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S Korea suspends savings banks citing weak finances

South Korea has suspended seven local savings banks citing the weak state of their finances.

Japan urges mass evacuation ahead of Typhoon Roke

More than a million people in central and western Japan have been urged to leave their homes as a powerful typhoon approaches.

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Owners of some of Burma's most antiquated cars have been queuing in Rangoon to exchange their old vehicles for permits to import newer models.

Polio strain spreads to China from Pakistan

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Showing posts with label North. Show all posts
Showing posts with label North. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

North Korea said the US free citizens

Illustration. Uniformed military personnel lined up outside the Kumsusan Palace in pictures taken from the video. (Photo FROM REUTERS/KRT/via Reuters TV)

Washington (News and Us)-the United States called North Korea, on the basis of humanity to immediately release its citizens Kenneth Bae, who is accused of trying to overthrow the country's Government closed it.

United States citizens of Korea Kenneth Bae (44 years) it is one of the five tourists, who visit the city of Rajin in the Northeast, in the course of five days in November 2012 and North Korea arrested since then.


"We called for the DPRK to free Kenneth Bae soon for reasons of humanity," said State Department Spokesman United States Patrick Ventrell told reporters in a daily briefing, Monday, as quoted from Reuters.


KCNA, North Korea's official news agency Saturday, said Bae had "admitted that he committed a crime that aims to overthrow the DPRK with wicked ways". KCNA, North Korea's official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.


"The crime is proven by the evidence," he said, adding that the question will soon be taken to the Supreme Court for trial.


Step it up in the middle of a long diplomatic stalemate between Pyongyang and Washington over North Korea's nuclear program.


Tensions between North Korea and South Korea and its allies United States has improved in recent weeks since the United States tightened sanctions after testing nuclear weapons North Korea third in February.


New sanctions that make Pyongyang threatened nuclear attack against South Korea and the United States.


A number of United States citizens of Korea has experienced difficulties in North Korea for years, and Pyongyang has tried to use their detention to trigger visits of high-level Americans, especially former President Bill Clinton.


A United States official who spoke on condition anonymity said Bae had entered North Korea with a valid visa and that the United States does not want the case being exploited for political purposes.


"In the past there have been many examples where ... citizens United used as key political bargaining and we value individuals cannot be used to the way it was," said officials of the United States, as reported in Reuters.


Translator: GNC Aryani




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Tuesday, March 26, 2013

North Korea threatens U.S. bases in Japan

North Korea's Army following military exercises in a picture released by North Korea's official KCNA news agency in Pyongyang, Friday (20/3). According to KCNA picture taken on Wednesday (20/3). (REUTERS/KCNA)

The US should not forget that the base Anderson ... as well as a naval base on the main island of Okinawa, Japan, all within reach of the target assets of our precision
Seoul (Reuters)-armed forces of North Korea (North Korea), Thursday, threatening future attacks the United States military bases in Japan, in response to the use of U.S. B-52 bombers armed with nuclear weapons in military training along with South Korea.

The threat came a day after Pyongyang condemned the flight-B-52 flight as "not the unforgivable provocation" and threatened to take military action if they continue.

The Pentagon confirmed that a B-52 took off from Andersen Air Force base in Guam, had been flying over South Korea as part of an annual joint drills, but Pyongyang insists the exercise to consider it as a provocation.

"We can not tolerate the US do exercise a nuclear attack, define us as targets, and notify them as strong warning message," said a spokesman for the armed forces high command in North Korea.

"The US should not forget that the base Anderson ... as well as a naval base on the main island of Okinawa, Japan, all within reach of our precision target assets," it said in a statement broadcast by the Korea Central News Agency (KCNA).

Military tensions on the peninsula of Korea are at the highest level during the past few years, with North Korea--angry against the UN sanctions imposed after its nuclear test last month, he--threatening a second Korea War supported by nuclear weapons.

The B-52 had taken part in training with the South Korea-us earlier, but the Pentagon said it has published its use at this time to underscore the U.S. commitment to defending ally South Korea.

"Because the US has started to conduct nuclear blackmail is naked, and we will switch to the appropriate military action," said the spokesman of North Korea's military without elaborating.
(AK)



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Wednesday, March 13, 2013

U.S. officials secretly visited North Korea last year

North Korea's leader Kim Jong-un. (REUTERS/Kyodo)

... This is one thing that I think is not worth it for me to say
Los Angeles (Reuters)-the United States officials visited North Korea twice secretly last year, in an attempt to improve relations after North Korea's leader Kim Jong-Un to assume the Office, said the Los Angeles Times newspaper, Saturday.

By citing the statement of former officials is not mentioned by name, knowing that the visit, the newspaper said the visit in April and August that aims to encourage new leaders in Pyongyang ran a moderate foreign policy.

The visit was led by Joseph DeTrani April, which at that time was the Director of national intelligence agency "National Counterproliferation Center."

It is not clear who is leading the August visit, the newspaper said.

