Monday, February 20, 2006

Danger: Chung takes another step

It seems that this past weekend was an interesting one for the Uri-party. They had their leadership election and they all smoked A LOT of Marry-Jane. I'm not sure on the second point of course, but how else could they have elected someone like Chung?

My only positive feeling about this is that it might just result in the chrushing defeat of Uri-dang that I have so long dreamed for.



Korea's ruling party has a new leader in former unification minister Chung Dong-young. Chung was elected chairman of the Uri Party on Saturday at a national convention attended by some 12,000 party members with 48 percent of the vote. His main rival, former health minister Kim Geun-tae, lost by a 6 percent margin.

President Roh Moo-hyun, himself a member, sent Chung a congratulatory message, saying he hopes the transition of power will help advance the ruling party. Party officials expect the new leadership to boost the party's chances in local elections on May 31. The party hopes to recover from a crushing defeat by the main opposition party in last October's parliamentary by-elections.

http://english.chosun.com/w21data/html/news/200602/200602190012.html



Wednesday, February 15, 2006

Ban Ki-moon for UN Secretary-General

Well, someone who I've liked on the political scene for quite some tie has been Foreign Minister Ban Ki-Moon. I've always felt that while the current administration has tried it's best to subjegate the South to the North, Minister ban has taken the middle-road to most issues. he has always seem to play the level head in a feild of occasional loons.

I'm not sure he'd be up for this challenge though:

http://english.chosun.com/w21data/html/news/200602/200602140009.html

Korea will field Foreign Minister Ban Ki-moon as a candidate for leadership of the UN to replace Secretary-General Kofi Annan, whose term ends in the second half of this year. The decision was made last December but the government delayed making it public to avoid prejudicing Ban’s candidacy.

“I humbly accept the nomination, which is based on the nation’s strength on the global stage and on public support,” Ban told reporters Tuesday. The UN secretary-general is the world body’s chief administrative officer in charge of 3,000 UN staff. He earns US$200,000-300,000 a year and is treated on a level with heads of state around the world.

Dubbed the CEO of the international community, the secretary-general also has a role to play as a mediator in international conflicts in a post symbolic of the global community’s administrative, political and moral authority.

Government officials give Ban a 50:50 chance of being elected. Given the principle of rotation by continent, it is theoretically Asia’s turn, but on the continent Ban is up against Thai Vice Premier Surakiart Sathirathai, who has the support of ASEAN. The AFP news agency reports Surakiart and Ban are the “leading” candidates. Singapore’s former prime minister Goh Chok Tong is also reportedly in the running.

However, the U.S. has recently come out against rotation by continent and could support a candidate from Eastern Europe. A high-ranking Foreign Ministry official said the U.S. was also not helping in another sense since Seoul’s alliance with Washington could make Ban suspect to other members of the UN Security Council, who could exercise their veto in the belief that he will side only with the U.S.

China, which is on the Security Council, has warned it will veto any non-Asian candidates. France is sticking to a notion that the secretary-general must speak French, and Ban is reportedly learning what was once the language of international diplomacy.

Another disadvantage for Ban is that Korea is $130 million in arrears in UN membership dues. Even government officials say it is “like a billionaire trying to get a top government post without paying his taxes.” The government has promised to pay up soon.

North Korea is another factor. A high-ranking Foreign Ministry official said, “We informed North Korea of Ban’s candidacy separately but haven’t received a response.”

North Korea may think twice about Ban’s candidacy. Any increase in South Korea’s international standing could mean problems for Pyongyang, but Seoul could counter North Korean objections by pointing to the plentiful help it has given the North. Pyongyang would probably prefer to work behind the scenes by urging its ally China to support the ASEAN candidate.

What happens in the deadlock over North Korea’s nuclear program over the next few months could also have a decisive influence. If the six-party talks resume and North Korea is willing to open up further, Ban’s candidacy could gain momentum. But if the matter ends up being referred to the Security Council for resolution, it could deal a fatal blow to South Korea’s bid.

