Archive for the ‘Civil society’ Category

Chairwoman of Women’s Union Caught With Drugs Unsettles Hoiryeong

Thursday, March 1st, 2007

Daly NK
Kim Young Jin
3/1/2007

Chairwoman for Hoiryeong City’s North Korean Democratic Women’s Union, Suh Kyung Hee’s husband “K” has been dealing with drugs since the moment he managed his company, Maebong Company. However, as central authorities began to centralize businesses since last year, the company closed its doors and “K” adopted his driver “L” as drug runner and his daughter as the treasurer in charge of distributing illicit drugs to smugglers at wholesale costs to districts such as Musan, Hoiryeong and Onsung.

According to a source in Hoiryeong, K and his driver L had been in confrontation with one another since January. In the past K had procured his drugs from Chongjin and moved them to a base in Hoiryeong. Then, the drugs would be either sold to border smugglers or sold to Chinese tradesmen.

Here is where the conflict surfaced. While, L was in charge of delivering the drugs from Chongjin to Hoiryeong, K became suspicious that L was secretly hoarding the drugs elsewhere. Hence, K conducted an investigation trailing L’s steps at which a disagreement arose.

In early Feb, L voluntarily went to North Hamkyung Security Agency in Chongjin and exposed that Chairwoman Suh’s family had been disclosing in drug dealings. The motive behind L indicting Chairwoman Suh’s family is still unknown.

Some argue that the reason L went straight to the district security office and not the city office in Hoiryeong was because of Chairwoman Suh’s hierarchical position in Hoiryeong city. If L had carelessly reported this case to the city office, it is possible that L would have simply lost his self-dignity.

At present, it seems that rumors about this case are spreading rapidly across Hoiryeong creating unsettling feelings in the city.

People of Hoiryeong city are muttering “High officials must also be shown the seriousness of law,” criticizing Chairwoman Suh’s family for concealing such large amounts of dollars and yuan also Chairwoman Suh, who as the leader of the Women’s Union would advocate severe punishment for female defectors.

100g of North Korean drugs sell for 12,000 yuan

North Korean citizen Park Jong Shim (pseudonym, Sanup-dong, Hoiryeong) who lives in the same suburb as Chairwoman Suh, said in a telephone conversation with a reporter on the 26th “The whole city is raucous because of Chairwoman Suh’s story” and informed “Some people say that the power of law will be enforced properly this time as the district security agency has been involved. On the other hand, some question whether or not those people with so much money and power will be punished according to law, despite the district office being involved.”

Hoiryeong citizen Kang Eun Soon (pseudonym) who defected to China in January said “If I think about the times when Chairwoman Suh would go around making a racket, my teeth rattle.” Like second nature, Chairwoman Suh would prowl around advocating, “With the slightest nudge, Hoiryeong women jump to China, not only defiling their bodies but dishonoring the land where mother Kim Jong Sook (Kim Jong Il’s mother) was born.”

Kang said “Usually, Suh would conduct political meetings through her Women’s Union and argue that the reason there was so many public trials for border crossers and illegal acts in Hoiryeong was due to the fact that women could not look after their family. She would say that Hoiryeong women were obsessed over money and would go to any lengths to get this becoming shallow-minded people.”

“Even if a verdict was made stating that Chairwoman Suh was not linked to the drug dealings, she would still not be able to maintain her position because of all the things she has said in the past,” Kang added.

The drug known as “ice” made in North Korea is sold to Korea, Japan and even Macau through the intermediary of China. The drug “ice” as known to defectors, originated from the Heung Nam Pharmaceutical Company.

Though the going rate for “ice” differs according to quality, 100g of high-quality ice is 12,000 yuan, 9,000~10,000 yuan for standard and 7,000 yuan for low-quality ice.

In accordance with North Korea’s legislation Article 218 amended in April 2004, any person found producing or trading drugs is sentenced to a maximum of 5 years time at the Labor Education Camp. If this act has been repeated on numerous occasions or the drug dealings were large scale, a person could be sentenced to 5~10 years at the Labor Education Camp. If the conditions are even more severe, the law clearly states that a person could then be sentenced to more than 10 years time at the Labor Education Camp or sent to the Labor Education Camp for life.

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New divorce law for N.K. defectors

Thursday, March 1st, 2007

Korea Herald
3/1/2007

North Korean defectors will be able to obtain court approval to divorce spouses not residing in the South, as a new law came into effect Tuesday.

The Seoul Family Court said yesterday it will expedite legal proceedings for 223 pending divorce cases filed by North Korean refugees living in South Korea.