The Times quoted officials as saying that Sydney Seiler, an analyst of the CIA veterans, who are fluent in Korea and led Korea Policy Board at the National Security Council, took part in two of the visit.

DeTrani withdrew from the Government last year and is now leading the Intelligence and national security Alliance, an industry group, said the newspaper.

"There are certain things I don't want to say, and this is one thing that I think is not worth it for me to disclose," the report said quoting a statement DeTrani in one telephone interview.

DeTrani said he and other u.s. experts had seen signs that Kim Jong-Un may be less assertive in comparison with his father, including placing a moderate figures in important government positions.

Without confirm excursions in 2012, she added take it is the need for US to conduct negotiations with officials from North Korea after the death of Kim Jong-Il, the paper said, as quoted by AFP.

U.s. officials have visited North Korea in the past. Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright made an official visit to the country in 2000.

U.S. officials visited North Korea last year 2009 was Stephen Bosworth, who endeavored to re-start the stalled negotiations with six countries of North Korea nuclear program.

(H-RN/C003)



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Monday, March 11, 2013

North Korea gave nuclear scientist award

Images taken from a video snippet of the KCNA, Thursday (14/12), shows the launch of a rocket Unha-2 (Galaxy 3) satellite launch site in the Western sea of North Korea in the satellite control center in North Pyongan Province of Cholsan. The Video was taken on December 12, 2012. (REUTERS/KCNA)

... in order to make North Korea as the country is unparalleled in nuclear weapons ... "
Seoul (Reuters)-North Korea has given the country's Medal and other awards for the thousands of scientists and workers who are behind the nuclear tests recently, State media said.

State Awards, medals and other benefits given to scientists, technicians, 11.592 workers and other officials for their contribution to the nuclear test, February 12, the official news agency, said the Korean Central News Agency Saturday.

North Korea's nuclear test was the third, which followed rocket launches at long-range last December that was widely criticized, prompting criticism of the round in the Security Council.

Nuclear scientists and other officials who are working on testing was also accepted and welcomed as heroes in Pyongyang last week when they win a trip to the capital.

"They are now spending a fun day in Pyongyang, providing the greatest support and privileges," said the KCNA.

The high level officials praised the scientists and workers as a true patriot and urged them to further develop nuclear technology in order to make North Korea as the country is unparalleled in nuclear weapons.

North Korea's leader, Kim Jong-un, as well as giving the country's Medal and other awards to hundreds of scientists working on the launch of the rocket.



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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Russia killed six guerrillas of the muslim North Caucasus

The underlying connection was closed: The connection was closed unexpectedly.
Moskow (ANTARA News) - Rusia mengatakan pasukan keamanan telah menewaskan enam gerilyawan pada Selasa dalam serangan di satu hutan persembunyian dan baku tembak di sebuah rumah di Kaukasus Utara, wilayah utama Muslim di mana Kremlin memerangi gerilyawan.

Lebih dari satu dekade setelah Moskow menegaskan kembali kontrol federal atas Chechnya menyusul dua perang separatis, masih berjuang untuk mengatasi kekerasan oleh gerilyawan yang berusaha untuk mendirikan negara Islam di selatan Rusia.

Komite Anti-terorisme Rusia (NAK) mengatakan lima gerilyawan, termasuk pemimpin pejuang yang dicari, tewas di satu hutan di perbatasan Kabupaten Derbent dan Tabasaran, Dagestan, yang saat ini jadi fokus kekerasan pemberontak.

Dikatakan, salah satu pemimpin gerilyawan melakukan serangkaian pembunuhan tahun lalu, termasuk penembakan dua pejabat desa dan direktur satu sekolah menengah setempat.

NAK mengatakan, gerilyawan lain tewas dalam serangan di satu rumah di desa Galashky, provinsi terdekat Ingushetia, setelah seseorang dari dalam melepaskan tembakan terhadap pasukan keamanan, kata NAK.

Satu sabuk bunuh diri, sebuah roket peluncur granat dan beberapa granat disita dalam penggerebekan itu, dan para pakar membawa dua bom rakitan untuk diamankan, katanya.

Serangan-serangan bom terhadap pos pemeriksaan polisi dan penembakan dengan sasaran para pejabat merupakan kejadian sehari-hari di Dagestan.

Resiko keamanan di wilayah tersebut berada dalam sorotan menjelang Olimpiade Musim Dingin 2014, yang Rusia akan menjadi tuan rumah di resor Laut Hitam Sochi, di ujung barat pegunungan Kaukasus. (AK)



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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

The SECURITY COUNCIL condemnation of North Korea nuclear test

South Korea's Foreign Minister Kim Sung-Hwan. (INTERMEDIATE)

United Nations (Reuters)-the Security Council of the United Nations (DK-UN), Tuesday, denounced the nuclear test North Korea carried out a third time and was determined to take action against Pyongyang.

"The members of the Security Council condemned vigorously these trials, which is a violation of the resolutions of the Security Council," said South Korea's Foreign Minister Kim Sung-hwan, told reporters, Reuters reported.