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

N.K. Prison Camp Musical

It seems that I have not had a lot of time for blogging of late , but hopefully that will change soon. Here is an article about how the Ui party is not the fan of free speech it claims to be.

http://english.chosun.com/w21data/html/news/200602/200602050001.html

N.K. Prison Camp Musical Falls Foul of Seoul Officialdom
A planned musical about human rights abuses in North Korea’s Yoduk concentration camp has run into massive obstacles, not least from officials fearful of upsetting the Stalinist country. South Korean government agencies are demanding changes to the story, which they say dwells too heavily on the negative aspects of the camp, according to producers. Officials also allegedly invoked the National Security Law to warn producers against showing a portrait of former leader Kim Il-sung and the singing of North Korean songs in the show.


Director Chung Seong-san and cast rehearse for the musical ‘Yoduk Story’, which deals with human rights abuses in North Korea, despite government pressure to tone down the show’s criticism of the Stalinist country.

After the Chosun Ilbo ran a story about the musical, one theater abruptly canceled the run there and a company which had promised to invest W300 million (US$300,000) pulled out. A key member of the production team has quit, and the director Chung Seong-san, who happens to be a North Korean defector himself, has received death threats.

Political prisoners carry pails of human waste from guard barracks at the Yoduk concentration camp in South Hamgyeong Province, North Korea in this video grab of footage shown by Japan's Fuji TV.

“Yoduk Story” focuses on a camp where 20,000 inmates work more than 14 hours a day living on just one bowl of cereal and a spoonful of salt. Those who try to escape are executed by hanging or stoning because the authorities do not want to waste bullets killing them. But its scheduled debut in March is now in jeopardy. Reportedly under official pressure, more than half its budget of W700 million has disappeared, making it difficult to feed producers and cast. "After reading our script, government officials demanded that we change part of the story, saying it’s too much,” Chung said. “I got a phone call, I don’t know if it was a government official, saying 'It's so easy to get you. You will be punished.'”

But Chung is determined to plough on. When Seoul KyoYuk Munhwa Hoekwan promised to show the musical in its theater last December, Chung borrowed W20 million against a contract to sell his left kidney. His father was publicly stoned to death in a Hoeryeong concentration camp in 2002. “I feel that my father is watching over our rehearsals,” Jeong says. Private citizens are also chipping in. One elderly woman sent a gold ring, a jade ring and a pair of earrings after reading about the show, and an elderly man sent a box containing W500 coins, W1,000 bills and W10,000 bills totaling W10 million. Chung says he is always hopeful in rehearsal but anxious when he is on his own. But he believes the show must be staged. "This is not a political activity. What we’re trying to do is just let people know about human rights abuses in North Korea by producing the musical. We are ready to deliver the message in the right way to North Korean leader Kim Jong-il,” he said. For more information call 02-569-4483 or go to http://www.yodukstory.com/

Friday, January 13, 2006

Show me the MONEY- Kim

Well, I know I haven't been posting much of late but I thought I'd take a few minutes to post up something I thought interesting. It seems that North korea is in need of some funds.

First, they
filed a suit/complaint with the National Human Rights Commission of Korea. It appears that they would like to be paid $1,000,000,000 in compensation for the imprisonment and torture of some of it's newly-repatrioted citizens. Not to be outdone though, a day or so later some party from the South filed a similar suit against the North. The Noh administrations response... chirp, chirp.

As well, just the other day, a North Korean (soldier?) was killed in an automobile accident involving a Hyundai Asan employee. I'm not sure on the details of this, but I seriously wonder if $1,000,000 (
what they are asking for in damages) would be what the family of the victim would usually get in any similar case in the DPRK.

I seriously wonder though if the North just isn't hard up for money. Right now Kim Jong-il is
in China and living it up and no doubt either trying to broker more aide or spending more of this hard earned cash on a new fighter jet.

Monday, January 02, 2006

Chung resigns!

That is right, my nemesis has stepped down from his post as Unification Minister *cough* DPRK kiss-up *cough* and is heading on to try for the presidency.