Existing family law stipulates that an individual seeking divorce must undergo court arbitration with the couple in attendance. The government revised the Protection and Resettlement for North Korean Defectors Act on Jan. 26 to plug the loophole.

A special provision has been added to the law, allowing the court to proceed with divorce cases only if the petitioner proves that his or her spouse is not residing in South Korea.

The South is seeing an increasing number of North Korean defectors fleeing poverty and human rights abuses. More than 10,000 North Koreans have been granted South Korean citizenship as of Feb. 16, the Unification Ministry said.

Since 2003, 232 North Koreans have filed for divorces but only nine cases were heard. One application was accepted and eight were dismissed.

The court suspended decisions for the remaining 223 cases because of the lack of a specific law, the court said.

It is still unclear whether South Korea should recognize marriages registered in North Korea, which the Constitution defines as part of its territory.

According to the revised bill, the plaintiff must submit to the court a letter by the unification minister confirming that his or her spouse is not residing in the South.

The court will post a public notice of the application on its online bulletin board, and can proceed with the case two months later.

Under current law, spouses must be notified of the petition for divorce before any legal proceedings can take place. For defectors, the two-month public notice period will be the equivalent of notification.

In 2004, a court ruled in favor of a 30-year-old female North Korean defector seeking a divorce and parental rights.

Officials at Korea Legal Aid Corp. said that a total of 115 defectors were given support to file petitions in 2005-2006, of which 36 were petitions for divorce.

Among the defectors, a 37-year-old woman identified by her surname Jeon filed for a divorce after running away from home due to domestic violence. Her husband beat her and had extra-marital affairs because she could not have children, she said.

It was difficult for Jeon to start a new life here with another man because of her marital status, the KLAC said.

“The cases can be heard in court only if the plaintiffs are able to obtain authorization from the Unification Ministry that their spouses are not defectors as well,” a judge at the Seoul Family Court said.

“Submitting the documents do not mean they can all get divorced. That is decided by the judges who will make the final decision after hearing the facts of the case.”

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Golf Courses Due in Kaesong

Monday, February 26th, 2007

Korea Times
Kim Yon-se
2/26/2007

Hyundai Asan is considering building three golf courses in Kaesong, North Korea, by 2012 as its first round of development projects at the Kaesong Industrial Complex have almost been completed.

According to sources, the inter-Korean tourism operator of Hyundai Group is in talks with the North to build an 18-hole golf course in the North Korean city by 2010 and two more by 2012.

A Hyundai Group official said the proposed golf course would be the second of its kind. One golf course has already been developed near Mount Kumgang and is scheduled to open to South Korean tourists later this year.

In a statement, however, Hyundai Asan predicted that it will take some time before the plan is realized as the North’s stance has yet to decided.

The company said talks between the two countries for the second development project would be possible after the first project is completed.

North Korea has stirred controversy by negotiating with a small South Korean company, Unico, to build a golf course despite its initial contract with Hyundai Asan to develop golf courses around the Kaesong Industrial Complex.

Since last July, the North has banned South Korean visitors to the industrial complex from visiting the city’s downtown area including historic sites.

Hundreds of South Koreans, mostly businesspeople and government officials, had been allowed to make an excursion to the city of Kaesong during their visit to the industrial complex.

Hyundai had signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with Emerson Pacific Group, which has been constructing golf courses at the scenic resort area at Mount Kumgang, for the project in Kaesong.

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U.S. preacher plans to delay trip to North until summer

Monday, February 26th, 2007

Joong Ang Daily
2/26/2007

A well-known U.S. pastor will delay his plan to preach in North Korea until this summer, the Voice of America reported, quoting the pastor’s aides.

Rick Warren, pastor of Saddleback Church in Orange County, California, announced earlier that he would visit North Korea next month to preach in front of more than 15,000 people at a Pyongyang stadium. But Mr. Warren’s aides told the radio station he will visit the North Korean capital in the summer. They gave no reason for the change or other details.

Mr. Warren, known as a staunch supporter of President George W. Bush, is one of the most influential religious figures in the world. His announced plan to visit North Korea drew a lot of criticism from Christians and the general public, who argued that the visit would be for show because the country does not allow freedom of religion.

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North Korean animation

Monday, February 26th, 2007

(updated): Youtube is a great time killer…recently I found these North Korean cartoons that I recommend…

    squirrel.JPG                   ammunition pencil.JPG
   Squirrel & Hedgehog                    Ammunition Pencil   
     (Part 1), (Part 2)

    racoondogwolf.JPG                   frogguard.JPG
Racoon, Dog, and Wolf                   The Frog Guard
    buzzofparadise.JPG                  
The Buzz of Bee Paradise
     (part 1), (part 2)

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Rebuilding a Church in North Korea

Friday, February 23rd, 2007

CBN News (Hat Tip DPRK Studies)
WITH VIDEO ***
2/23/2007

The Christian cross stands on a mountain high above the North Korean capital, Pyongyang.