South Korea currently is President of the Security Council's monthly.

Sung-hwan says now DK-UN would consider taking "appropriate measures."

Non-binding statement was agreed to by all 15 members of the DK-UN.

United States Ambassador to the UN, Susan Rice, said Washington and its allies want the Security Council passed a resolution that would "add to the sanctions"--who had previously been dropped atomic trials related by Pyongyang in 2006 and 2009.

The Council statement was agreed upon when he did, the trial closed the emergency dituanrumahi by South Korea.

The diplomat said the negotiations about new sanctions could run for weeks because China seems to reject the new measures over fears that new sanctions will lead to further reprisals by North Korea's leader.

Beijing also previously worrisome that heavier sanctions will weaken the economy and cause a flood of refugees fleeing North Korea North Korea to China.

United States, United Kingdom, France, Russia and China--the five permanent members of the 15-Member Council of State--denounced the latest nuclear test by Pyongyang.

It's called trial supervisory international nuclear test in Vienna as approximately two times larger than North Korea had done in 2009.

U.s. President Barack Obama said the "dangers of threatening activities that North Korea conducted a guarantee for taking further action that is rapid and assured by the international community."

Obama will deliver the annual State of the Union Speech on Tuesday night.

Diplomats say North Korea may indeed choose to blow up the Atomic Sealsa day because Pyongyang usually do such measures on important days in the calendar.

In Beijing, Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi on Tuesday called North Korea's Ambassador to China to deliver a protest against its latest nuclear test by North Korea.

Who said China "strongly dissatisfied and resolutely opposed" the test.

A number of diplomats from member countries of the Security Council said that the u.s. and its allies will attempt to embody the overthrow sanctions heavier than just extending the sanctions currently applied after a nuclear test by Pyongyang in 2006 and 2009.

There is no clarity about what steps, if any, that will be supported by China.

Diplomats say China's delegation at the meeting pointed out that his country closed there is the possibility of supporting a new Security Council resolution is a matter of North Korea but does not specify which aspects will they support. (T008/AK)



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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Three doctor who was murdered in Nigeria citizens of North Korea

Kano, Nigeria (ANTARANews)-the three doctors who were killed in the attack with a knife in northeastern Nigeria on Sunday is a citizen of North Korea, said the police and local governments, having previously occurred regarding the nationality of the victim kesimpangsiuran.

"The three people it came from North Korea, rather than from South Korea," said the head of the regional police, Rufa'i, Yobe State Sanusi told AFP about the attack, which took place in the restive area of Potiskum.

"They are the doctors who work in Potiskum to State Governments," he added.

Abdullahi, spokesman for the Governor of the Dingle area of Yobe State, also identifies the sacrifices as citizens of North Korea and say, they were in Nigeria as part of an agreement of cooperation was signed about five years ago.

According to police, people armed with knives slit the third doctor was in a offensive towards dawn, the last such killings in the past few months.

Police had earlier identified the victim as Chinese, then South Korea, before finally saying that they came from North Korea.

The North Korea Embassy officials could not be reached for comment about the attacks they requested it.

In November, gunmen shot dead two Chinese building workers in the State of Borno, the adjacent headquarters of the hard-line group Boko Haram.

Three others also killed Chinese in separate attacks in the area.

Some Nigerians also became a victim of gorok the neck in that area in the past few months.

Although there has been no parties who claim to be responsible, the attacks were similar to those performed by the Boko Haram before against foreigners.

Violence escalates in Nigeria since the attacks killed dozens of people during Christmas celebrations 2011 which was claimed by hardline muslim group Boko Haram.

Kano, the city has a population of about 10 million people in Northern Nigeria, a region which was hit hardest in the violence.

A series of bombings and shootings swept Kano after Friday prayers on January 20, 2012, killing 185 people, in attacks claimed by Boko Haram which aimed at the police headquarters and the offices of other policemen, a police building and immigration offices.

The attacks were the most deadly operations by the Group and is aimed primarily at the police station.

Boko Haram claimed dozens of attacks in Nigeria, including suicide bombings in August at UN headquarters in Abuja that killed at least 24 people.

A series of bomb attacks in the city of Jos, central Nigeria, on Christmas Eve 2010 also claimed by Boko Haram.

Boko Haram launched a violent action in 2009 that the uprising was crushed brutally by the military which killed about 800 people and destroying mosques and their headquarters in the northeastern city of Maiduguri, Nigeria.

The Group was inactive for about a year and then appeared again in 2010 with a series of murders.

Nigeria's population of over 160 million people split in the northern region, which is mostly Muslim and the South largely Christian. (M014)



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Monday, January 23, 2012

Sailor recalls North Korean capture of US ship

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23 January 2012 Last updated at 08:36 GMT By Chloe Hadjimatheou BBC World Service A North Korean guide shows tourists around the USS Pueblo From spy ship to tourist attraction - the USS Pueblo is now run as a museum in Pyongyang There is only one US Navy ship in the world held by a foreign nation - the USS Pueblo, a spy ship which was captured by North Korea on 23 January 1968. Its crew were held prisoner by North Korea for exactly 11 months before being released.