Awhile ago I was worried that he might just have a chance of winning. That somehow he would pull a rabbit out of the bag and pull offf a diplomatic wonder. Luckily, that never happened.

So, now begins the race for the Blue House. No one out there would be dumb enough to vote for this guy... right?

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

Kim Dae-jung to visit North


Well, I dare say that Chung may be bumped off of my #1 slot for most asinine. An old favorite has come back to haunt us here in Juggertha's hall. Apparently Kim Dae-jung is planning on visiting the DPRK sometime soon. With comments like those below I seriously wonder why this man was not thrown off that ship so many years ago.

"Although they (the US) use strong rhetoric, I don't think they don't have the strength to carry out the military operations that the neo-conservatives insist upon."

"South Korea cooperates with the United States for peace. If war is the premise, everything must change."

Wow, could it be possible that I am GLAD that Noh is president instead of this guy? Well, maybe that is taking it a bit too far but seriously, is he just losing it in his old age? I'm no fan of US foreign "excursions" but I have little doubt as to their power.

Also of note is where this is an official visit or not, you decide:

Former President Kim Dae-jung said he would meet North Korean leader Kim Jong-il for a second time in the near future. He said the governments of both Koreas had agreed to his trip, but that he would travel there in a private capacity, not as an envoy of the Roh administration.

The visit, at an unspecified time, would be Mr. Kim's second encounter with Kim Jong-il, whom he met in June 2000 for the first meeting of the two nations' heads of government. "Pyongyang has requested a visit several times, and President Roh Moo-hyun officially asked me to make the visit," he said.

A peek at North Korea

I've been away for awhile but now I'm back and I thought I'd start this week's blogging by making note of some pics from the North. Normally it is difficult to take pictures of anything but the "official sites" but for some reason an annonymous businessman was able to snap these pics.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/hi/picture_gallery/05/asia_pac_unseen_north_korea/html/1.stm


I could travel more or less where I pleased for my work, and even though we always had translators and minders, I was rarely prevented from taking photographs.

I am under no illusions about the nature of the state. What I saw was how North Koreans live and work.



North Korea is a land of vast motorways, some with as many as 10 lanes. But they are always empty. Very few people own cars.
Pedestrians and cyclists zig-zag across them as they are so unused to traffic.

But even though these roads host few vehicles, they are beautifully tended. Every Sunday, the people who live close by can be seen dusting down the gutter and pruning the shrubs on the road. Some might be visible in the distance here.


A woman stands in contemplation at the side of a village lane.
The most impressive aspect of such villages is that even in the remotest areas and despite their poverty, they are maintained with great care.

Scrap metal and twigs are intricately entwined to create the fencing that demarcates each home. Villagers often tend allotments together and share the produce.


Men thatch the roof of their home as winter draws in. People are responsible for the upkeep of their own properties and in remote rural areas they can only rely on the natural resources that lie around.
In the background, there is a TV aerial jutting out of the neighbouring roof. Many homes in rural areas have such aerials and I can only imagine they are for receiving broadcasts from the local state-controlled channels.

The yards are tidy. Even the most humble dwellings are clean and well-presented.



http://news.bbc.co.uk/nol/shared/spl/hi/picture_gallery/05/asia_pac_unseen_north_korea/img/5.jpg


On a frosty day, peasants cluster on a remote country lane to dig at the ice caking roads and streams so they can access the mud underneath.
Mud is valuable as a fertiliser. Throughout the seasons, piles of mud and even human manure will be applied onto fields in order to make the crops grow better.