The Bongsoo Church – currently under renovation – is one of two official Protestant churches in North Korea. It has become a point of connection for North and South Korean Christians.

That’s because they’re working to rebuild it together.

Last fall, a delegation of 90 Christians from South Korea came to the church to celebrate completion of the first phase of renovation.

The Presbyterian Church of Korea in the South is partnering with the Christian Association in North Korea to rebuild Bongsoo Church. The church’s pastor says he hopes this partnership will help bring the two Koreas together after more than 50 years of separation.

“I surely believe the renovation and completion of Bongsoo Church is part of God’s will,” said Kang Young Seob of the Christian Association in North Korea. “I also believe that all the Christians who come to the church will have their hearts filled with love for their brothers, their neighbors, and for all Korean people.”

One South Korean church elder says the project is a gift from God.

“The construction of Bongsoo Church is a special privilege and a special mission that God granted the South Korean church and the North Korean church members,” Choi Ho Chul, a South Korean Christian leader.

South Korea’s Christians know that state-sanctioned churches in North Korea are mostly for show. They open only periodically, usually to show visiting dignitaries the regime’s religious tolerance. They know that North Korean church leaders – and even the congregants – are hand-picked by the government.

But as one South Korean Christian in the U.S. told Christian World News, they believe that working with North Korea’s state-sanctioned church is better than doing nothing at all.

They believe that raising a church – and the Cross – high above Pyongyang might have an impact beyond what natural eyes can see.

“We still have hope of the salvation as long as we have the cross that reflects it and the church of God,” said Kim Tae Beom, a South Korean pastor.

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Even Pyongyang Citizens Selling to Live

Friday, February 23rd, 2007

Daily NK
Kang Jae Hyok
2/23/2007

Although North Korea tried to create a festive atmosphere in celebration of Kim Jong Il’s 65th birthday, the voices of Pyongyang citizens express hardship and exhaustion.

Recently, Lee Myung Sup (pseudonym, 69) who lives in Pyongyang went to Namyang-district, Onsung, North Hamkyung province, in search of his brother who resides in China to get help.

In a telephone conversation with the DailyNK on the 21st, he said “Nowadays, it is even hard for people in Pyongyang to live. Although rations are given, it is not enough to live on.”

Lee informed “Compared to the country, rules and regulations are even stricter in Pyongyang to the point all men must go to work. Alternatively, the majority of housewives utilize the markets and trains to travel to the rural districts selling goods.”

“Even the people in Pyongyang must engage in trade, otherwise they have nothing to eat but rice porridge. While the elite are living lives more privileged than the times of the ‘march of suffering,’ the common worker in Pyongyang is indifferent to the citizens in the country” he said.

According to Lee, a month’s worth of rations given to the citizens in Pyongyang always fall short of a week’s amount of food. This is because a week’s worth of rations in North Korea is removed and redirected as distributions for the military.

Coal and stones used to solve the heating problem

The average monthly wage for a worker in Pyongyang is 4,000~5,000 (approx. US$1.2~1.6) won. At the markets, 1kg of rice is 1,100 won and hence this wage is equivalent to 4kg of rice. While all necessities including food, vegetables, daily needs and medicine can be purchased at the market, Lee says that at least 10,000 won (approx. US$3.2) is needed per month.

He said “It has already been 10 years since heating rations for were suspended” and added “Large stones placed under the floor are heated up to warm the home and coal is also used to cook rice and further heat the room, even in apartments.” He said that during the winter, each household required at least 2,000kg of coal

Already, many average North Korean citizens find it hard to live if they do not trade, however the situation has now arisen where the “revolutionary city” of Pyongyang and its citizens are experiencing the same conditions.

Even during the food crisis in the `90’s, many people in Pyongyang found pride in the fact that they lived in the revolutionary city. However, 10 years on, the privileges of a Pyongyang citizen has but merely disappeared and the adversities of the people increasing as they find their own way to survive.

The people of Pyongyang who once faced the period of their honorable father, Kim Jong Il have now become common citizens.

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Having a Ball

Thursday, February 22nd, 2007

Korea Times
Andrei Lankov
2/22/2007

Few Koreans will ever forget the excitement they felt in 2002 when Seoul co-hosted the World Cup. The unbelievable success of the local team added much to this excitement. It was the highest point in the history of Korean football. But this history has been long and interesting.