The ship is now moored in a river in Pyongyang and serves as a tourist attraction.

Guided tours are offered by officials who recount how the brave seamen of the People's Army thwarted the US imperialists by capturing the ship in "their territorial waters" - a claim always denied by the US, which says the Pueblo was well within international waters.

In early January 1968, disguised as a scientific vessel, the ship set sail from Japan carrying high-tech communications equipment and a crew of more than 80, many of whom were experts in decoding the messages they hoped to intercept from the North Korean military.

As long as the Pueblo stayed in international waters no one imagined that the North Koreans might try to capture it; so the crew were totally unprepared when the unthinkable happened.

Burning secrets Skip Schumacher (centre) Skip Schumacher was Operations Officer on the Pueblo when it was captured

The Pueblo was off the coast of Wonsan - North Korea's most active and largest cargo and military port - when a local harbour patrol vessel sent a message warning the crew that they should allow them to board.

When the Americans refused, the North Koreans opened fire.

"We didn't have anything to fire back with, the whole notion was that we were to be an unarmed trawler-like vessel; that was our disguise," recalls Lieutenant Skip Schumacher, the Operations Officer on the ship, who was 24 years old at the time.

The captain of the Pueblo tried to buy the crew some time by heading out to sea but the ship's maximum speed was only 15 miles an hour (24km an hour), and no match for the North Korean fleet.

The crew's main concern was to destroy all sensitive material on board before it fell into enemy hands, but without access to modern paper shredders, they had to burn documents in metal barrels or cans - a slow and painstaking process.

The North Koreans - understanding exactly what was going on - opened fire each time they saw smoke emerging from the ship.

In just over an hour, one sailor was dead and about a third of the crew were injured. The captain of the ship, Commander Lloyd M Bucher, decided he had no choice but to surrender.

Continue reading the main story USS Pueblo at sea before its capture

• The USS Pueblo is still an officially commissioned US vessel, and is one of the oldest in the US Navy

• It is moored along Taedong River in Pyongyang

• The capture of the ship came to be known as the "Pueblo Affair", the "Pueblo incident" or the "Pueblo crisis"

• The Pueblo had two 50-calibre machine guns on board. They were on the deck, but there were strict instructions that they be covered at all times

• The ship is named after Pueblo County in Colorado

• There are still efforts to get the Pueblo returned. Over the years there have been a number of discussions between US and North Korean officials on the issue

Source: USS Pueblo Veteran's Association

The crew of the Pueblo were taken ashore, transported to Pyongyang and put in prison.

North Korea's immediate concern was to extract confessions from the crew. They began with Commander Bucher, beating him severely when he refused to admit that the ship had violated territorial waters and that it was a spy ship.

Lt Skip Schumacher recalls the methods they used to finally wear him down.

"They put a gun to his head and said: 'That's it, we're going to kill you.' And they clicked the revolver on an empty chamber, but he still refused," he says.

Finally, when the interrogators threatened to shoot his crew one by one starting with the youngest, Commander Bucher gave in and signed the confession.

Each of the senior crew members was made to sign a similar admission of guilt and these were published as triumphant justification for the capture by the North Korean government.

Back in the United States the news of the Pueblo's capture was greeted with anger and dismay but since there was no intelligence on where the men were being held, a rescue mission was not possible. So the slow process of negotiations began.

Finger of defiance

In Pyongyang the men were being made to write endless confessions of guilt, but they were also busy planning their own acts of defiance - using the North Korean propaganda machine to their own advantage.

On one occasion a group of eight sailors were photographed by the North Koreans to show how well the crew was being treated. In the photograph every sailor held up his middle finger - a lewd gesture that was not recognised by their captors.

"We told them the finger was a Hawaiian good luck sign so they thought that was wonderful," Lt Schumacher remembers.

The photograph was published in Time Magazine, which praised the crew for their courage.

Continue reading the main story Lieutenant Skip Schumacher was interviewed for the BBC World Service programme WitnessWitness airs every weekday, and tells history through the eyes of the people who were thereWhen that issue of the magazine made its way to North Korea and when the captors realised they had been made fools of, they reacted with anger and violence.

"They wanted to know all the double entendres and the slang language that we'd used during the 10 months we had been in captivity, and they beat us up very badly," said Lt Schmacher. "It was really quite brutal."

He said it was then that they began to lose hope.

"It finally dawned on us that there was nothing to prevent the North Koreans from sending us to work in the mines or even just taking us out into the parking lot and shooting us," he recalled.

"It was a traumatic experience not knowing your fate."

Free at last

Then just when the crew were at their lowest, they were told they would be released. The negotiations - and a series of US confessions and apologies - had worked.