Red flags and banners bearing government propaganda slogans dot these fields. Their motto is: 'Dig for victory'. In this case they seem to be digging for sheer survival.


http://news.bbc.co.uk/nol/shared/spl/hi/picture_gallery/05/asia_pac_unseen_north_korea/img/6.jpg


Despite the deprivation, children will always find creative ways to play. As they are too poor to afford ice skates, these boys have improvised with knife blades stuck onto blocks of wood. They propel themselves along with sticks.
The ice on this lake is about 25cm deep. As people walk across it you hear pistol shots ringing out as hairline cracks develop. But it is perfectly safe and in the winter people cycle across the lake to get to the other side.


http://news.bbc.co.uk/nol/shared/spl/hi/picture_gallery/05/asia_pac_unseen_north_korea/img/7.jpg


This department store in the centre of Pyongyang has the latest goods for sale.
The food counters sell vacuum-packed foods. There are also traditional medicines and imported pharmaceuticals. Electronic devices are also on sale, including digital cameras and the occasional MP3 player.

Just who can afford these items on a Korean salary is not clear. Perhaps some are just there for show.

Sunday, November 27, 2005

NORTH KOREA: The Struggle Against American Power

Well now, this seems to be an interesting idea for a book.

Description:
George W. Bush's infamous remark about the 'Axis of Evil' brought North Korea dramatically back into the international spotlight. During the late 1990s relations between North Korea and the US and its allies were on the mend. However, the election of George W. Bush resulted in renewed crisis. The nuclear accord between the two countries was torn up, dashing North Korean hopes for establishing normal diplomatic and economic relations. Though malnutrition has eased and the economy is growing, the outlook is bleak.

This book cuts through the propaganda to unearth the complex and contradictory realities of this much-demonised country and its geopolitical context. The North is not a ‘workers’ paradise’ but, like Iraq, neither is it a threat to its neighbours and the region in the way usually portrayed.

Tim Beal reveals a country overburdened by military spending that sees itself under constant threat. However, he also shows that North Korea is pragmatic about negotiating with the United States. Attempts at economic reform and export expansion are shackled by US and Japanese hostility. Exploring a broad range of subjects including the historical and political framework of North Korea, the development of the nuclear crisis, human rights issues, drug trading, as well as its shifting relationship with South Korea, this is an ideal book for anyone who wants a thorough introduction to the daunting challenges faced by this country.

Wednesday, November 16, 2005

Chung caught doing crack!

That's right, you heard it here first! Chung Dong-young has been caught doing drugs

Apparently, he gave an interview while high. Read on:

"Communist North Korea and capitalist South Korea are likely to have formed at least an economic union by 2020"

"North Korea would be ready to accept Seoul's offer of free electricity as a stop-gap until light-water atomic reactors were built"

"The vision of the Republic of Korea -- my personal vision as a politician -- is that by 2020 we will be a welfare state, and also at the same time, the South and the North will be able to communicate freely, that we will at least have developed into a joint economic union,"

"With North Korea, sticks don't help in solving problems," he said. "It doesn't give you the short cut, but only aggravates the problem."

Well, now that explains it. He has been dreaming of making the ROK into a welfare state the whole time. Now I understand why he is giving away so much of the tax payer's money! He wants the government to support the masses, ok, but where will the money come from? He keeps talking about providing all this funding to the North, but I am still missing the announcement of the tax hike that will pay for it all.

Wednesday, November 02, 2005

Unified Olympic team


Do you see how ugly this girl is? Well, at least how bad all those colors look on her? For some reason it smacks me as a hint of how ugly this
news is.

I am in a hurry but I thought this was worth posting. A unified Korean team eh. Well, I'm very curious to hear how they plan to pull that off. I mean really, which flag and anthem do they plan to play?

Monday, October 31, 2005

A good weekend for me.

Well, it seems that the Uri party Leader ship bowed out of the lime light after a crushing defeat in some local elections. Buahahaha. Seriously, did anyone expect any different? The Uri party was NEVER meant to lead and the people of the ROK have been feeling it's ill effects. I must say, I giggled like a school girl when I saw this news on the stands. Heck, I even stooped so low as to buy a Korean Herald edition just to gloat.

Also in the news was a couple of tid-bits on the DPRK. man, I thought that Bush was having a hard week (ok, he is). These guys from the North sound stressed.