It is widely believed that the first football match on Korean soil took place in June 1882 when sailors from a British warship played some football ashore. Robert Neff, the leading authority on Korean maritime interaction with foreigners, recently expressed his doubts as to whether the match took place. He might be right, but at any rate, 1882 is widely seen as the birth date of Korean football. In 1982, there were even some centennial celebrations to commemorate this event.

Football was made popular by enthusiastic foreign teachers at the new-style missionary schools, and from 1921 Korea had its Cup, as well as famous matches between Seoul and Pyongyang teams (Pyongyang, then a Christian and pro-Western city, usually won). But today our story is about football after 1945.

The last Seoul-Pyongyang match took place in 1946, and the North Korean participants had to cross the 38th parallel illegally, reaching the South by boat. The situation was still quite mild, and it was not too difficult to cross the badly guarded demarcation line between the Soviet and American zones of occupation.

In 1948, the newly independent Republic of Korea came into being, and it immediately acquired its own football association, which joined FIFA. In the same year, South Koreans appeared on the international scene, dispatching a national team to take part in the London Olympics.

In those days, air travel was expensive and dangerous, so the team traveled to London by ship. It was a long trip; it took about a month. On their way to London, the Korean athletes stopped briefly in Hong Kong where on July 6, 1948, they played a match with a local team. This was perhaps the first international match ever played by a national Korean team. The Koreans won 5:1, and it was a good omen.

Their first match at the Olympics was successful as well. The Koreans defeated Mexico, but the next game ended in complete failure. The score of the mach between Korea and Sweden was 12:0. The Korean team returned home without much success but with some useful experience.

In 1954, the Korean team took part in the World Cup. The Korean athletes had to play preliminary matches against the Japanese. Normally, there would be two matches, one played in each country, but Korean President Syngman Rhee refused to allow the Japanese team play on the Korean soil. Hence, both matches took place in Japan.

According to a popular rumor, President Rhee told the captain of the Korean team that if they did not win it would be better for them to jump to the Korean Strait on the way home. Taking into consideration Rhee’s leadership style, one cannot help but wonder to what extent this joke was indeed a joke. But the players had no reason to contemplate such dramatic measures: They won and went to Switzerland, where they took part in the finals of the World Cup.

The Koreans came up against the Hungarians, arguably the best European team of the time, leading to a crushing defeat, with the scoreline reading 9:0. For many years after that Korean teams did not make their way to the World Cup finals. However, in Asia, where football was less popular, the Korean team fared well.

North Korea became a football power at the same time. There were rumors that the North Korean prominence influenced the South Korean decision not to take part in the 1966 World Cup in the U.K. The staunchly anti-Communist government was afraid that the country’s standing would be damaged if the South Korean team lost to the “Reds.’’ There were reasons to feel uneasy; at the 1966 World Cup, the North Korean team reached the final eight.

In those days, the South was not much different from the North in terms of economic performance, so symbolic competitions were taken very seriously. Kim Hyong-uk, then the head of the Korean CIA, took personal responsibility for football operations and did his best to create a team that would be able to compete with the “Red evil ghosts.’’ However, his efforts were unsuccessful: Despite good facilities, the achievements of the special team were doubtful (perhaps because they could not find a suitable coach).

The first actual match between North and South Korean teams took place in 1978 during the Asian Games in Bangkok, Thailand. The match took place on Dec. 20 amid great publicity. Both teams were under great pressure, but the result was a draw.

And then in May 1996, FIFA decided that the 2002 World Cup would be held in Korea and Japan. This news was met with great enthusiasm, and a football boom ensued. But that is another story…

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In the Name of the Father

Tuesday, February 20th, 2007

Korea Times
Andrei Lankov
2/20/2007

In July 1997, the five most important government agencies of North Korea published a joint declaration which informed the North Korea populace and the entire world that the country was introducing a new calendar. The year 1912 became the First Year of Chuche. The reason? This was the year Kim Il-sung was born.

The decision allowed the occasional use of the Christian-era years, but these four-digit numbers would accompany the new official chronological designation only when deemed necessary. Thus 2006 AD is the Year 95 of the Chuche Era. In other words, Kim Il-sung’s birthday replaced that of Christ in the official North Korean calendar.

The world has seen other attempts to break with old calendar traditions. In France of the 1790s, the revolutionaries began to count years from the proclamation of the French Republic. In South Korea of the 1950s, the government tried to implement the so-called ‘Tangun Era.’ None of these attempts succeeded for more than a few decades.