Continue reading the main story Commander Lloyd M Bucher There were 83 crew members on board. 82 of them were freed on 23 Jan 1968. One crew member, Duane Hodges, was killed during the seizing of the PuebloThe men were freed on 23 December 1968, exactly 11 months after their captureThe captain (shown in photo above) of the ship was nicknamed Pete, a name he choose for himself as a child after seeing a character in a cowboy movie by that nameIn 1970 Commander Lloyd M. Bucher told his version of events in the book Bucher: My Story. He died in 2004

Source: USS Pueblo Veteran's Association

But before they left, there was one last act of defiance.

When the North Koreans ordered Commander Bucher to record a thank you message to his captors, he included the word paean which translated as "to praise" in the Korean-English dictionary but sounds like the phrase "to pee on".

Skip Schumacher recalls with humour and pride their final act of resistance as the men walked across the "bridge of no return" at Panmunjom - a village at the border between North and South Korea - to freedom.

"Blasted on the loud speakers for all to hear came the booming voice of Commander Bucher wishing to pee on the North Korean navy and most of all pee on Premier Kim ll-sung!"

Back in the US, Commander Bucher faced a court of enquiry for his surrender to the North Koreans; a court martial was recommended but charges were never pressed.

It was 1989 before the men received medals in recognition of their ordeal.

But there are still some in the US Navy who believe the crew should have fought to the death rather than allow themselves to fall into enemy hands.

Lieutenant Skip Schumacher was interviewed for the BBC World Service programme Witness. You can listen to the programme or browse the archive.



Source BBC



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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Judge blocks part of North Carolina abortion law

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WINSTON-SALEM, North Carolina | Tue Oct 25, 2011 6:07pm EDT

WINSTON-SALEM, North Carolina (Reuters) - North Carolina cannot require abortion providers to show and describe to pregnant women images from ultrasounds performed before the procedures, a federal judge ruled on Tuesday.

District Judge Catherine Eagles temporarily halted that part of the state's new abortion law, set to take effect on Wednesday. The judge ruled that challengers of the law had shown they were likely to prove that the provision violated their constitutional rights.

The provision requires providers to perform an ultrasound at least four hours before an abortion and to describe to patients the images seen on the ultrasound.

The judge left in place a provision that imposes a 24-hour waiting period before an abortion.

(Reporting by Colleen Jenkins; Editing by Greg McCune)



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Thursday, October 13, 2011

BlackBerry outages continued to North America

NEW YORK sporadic failures of messaging and e-Mail Service distributed in the United States and Canada on Wednesday, as problems in stretched third day for Europe, Asia, Latin America and Africa.

Research in motion Ltd., the Canadian company that, the phones makes users in America "Delays in intermittent services today morning to experience", said, and said that it works to resolve the issue.

Bell Canada spokesman Mark Langton said some BlackBerry users who were affected on all Canadian carriers.

Overseas, began angrily leave the problems Monday, many BlackBerry owners. On Tuesday RIM said an important link in the infrastructure had not succeeded, and a backup not work one of the two. It said that it is now working through a backlog to get traffic.

[Rick Newman: why the era of free stuff ends]

The failure of the service, the longest in many years suffer added RIM. The company is fighting with slowing sales and a tablet, which was a dud. Its shares are a five year deep approach.

In the United Arab Emirates, the two largest telephone companies said she would compensate for their BlackBerry users for the breakdown, by one them at least three days of free service. Matthew Willsher, chief marketing officer of Etisalat, the country of the largest Telecom, said that to act in response to the "exceptional and unforeseen circumstances."

In contrast to other handset makers RIM handles email and messaging traffic to and from their mobile phones. That allows, providing services to the other phones have, can optimize data service and provide excellent security. But when it occurs a problem, a large part of the 70 million BlackBerry can be affected worldwide at once subscribers. BlackBerry outages are usually several times a year occur, but they last usually less than a day.

[See editorial month.]

One of the major attractions of the BlackBerry is the BlackBerry Messenger or BBM, that functions like text messaging, but not additional fees incurred. This service has been affected by the outage, and everything worse for RIM, Apple Inc is software Wednesday the share for their iPhones that works like BBM. Competition from Apple is one of the most important causes of RIM diminishing assets.

RIM shares dropped 42 cents, or 1.7 percent to $23.99 morning trade in New York as major indexes rose.



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Sunday, October 9, 2011

Special Report: Crisis grips North Korean rice bowl

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Pak Su Dong, manager of the Soksa-Ri cooperative farm in the area hit by recent floods and typhoons shows damage to agricultural products in the South Hwanghae province September 29, 2011. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj

1 of 30. Pak Su Dong, manager of the Soksa-Ri cooperative farm in the area hit by recent floods and typhoons shows damage to agricultural products in the South Hwanghae province September 29, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Damir Sagolj

By Tim Large

Thu Oct 6, 2011 4:00pm EDT

HAEJU, North Korea, Oct 6 (AlertNet) - In a pediatric hospital in North Korea's most productive farming province, children lay two to a bed. All showed signs of severe malnutrition: skin infections, patchy hair, listless apathy.