First there were
some shots fired at the South from the North (quite under-reported)

SEOUL, Oct. 28 (Yonhap) -- A shot fired from North Korea fell near a South Korean guard post inside the demilitarized zone late Friday, but there were no casualties, Seoul's Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said.South Korean soldiers immediately returned several rounds of fire toward the North but received no response, the JCS said in a statement.

Then, a North korean diplomat decided he'd " curse at some guy for bad mouthing his dear leader.

WASHINGTON, Oct. 27 (Yonhap) -- A South Korean activist protesting against North Korea said he was called a "son of a -----" after he whispered to a North Korean diplomat that his leader Kim Jong-il must be overthrown.

And now it has been reported that Kim Jong-il is having troubles removing all the mustard stains he got on his nose from kissing Chinese president Hu Jintao's Butt.

Tuesday, October 25, 2005

Seoul sends regrets after death in North

Well, it seems that Unification Minister Chung Dong-young has sent a letter of condolence to the North in regards to the passing of a DPRK official. Among many nations, this is not really newsworthy, but by many accounts, this is the first time a South Kortean official has done it (in this way?). It seems that someone has forgotten that there is still technically a war on.

Anyway, on to more exciting news. It seems that I was able to get my hands on an actual copy of the letter. Please read it at your own risk. I have no idea how many laws I may be breaking by posting this.


Monday, October 24, 2005

Warming tides?


It seems that the ROK and the US are in the minds of renegotiating the details of their military alliance. There are no real big changes on the table (last year was more about moving the base out of Youngsan) but one issue that sems to be the darling of the Korean media is that of "Control over 'wartime' forces". As it stands right now, the ROK has control over it's forces during peace, but should ar break out on the peninsula, the US gets opperational command.

Personally, I'm glad the ROK is in a position to negotiate important points like this. I would like to have the Korean people more responsible for their own future, and this might just be a step in that direction. I hope though that it can be done with as little "kick out the foreign devils" as possible. The truth is, and this might surpise many of my readers (do I have many?), I think the US should look at a staged withdrawl of the majority of their troops. In the very least, they need to pull the troops out of Youngsan. The ARMY should never be in the heart of a city, it just doesn't fit with their job.

President Noh seems to think though that the Americans are looking at him more fondly. Lets hope that translates into more negotiating power eh.

"The United States appears to be accepting South Korea's changed attitude," Mr. Roh said. "The U.S. must be relieved to find that I am more moderate than they initially thought."

Friday, October 14, 2005

Hankyoreh speaks!

Well some students of mine accused me of being too conservative. Who, me?? Not the Juggster!!

Anyway, they suggested I might do well to read some more "left leaning" papers. I am always up for the chance to broaden my perspectives, so I checked out
an article in Hankyoreh

Well, most of their stuff was in Korean but if you look at this editorial (and most are translated thanks to the folks at http://www.seoulselection.com/) you'll be able to slug through "their thoughts".

Let's take a look at some of these thoughts:

There are persistent accusations that permitting a massive delegation to go to North Korea's "Arirang" performance is shaking the state's foundation. It's the same old people and arguments, too. It all got started when the government allowed around 5,000 people to watch an event that is used as propaganda for the North Korean system. Maybe they think that those who have watched the mass games have come to admire North Korean-style socialism.

OK, so the government in the South allows 5,000 people to partake in a admittedly propagandized ceremony and you have no worries?

Card sections and other elements of mass games were rampant under South Korean dictatorship as well.

So, it was bad then but because we've learned from it, it won't affect anyone now?

How could someone think that a person could be moved by such an event and come to sympathize with the North's government? Viewing the Arirang event was probably time in which people reaffirmed the democratic and pluralist nature of Southern society and came to agonize over what the Korean nation has to do in the future.

Well, at least somebody thought so (bah, can't find link for the first "unification baby" that was born in pyongyang this past week).

Currently there is rice, flour, corn, powdered milk, and oil going to the North, while defectors are continuously arriving in the South. Unless you're worried about criminals taking flight, there's no reason to be scared about people traveling to the North.

