings that the unpredictable regime might renege on its agreement to shut down its nuclear facilities.

This week’s meetings in Pyongyang were part of the historic reconciliation launched between the Koreas since their leaders met in their first and only summit in 2000. The countries remain technically at war because the cease-fire that ended the 1950-53 Korean War has never been replaced by a peace treaty.

But attempts to bring the countries together have been complicated since 2002, when Washington accused North Korea of secret uranium enrichment efforts that the Bush administration said violated an earlier disarmament deal.

The situation deteriorated further last July when North Korea test-launched a series of missiles, prompting South Korea, one of the North’s main sources of aid such as rice and fertilizer, to put the shipments on hold.

Relations worsened after North Korea’s Oct. 9 nuclear test. But a breakthrough came last month after a revival of six-nation nuclear negotiations — including China, Japan, Russia, the United States and the two Koreas — in which the North pledged to make moves toward abandoning its nuclear program.

Two Koreas agree on fertilizer aid, reunions
Joong Ang Daily
Ser Myo-ja
3/3/2007

A May reunion of some family members separated since the Korean War and the resumption of fertilizer aid to North Korea are among the agreements the two Koreas announced yesterday in Pyongyang.

Video conference calls will take place March 27 to 29, and the face-to-face reunions will happen in early May at the Mount Kumgang resort in North Korea, according to Unification Minister Lee Jae-joung and his North Korean counterpart, Kwon Ho-ung.

The two released a joint statement yesterday wrapping up their four-day meeting. The reunions will be the 15th held; the last round took place in June of last year.

In the talks, which had been stalled since North Korea tested a missile in July, the two Koreas also agreed to quickly resume a project to build a permanent reunion center. Working-level Red Cross officials from both countries will meet Friday at Mount Kumgang to discuss it.

More Red Cross talks are scheduled April 10 to 12 at the same venue to address issues associated with “those who have gone missing since the Korean War.” The term refers to the South Korean war prisoners and kidnap victims still alive in the North.

Although there was no specific mention of rice and fertilizer aid in the statement, Mr. Lee said Seoul will provide them as it has done in the past. Speaking to journalists after wrapping up the talks, Mr. Lee said, “The North will fax its request for fertilizer aid, and the South will provide it accordingly.” He added that “spring is coming fast, so we probably need to hurry.” Seoul has been providing an average of 150,000 tons of fertilizer, used in spring farming, per year. It will provide 300,000 tons this time.

According to the pool report from North Korea, Mr. Lee also said “the matter about rice will be discussed at the economic talks in April and an official decision will be made there.”

The two ministers agreed to expand economic cooperation ― including finalizing of 400,000 tons of rice aid ― during economic talks April 18 to 21 in Pyongyang.

“Since we agreed to meet in Pyongyang in April for economic talks, we will be able to discuss rice aid, taking into account how far the North implemented the Feb. 13 nuclear agreement,” a South Korean official said on the condition of anonymity.

He was referring to the agreement reached last month at the six-nation nuclear talks, in which Pyongyang promised to shut down its main nuclear facility within 60 days in return for aid and economic assistance from other countries.

The two Koreas also agreed to conduct test-runs of inter-Korean railroads before the end of June, as soon as both sides’ military arms are comfortable with the safety measures in place. On March 14 and 15, economic committee representatives will meet in Kaesong to address the plan. The military guarantee is the key for the trains to cross the demilitarized zone between the two Koreas.

Mr. Lee and Mr. Kwon agreed the next round of ministerial meetings will take place in Seoul for four days starting May 29.

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Mass Games and Americans in Pyongyang this spring

Friday, March 2nd, 2007

Koryo Tours
March 2, 2007

North Korea has finally confirmed that the Arirang Mass games will be hosted in Pyongyang during the period of April 15th – May 15th this year, we also expect the event to be repeated from August to October but this is not definite yet.

It has also been announced that US citizens will be accepted into DPRK at this time, the only other opportunities Americans have had to travel to North Korea have been in 1995, 2002, and 2005 also for Mass Games events, there are the usual added limitations for US tours (3 night stays as a maximum, must fly both ways from Beijing) but it remains the most fascinating chance of your life to visit a truly enigmatic place to see the kind of event that only the North Koreans can pull off, please see tour dates and itineraries on our website www.koryogroup.com.

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