"Their mothers have to bring them here on bicycles," said duty doctor Jang Kum Son in the Yellow Sea port city of Haeju. "We used to have an ambulance but it's completely broken down. One mother travelled 72 kilometers (45 miles). By the time they get here, it's often too late."

It's also getting late for North Korea to get the massive amount of food aid it claims to need before the harsh winter sets in. The country's dysfunctional food-distribution system, rising global commodities prices and sanctions imposed over Pyongyang's nuclear and missile programs had contributed to what appears to be a hunger crisis in the North, even before devastating summer floods and typhoons compounded the emergency.

The regime's appeals for massive food aid have gone mostly unanswered by a skeptical international community. Only 30 percent of a United Nations food aid target for North Korea has been met so far. The United States and South Korea, the two biggest donors before sanctions, have said they won't resume aid until they are satisfied the military-led communist regime won't divert the aid for its own uses and progress is made on disarmament talks.

South Korea also says the North is exaggerating the severity of its food crisis. Visiting scholars, tourists and charity workers have sent out conflicting views about it.

The U.N.'s Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), for instance, said last month after visiting the North that "the damage was not so significant." Another U.N. body, the World Food Programme, which has a regular presence in the North, warned in March of growing hunger. The sharp divergence of views is one reason why the U.N.'s emergency relief coordinator will visit this month to assess the situation.

North Korea's Economy and Trade Information Center, part of the foreign trade ministry, invited Alertnet to see the extent of the crisis on a rare reporting trip to its rice bowl in South Hwanghae province in the southwest.

Alertnet (www.trust.org/alertnet/), a humanitarian news service run by the Thomson Reuters Foundation which covers crises worldwide, saw evidence of alarming malnutrition and damaged crops, but also signs of some promise for the coming rice harvest.

Although tightly controlled by government officials, an Alertnet reporter and Reuters photographers and video journalists were able to conduct a week-long trip into the South Hwanghae region. The visit included rare access to collective farms, orphanages, hospitals, rural clinics, schools and nurseries.

The regime's motive in granting the access appears to be to amplify its food-aid appeals. North Korean officials at first asked Alertnet to reach out to its subscriber base to mobilize help--and at one point asked the Thomson Reuters Foundation for a donation. Alertnet declined, saying all it could do is visit and report on the situation.

The picture the regime presented in South Hwanghae was largely one of chronic hunger, dire healthcare, limited access to clean water and a collapsing food-rationing system, all under a command economy that has been in crisis since the collapse of the Soviet Union 20 years ago threw North Korea into isolation.

In one orphanage in Haeju, 28 children huddled together on the floor of a small clinic, singing "We have nothing to envy" -- an anthem to North Korea's longstanding policy of juche, or complete self-reliance, that has made this one of the most closed societies on earth.

Measurements taken of each child's mid-upper arm with color-coded plastic bracelets -- a standard test for malnutrition -- showed 12 were in the orange or red danger zones, meaning some could die without proper treatment.

Nutrition experts from Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), who accompanied AlertNet, found similar results among children at other institutions. But they stressed their findings were not statistically representative.

At an orphanage in Hwangju town, across the provincial border in North Hwanghae province, 11 of 12 children in the clinic were critically malnourished. They looked to be no more than three or four years old, but orphanage staff insisted they were eight, citing severe stunting due to malnutrition.

"I've never seen stunting like this before, not ever -- not even in Ethiopia," said Delphine Chedorge, deputy program manager of emergencies for MSF France.

In the orphanage's kitchen, the only food for the 736 children was maize and a thin soup made of onion and radish leaves. Cooks said they had no oil, sugar or protein -- vital ingredients for adequate nutrition.

"They've had to reduce the minimum height limit for the army by 2 cm," a Western aid worker in Pyongyang said, speaking of stunting.

North Koreans on average live 11 years less than South Koreans due mainly to malnutrition, according to U.N. health indicators.

FAMINE FEARS AGAIN?

In March, the World Food Programme (WFP) estimated that 6 million North Koreans needed food aid and a third of children were chronically malnourished or stunted. By contrast, the United Nations says 4 million people face a food crisis in Somalia.

The WFP's appeal inevitably raised the specter of the mid-1990s, when years of mismanaged farm policy and natural disasters resulted in famine that some estimates said killed as many as a million people. Nobody is saying this year is anything like that -- and South Korea has said it suspects Pyongyang of exaggerating the crisis.

North Korea has relied on food aid since the mid-1990s. Critics say Pyongyang spends most of what little hard currency it earns maintaining a million-strong army and developing nuclear weapons and missiles instead of feeding its millions of malnourished people.

A savage winter that froze seeds in the ground hit early crops even before this summer's floods. In South Hwanghae, the governing People's Committee said, the cold wiped out 65 percent of the province's barley, winter wheat and potato crops, which are sown in autumn and harvested in spring.

Between late June and early August, torrential rains, successive floods and two typhoons inundated southwestern and central provinces. Hardest hit were the plains of South Hwanghae, whose sprawling, collective farms are essential food providers in a mountainous nation where only a fifth of land is arable and the climate is harsh.