So, they send propaganda and defectors to the South, while we send food and aid to the North. Sounds like a GREAT trade.

We hope to see the procedures and qualifications for visiting the North changed swiftly to be consistent with changed realities. The principle should be that there is more frequent and freer passage.

Ok but you mean both ways right? Right? When making a statement like that I AM SURE that you mean that travel rights should be "freer" (sic) for ALL koreans right?

Funny how this article did it's best to lambaste the "conservative side" in the South while totally letting the North off the hook for any responsibility. Wow, am I ever glad I found this paper to add to my collection.

Tuesday, October 11, 2005

Confused?

Well, I'm not really sure if I should be happy or sad. Kind of a mixed message here, all within the nice time frame of 24 hours.

China Deports N.Koreans Sheltering at Int'l School

Seven North Korean defectors who entered the compound of a Korean international school in the Northwestern Chinese city of Yantai, Shandong Province, on Aug. 29 and requested safe passage to South Korea have been returned to the North. The group consisted of two men and five women, four of them from the same family.

China Softens on N.Korean Defectors

Chinese authorities have agreed to let eight North Korean women who made their way into a Korean international school in Qingdao, China on Tuesday seek shelter at the South Korean Consulate. "After negotiations with the Chinese government, the entire group was moved today at around 2:50 p.m. to Korean consular buildings, where they are safe and being looked after,” Foreign Minister Ban Ki-moon said.

Now, I'm not one for conspiracy theories but I have to wonder at the timing. All to often of late the North has tried to "respond" to possibly bad press in the South. This seems a little too smooth for that but it makes you wonder. With China being in the picture on all this, it makes me wonder too how close the two counties coordinate all/any of this.

Monday, October 10, 2005

Who will foot the bill?

Well, it seems my buddy Chung is at it again, laying down promises that in my opinion he has no right to. First he said that the South would provide energy to the North (I suppose he got approval for that one from Noh but I'm still waiting for the public referendum) and now he is making blanket statements of a massive commitment of aid to the North.

He addressed lawmakers and said "I believe we should shoulder at least 2 trillion won to 5 trillion won (US$1.92 billion-$4.82 billion) a year to save our reputation in the international community as a civilized nation," Wow, is that all? All for the sake of saving your reputation? I hate to tell you this Chung, but you don't really have one and you've apparently done your best to drag the South's through the international mud.


If you truly are concerned with keeping pace with the international community, why not try to actually support human rights initiatives in the UN. Or better yet, why not (as Kang mentioned below) monitor all of the South's aid to the North and make sure that it is going to the right recipients?

Oh, wait, I know why you don't do it...

You're too busy styling your hair with the sweat off of Kim's butt cheeks.



EDIT: It seems that this money will go to a good cause

North Korea spent an estimated $10 million in 2004 to purchase Chinese and Russian defense products, the Defense Ministry said Tuesday.

Sunday, October 09, 2005

Kang Chol-hwan (Aquariums of Pyongyang)

Well this evening was an exciting one. I went to the Seoul club to listen to, and hopefully meet the author of one of my favorite books on North Korea. Kang Chol-hwan was giving a talk at the joint invitation of the Democrats and Republicans abroad.

Before tonight though, I re-read his book. I had been a few years since I last looked at it (actually I had to go and actually buy a copy) and I felt I had better brush up. The book itself is a facinating glimpse of life in a North Korean labour camp. Of Kang's life and death struggles to survive in the tyranical DPRK regime.


"The sweatbox is one of the harshest punishments imaginable, and since it could be used as retribution for the most trifling of offenses - offenses that would seem downright ridiculous on the outside - it was perpetually dangled over our heads. I exagerate when I say "our heads": it wasn't used on kids. But when a relative was sent to the sweatbox the whole family was scared, not knowing whether the loved one would make it out alive. Stealing three ears of corn, responding to a guard's command with insufficient zeal, missing a role call, even if the absence clearly had no wrongful intent - any of these was reason enough for being sent to the sweatbox. Yet all were "faults" that anyone could commit - and often had to commit - to survive."