However, the decision to introduce the Chuche Era was just one of the many manifestations of Kim Il-sung’s posthumous “personality cult.”

Indeed, the memory of the North Korea’s founding father is treated in Pyongyang with the utmost respect. Obviously, this was the intention of the dead founder when he chose to transform his country into the first communist monarchy in world history.

He saw what had happened to Stalin and Mao’s posthumous reputations, and arranged the transition of power within his family, so the new leaders have a vested interest in keeping the old man’s memory intact.

First of all, Kim Il-sung is to remain the country’s only president.

After his death, the President’s office was left vacant _ and is meant to remain vacant forever. Kim Il-sung is North Korea’s “eternal president” while Kim Jong-il runs the country not as president, but merely as “chairman of the national defense committee.”

Kim Il-sung’s body has been embalmed and left on public display in a special glass-covered coffin. Actually, in this regard they follow an established _ if bizarre _ communist tradition. Lenin’s body was treated in such a way in 1924 (against his own clearly expressed will), and since then many other communist leaders have had their bodies left on public display _ also often against their will.

However, the sheer size of the North Korean mausoleum is impressive. In other Communist countries, bodies of the dead leaders were held in specially constructed and relatively small _ if impressive _ buildings.

The North decided to transform the entire Presidential Palace into the mausoleum and major center of Kim Ilsung’s posthumous cult.

The construction of Kmsusan Palace began in 1974, and in 1977 it was presented to Kim Il-sung as a present for his 65th birthday. In Kim’s lifetime, the imposing building, with floor area of 35,000 square meters, was strictly off-limits to the public, but in recent years it has become the center of a government- sponsored pilgrimage.

Of course, portraits of Kim Il sung are everywhere, albeit often accompanied by images of Kim Jong-il and his mother Kim Jong-suk. From the late 1960s, the North Korean bureaucracy has developed intricate rules to determine where and how Kim Il-sung’s likeness would be displayed. I’ll probably say more about these rules later, but now it suffices to say that every living room, office, and entrance to every official building, as well as every railway carriage, has been adorned with the portrait of the leader from the 1970s.

After 1980, the portrait of his son has complemented that of the father.

The currently approved portrait of Kim Il-sung is officially known as the ‘sun image’ (taeyangsang in Korean). Here the Great Leader is depicted as smiling kindly at his subjects, and he is dressed in the Western suit and necktie that he actually preferred in the last years of his life (prior to 1984 Kim had worn a Mao suit).

These portraits are mass-produced by the ‘Mansudae Creative Group,’ a special workshop whose sole purpose is to design and manufacture portraits and statues of the Great Leaders.

An important part of Kim Ilsung’s posthumous glorification is the numerous “Yongsaengtap,” or “Towers of Eternal Life.” Their name reflects the official slogan: “Kim Il-sung will live with us forever!” These towers have a shape, slightly reminiscent of ancient Egypt’s obelisks, and they are decorated with slogans on Kim’s alleged “eternal presence” in his realm.

As of 1997, there were 3,150 “Towers of Eternal Life” nationwide. They are normally erected at crossroads, and every major town is required to have one. Most of these structures are relatively cheap and easy to build, but some of them are quite elaborate and expensive.

The tallest of all towers is, of course, located in Pyongyang. It has a height of 92.5 meters _ just a bit lower than the Chuche Tower, one of the city’s major architectural monuments.

However, Kim Il-sung’s cult is now giving way to the cult of his son, who has successfully become the new supreme ruler of the country.

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Pope’s Letter to Be Delivered to North Korean Catholics

Tuesday, February 20th, 2007

Korea Times
2/20/2007

Pope Benedict XVI has addressed a letter to North Korea’s Catholics to be delivered by a South Korean delegation of the Catholic humanitarian organization Caritas at Pyongyang, the Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported Monday quoting a Caritas spokesman.

The visit by the Catholic relief organization will take place on March 27-31 and is intended to “strengthen relations with the authorities and analyze needs,’’ AFP quoted Caritas spokeswoman Nancy McNally as saying.

Caritas is a confederation of 162 Catholic relief, development and social service organizations working to build a better world, especially for the poor and oppressed, in over 200 countries and territories.

The global news agency said the letter is a reply to a Christmas address sent to the pontiff by the National Korean Catholic Association.

There are reportedly around 3,000 to 4,000 Catholics in North Korea, who are members of a church which comes under the control of the North Korean government and has no official ties to the Vatican.

Last November the Pope urged the international community to intensify humanitarian aid to the world’s most vulnerable countries, particularly North Korea.

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