Typically, the province generates about a third of the country's total cereal supply, pumping wheat, maize and rice into the Public Distribution System, on which two-thirds of the population relies.

Last year, 16 of South Hwanghae's 22 counties produced a surplus, providing precious calories for people elsewhere, especially in towns and cities where chances to fish, forage and keep household gardens are limited. The summer storms destroyed 80 percent of the province's early maize harvest, the People's Committee said.

Those figures were impossible to verify.

AlertNet saw fields buried under mud and sand washed down from higher ground, as well as broken concrete bridges and collapsed school buildings and medical centers.

"The harvest is lost, and we'll just have to turn the ground over," said a senior official with the provincial Flood Damage Rehabilitation Committee. "We don't have any tractors so we'll do it by hand."

At Soa-Ri collective farm, which was hit three times by floods, about 100 families were living under Red Cross tarpaulins amid the buckled ruins of bungalow-style homes.

An enormous tree lay prone in the muck, snapped at its base by the force of flash floods, whose power and frequency have intensified in recent years due to rampant deforestation in a country where many still need firewood for cooking.

WELLS CONTAMINATED

Jong Song Hui, 40, recalled how she was sleeping when her house started caving in, its mud bricks turned to mush by days of heavy rain. Woken by the crashing of timbers, she grabbed her two children and got out just in time.

"The only things I could save were the portraits of the Great Leaders," she said. She was referring to pictures of North Korea's founding father, Kim Il-Sung, and his now ruling son, Kim Jong-il, which adorn many walls in one of the world's most enduring personality cults. The elder Kim remains posthumously the formal head of state, proclaimed "eternal president" four years after his 1994 death.

The rains also destroyed Soa-Ri's clinic, which serves 4,790 people on the collective farm. "Living conditions are terrible," said the clinic's doctor, standing outside a dilapidated building that functioned as a substitute clinic.

"The water supply is heavily contaminated -- wells are polluted. So people are suffering diarrhea and digestive disorders. Also, it's getting colder, so people are getting pneumonia and bronchitis."

In Haeju, 40 percent of the city's 276,000 people were still without water due to damage to the mains system, forcing residents to trek 4 kilometers into the mountains to lug water from fresh streams, municipal officials said.

Teams of students and factory workers were digging to find the broken concrete pipes connecting Haeju with a reservoir almost 7 kilometers away. All the pipes would have to be replaced.

SOLDIERS GUARD CORNFIELDS

The U.N.'s top humanitarian official, Valerie Amos, will visit the country for the first time later this month to assess the country's food needs and how aid can be monitored to ensure it does go to those who need it most.

Experts have presented conflicting views about North Korea's harvests. Last week, Hiroyuki Konuma, the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization's regional representative in Asia, said crop damage from the summer's extreme weather was "not so significant" after finishing a three-day trip to North Korea.

Ondine Ripka, a food security analyst with MSF France, said even minor natural disasters could have catastrophic consequences for vulnerable people.

"We did witness some damage in the fields," she said. "But we shouldn't forget that people are already living on the edge, and it takes very little to push them over into malnutrition."

Along pot-holed roads neatly planted with cosmos and asters, AlertNet saw acre after acre of brown, drooping cornstalks, suggesting some damage at least to South Hwanghae's maize crops.

Pak Su Dong, manager of the Soksa-Ri farm, held up a withered cob and pulled back the husk, revealing just a few yellow kernels inside.

"Since June, we had heavy rain for two months, so that's why the maize couldn't get enough nutrients to grow properly," he said. "We now expect to harvest only 15 percent of the maize output we had originally planned."

Despite the sorry-looking crops, soldiers were guarding many cornfields against raiders, keeping watch from wooden shelters with straw roofs.

FOOD AND NUCLEAR DIPLOMACY

Next April marks the 100th birthday of "Eternal President" Kim Il-sung, and skeptics accuse North Korea of hoarding food for the centennial celebrations.

South Korean officials say the North is stockpiling food ahead of a possible underground nuclear test, which would likely provoke another round of sanctions.

In August, the United States offered $900,000 in flood assistance that consisted largely of supplies such as plastic sheeting and tents, saying it carried less risk of diversion.

North Korea's closed society and fixation on weaponry have thrown up plenty of doubt over the years about its perennial food aid requests. Aid has often been intertwined with diplomacy over its nuclear and missile programs.

North Korea said in August, in the midst of its food aid appeals, it was willing to resume regional disarmament talks at an early date without preconditions.

North Korea in the past has won food aid pledges after resuming talks on its nuclear program, which have dragged on for much of the past decade. Pyongyang has conducted two nuclear tests, in October 2006 and May 2009, and is believed to have enough nuclear material for up to a dozen warheads.

South Korea halted shipments of food and fertilizer in early 2008 at the outset of South Korean President Lee Myung-bak's five-year term. He demanded progress on the disarmament talks before resuming aid.

Russia, one of the six parties to the disarmament talks, expects them to resume soon, its foreign ministry spokesman said on Wednesday.