Kang made mention during the talks that "one of the biggest pillars supporting the regime were the labour camps" and that "South Korean students are facinated by an illusion... (where as this) sentiment is affecting the DPRK and extending it's tyranny."

I took a number of notes but i do not have the time to put them down here tonight. Basically, he held a lot of my views on aid to the North, that it should be monitored and measured against a backdrop of concessions from both sides. He seemed like a level headed guy and impressed me as a survivor. I wish him the best and hope that his nightmares are behind him.

Sunday, October 02, 2005

Are you watching Chung??


I really hope that Chung Dong Young has these pictures shoved down his throat some time. The
NKZone has a few wise words on the subject. How legit is it? I'm not sure. Some may doubt, but to me the important point is that this type of thing is acknowledged to happen regularly. Real or not, I truly think that even the possibility of truth in this should send a reminding shiver down our souls.

Saturday, October 01, 2005

President Lee Myung-bak?


Well, with the water flowing in Cheonggye stream it seems that Seoul's Mayor Lee Myung-bak is riding the crest of the wave. While some say the water will die down quickly, others hope that he rides it all the way into the presidency.

The Chosun put out a small interview in English with the Mayor. I think it deservers a read in it's entirety:

It seems not a day goes by without an article about the Cheonggye Stream. Why do you think the restoration project has been such a hit?

“I think it’s people’s interest in seeing something they thought was impossible come to fruition. It’s a positive response to seeing something unexpected accomplished in an age when ‘nothing is being accomplished even as nothing fails.’”

There also appears to be some jealousy from those who say you are over-praised for doing something that wasn’t all that spectacular, while others say you’ve spent tons of money on nothing more than sprucing up a canal.

“That’s because they don’t know its history. The Cheonggye Stream is an artificial waterway that differs from a natural stream flowing through the fields. It was built during the reign of King Taejong of the Chosun Dynasty to stop flooding, and during the reign of King Yeongjo, 200,000 men from around the country were mobilized to build the embankments. The stream has been restored to how it looked back then.”

Have you had difficulties being Seoul mayor as a member of the opposition party?

“There were major traffic problems with construction going on in the heart of the city. Authority over traffic rests with the central government and police, but there were difficulties owing to poor cooperation. When we had to remove 1,500 stalls, not one policeman helped. The authority over cultural properties, too, rests with the central government’s committee, but although the city carried out its construction according to the decision of the committee, there were many instances where it tried to find fault, saying Seoul was building things and ignoring the city’s historic sites.”

The covering of City Hall with Korean flags on Liberation Day was a hot topic. Was there a think-tank that gave the city this idea?

“There’s no think tank, but there are people I consult about personal life and politics. It’s not an organized thing. This Liberation Day was the 60th anniversary of Korea’s liberation, so we pondered what we could do. We wondered how we could peacefully make Japan aware, inspire patriotism in the people, and give courage to the young. So we drew up the Korean flag idea in outline and debated it in several departments, but some thought it might be impossible because of the wind. Seoul officials were added to the meeting, and in the end, some young artists said it was possible, and it was done.”

You’re making a people-centered city, building many crosswalks downtown and planting grass in Seoul Plaza and Sungnyemun Plaza. Is this the result of a consistent plan?

“Actually, I made my own preparations for it before becoming mayor. I made a list of 20 things. The Cheonggye Steam restoration, public transport reform and the New Town construction were carried out according to the order of the list. Welfare and cultural projects are now being carried out in the second half of my term. The group that gave me the most help prior to my inauguration was a Seoul metropolitan government advisory team composed of foreigners. It was made up of foreign CEOs, academics and diplomats and their families who have lived in Seoul for more than five years.”

You’re believed to be a major contender for the next presidential election. Many people are saying you’ll carry out a major national project of a vast scale dissimilar to the Cheonggye Stream restoration. Is there some project you are thinking of should you become a presidential candidate? Some are talking about the construction of a “Seoul-Busan Canal” linking the Han and Nakdong rivers.

“The biggest problem facing out society at the moment is employment; the most basic thing to make the people happy is to create jobs. One cannot create jobs through cutting-edge IT and BT industries alone. In a country of 50 million people, you can create jobs only by appropriately endowing the country with high-tech industries, financial services and manufacturing. In order to foster national competitiveness, we must cut prime costs by decreasing distribution costs. Transport costs from Seoul to Busan are similar or greater than those between Busan and Los Angeles. The Seoul-Busan Canal plan I announced during the 14th National Assembly is a comprehensive plan to foster national competitiveness and create jobs. A leader is someone who endlessly gives the people vision and hope.”

Is your wealth, which some say is excessive for a man even with a past in a white-collar job, perhaps a weak point?

“I’m proud of the fact that I have a lot of property. I think it gives hope that a poor person can become rich. My total current wealth isn’t even the annual salary of a CEO of a leading global firm. I went into a firm with 100 employees (Hyundai Construction) and made it into one with 160,000, so I think I had the right to be sufficiently compensated. I’ve lived by saving. If I had spent money I didn’t have to spend, I wouldn’t have become rich.”

There are some who expect that you’ll return your wealth to society one day.

“This is usually said by people who’ve made their money unjustly or those with an interest in other people’s money. I won’t bequeath all my money to my children, but I won’t say I’ll give it back. This is a political statement. I’ve made plans on how I’ll use my wealth in the future. I will do it according to those plans.”

Your supporters are calling for an early party convention. Do you agree with this?

“That should be left to Grand National Party chairwoman Park Geun-hye. Whether someone retires should be left to them; it’s not desirable to create an overheated atmosphere by calling a party convention and fight. I will take a step back and follow the party’s decision. I won’t differentiate between what is advantageous and disadvantageous to me.”

What do you think makes you different from Park Geun-hye?

“There’s no need to ask that. Everyone knows. We’re completely different. The lives we’ve lived are completely different, and our administration styles are different. But only when two very different people come together can they become powerful and cooperate. If Park and I combine our strength, it could produce a great synergistic effect. People see us as rivals, but I think of us as collaborators. I will join hands with Park to cooperate and take back the government.”

Sunday, September 25, 2005

Some smart ones

It seems that some lawyers in Seoul have decided that they will pick up the torch on human rights in the North. The torch that had carelessly been dropped by the government a few years back is now in some professional hands. Lets hope they do something with it.


In a closing declaration, participating lawyers said the South Korean
government claimed to be taking a gradual approach to human rights in the North
but had in fact been consistently tepid on the issue. It expressed concern that
the governmentÂ’s logic ran along the same lines as that of South KoreaÂ’s past
military dictators, who suppressed human rights under the pretext of economic
development or the threat of war.



Also, a respective nod to the Marmot for posting on this woman's odyssey of trials and escape.

According to the Chosun Ilbo, a North Korean woman, identified by her family name of Park, recently arrived in Thailand with her 19-year-old son and two North Korean women and is awaiting passage to South Korea. What makes Park’s story truly amazing is that this she made the trip without feet, having lost them thanks to torture she suffered at the hands of North Korean security authorities after she was repatriated to the Workers’ Paradise during a previous defection attempt.

Now, it is THAT type of strength that will save the ROK! Unfortunatly, it seems that it is lacking right now. With Chung at the helm of the Unification ministry, few have the backing of the ROK government when trying to escape their lives in the North.

To make up for this shortcoming, many NGOs have stepped up offering assistance. While I am not sure that their motives are always pure, the outcome is generally the same; more people are able to shake off the shackles of the North. These NGOs so not help without risk though;


15 S. Koreans in Chinese Lockup
A total of 15 South Koreans are being detained in China after
being charged with helping North Korean refugees depart for a third country, the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade said Friday.


In a report to the National Assembly, the ministry said
that a total of 64 South Koreans had been arrested in China since 2001. Among
them, 49 were set free while the others remain in custody.