IRRATIONAL RATIONING?

Experts have noted that North Korea could better survive natural disasters if it adopted more market-based food policies.

North Korea's Public Distribution System was the main source of food for most North Koreans until it broke down during the mid-1990s famine. Gradually, the regime allowed a limited form of commercial trading to develop. The majority of people began to rely on crude rural markets to survive.

But in 2005, the state clamped down on the market system, reverting to the PDS, which can ensure food goes to soldiers, officials, party apparatchiks and priority workers but has again proved unable to meet most people's needs, North Korean experts said.

That became evident again this year.

North Korea's standard daily food ration is 700 grams of cereals per person per day. After the harsh winter it was reduced to 400 grams, then cut further to 150 grams in June, officials said. From July it was raised back to 200 grams, where it remains -- about a third of the government's minimum standard of 573 grams.

Back in March, the World Food Programme predicted the PDS would run out of food by early summer. In fact, it didn't -- possibly because of the drastic reductions in rations. One of the tasks of the U.N. assessment mission this month is to figure out why.

AlertNet was not permitted to visit the struggling rural markets where farmers are allowed to barter goods, although a few people were seen on the roadside selling potatoes, eggs, fruit and cigarettes.

The October rice crop will soon be harvested here, and official expectations are muted.

"We're only expecting about 45 percent of the rice crop to come through," said the senior official from the South Hwanghae People's Committee.

However, a North Korean Red Cross official said he was optimistic about the rice harvest, as there had been plenty of sunshine since mid-August.

All over the province, AlertNet saw lush-looking paddies with golden-green rows swaying in the breeze. Under a balmy autumn sun, some men, women and children were beginning to reap rice, working the rows with hand-held sickles.

Visitors to the central parts of the country, including areas around Pyongyang, have also reported seeing crops in good condition.

Red flags marked paddies ready for early harvest and enormous signs proclaimed: "Let's all help the farmers!"

Some farmers used ox-drawn carts to transport produce. Not a single piece of farm machinery was seen during the trip.

Many houses were surrounded by small kitchen gardens, with climbing beans and even melons growing onto roofs. Personal plots were crammed with cabbages, radishes and other vegetables.

A woman whose house was destroyed by floods at the Soa-Ri collective farm showed the food stocks she kept in her tarpaulin tent: corn and a few green leaves.

"I had about 15 square meters by my house that I was allowed to cultivate for myself, but everything was washed away," she said. "So now I have to dig wild grass."

(AlertNet is a humanitarian news service run by Thomson Reuters Foundation. Visit www.trust.org/alertnet)

(Additional reporting by Jeremy Laurence; editing by Bill Tarrant)



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Monday, September 19, 2011

Great North Run attracts crowds

 The Red Arrows fly over the Tyne Bridge The Red Arrows flew over the Tyne Bridge as runners streamed over it Thousands of people have taken part in this year's Great North Run.
The famous half marathon, which attracted 54,000 entrants, was started by the newly crowned world 5,000m champion Mo Farah.
He was joined by Dr Emma Egging, the widow of Red Arrow pilot Flt Lt Jon Egging who died in a crash in August.
The runners watched as the Red Arrows flew over the start line and later over the Tyne Bridge.
They flew over the bridge in the "missing man" formation in memory of Flt Lt Egging, 33, from Rutland.
Dr Egging also joined the thousands running. She and her husband used to run together.
Continue reading the main story Francesca Williams BBC Newcastle
The first thing you notice is the amiable patience. Thousands of people, waiting. In a queue for a long row of portable toilets, in the queue for their pre-start-line position.
The second thing is the smell - an unmistakable reminder of childhood and sore knees. Antiseptic cream, the runner's friend, easing the chafing and dulling the half marathon pain.
Then they are running and the commentator starts reading out the names of the charities being supported - and does not stop. The list goes on for as long as runners cross the start line. There is a 50-minute-long reminder of why most of these people are here.
She ran with the Red 4 number on her vest, reflecting the position her husband flew with the team.
The first to start the course from Newcastle to South Shields were the elite wheelchair athletes.
The men's wheelchair race was won by Canadian Josh Cassidy and the women's by Britain's Shelly Woods.
The women's race was won by Kenya's Lucy Kabuu and the men's by Kenyan Martin Mathathi.
Following the start, Mo Farah shook hands with hundreds of runners as they went past.
Thousands of people were running for a wide range of charities and causes.
Among them was Mark Allison, from County Durham, who ran 3,100 miles across the US in 100 days raising thousands of pounds for charity.
Organisers gave him the number 3,100 to wear on his vest.
A number of celebrities also took part including Nell McAndrew, boxer Tony Jeffries and BBC newsreader Sophie Raworth.
Motorists were warned roads along the route and surrounding areas were closed. Diversions were set up.
Send your pictures and videos to yourpics@bbc.co.uk or text them to 61124 (UK) or +44 7624 800 100 (International). If you have a large file you can upload here.