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Tag Archive | "north korea"

Kim Jong Il News Round up


A Chosun Ilbo Error and Did the US Predict ‘Kim Jong Il’s Death’?

Korean power-blogger, I’m Peter, wrote a post that criticized the South Korean government for being unaware of what was happening in the North.  In a slightly tongue-in-cheek fashion, I’m Peter noticed how a video game had a better prediction into North Korean politics than the South Korean intelligence agency.  I’m Peter contrasted that “prediction” with an error by the Chosun Ilbo that seemed to point out a serious disconnect in communication between the two Koreas.

Many South Korean netizens have also latched onto the South Korean government’s lack of awareness.  K-tweeps retweeted this Hankyoreh article that described how the announcement caught all the respective government agencies, Ministry of Defense, Ministry of Reunification, National Intelligence Agency and even the Blue House (which held a birthday party for the President), totally unaware.

Read the full story

Posted in Media, PoliticsComments

Kim Jong-Il is Dead… What Now?


Before we get into speculation, here is something that every article about North Korea should include:

North Korea still operates concentration camps. There is only one limit on how shocking the scale of the human rights crisis in North Korea is: how much information we have on it. The fact Camp 22 exists, and has done so more or less quietly, is a damning repudiation of whatever lessons we were supposed to have learned in Auschwitz, and on every Human Rights organization in East Asia.

A documentary/presentation about a North Korean refugee who grew up in a North Korean gulag.

Get started at LiNK – Liberty in North Korea

More on North Korean death camps here. Read the full story

Posted in PoliticsComments

Kim Jong-il’s Death Rocks Twitter


Early Monday morning, many were speculating as to what the “important announcement” from North Korea which was scheduled to take place at noon would be about.

@YonhapNews
N. Korea to make ’special’ broadcast at noon http://bit.ly/sxFKmE

When the announcement came in the form of a television broadcast, it was announced right away that Kim Jong-il had passed away. From the first sentence and while the broadcast continued, a barrage of tweets with news and details of the North Korean leader’s death began.

@YonhapNews
(URGENT) N. Korean leader died of physical fatigue during train ride

@mediadaum
김정일 사망소식에 코스피 폭락(1보) http://durl.me/onm58”

Daum tweeted not long after that the KOSPI was beginning to drop as some investors become worried in wake of the news.

@ozzyzzz
옆자리 남자 주식 때문에 패닉상태. 믿을 수 없는 큰소리로 폭풍통화 중. 북한까지 뛰어갈 기세다

@ozzyzzz tweeted about one investor’s reaction saying, “The guy next to me is in a panic state because of his stock. He’s making a ton of calls in a voice so loud you wouldn’t believe it. He might just end up running straight into North Korea.

Sungkyu Lee @dangun769m
흥미로운 사실은, 해외 유력지들의 온라인판은 김정일 사망 속보를 전하면서도 대표 자료사진은 겹치지 않는다는 것. 타사 방송캡처도 아니라는 것. bit.ly/uGzUH4 #fb

The news made front page headlines all over the world and Sungkyu Lee, noticed that many of the photos that news outlets were using were all different. Something which he found interesting.

OhmyNews_Korea 오마이뉴스
28일 평양에서 김정일 영결식.. 북한 장의위원회 “외국조문단 안 받겠다” bit.ly/vbsXRH

Ohmynews reported that Kim’s funeral would be held on the 28th of December with a day of mourning to follow on the 29th. However, the North Korean funeral committee said that foreign groups would not be allowed to take part on the day of mourning.

As the news began to sink in, many started focusing on North Korea’s reaction and questioning how North Korea will change.

polargom 정대원(JEONG, Dae-won)
김정일 사망으로 인한 최악의 시나리오는 군부 강경파가 김정은을 제끼고 쿠테타를 일으킨 뒤 북경 정부의 인준을 받는 건데 사망 후 2일이 지나도록 액션이 없는 걸로 봐선 미국의 대북지원 카드가 제대로 먹힌 듯. 어쨌든 다행.

@Polargom thought it was lucky that so far the worst case scenario of military forces kicking out Kim Jong-un and initiating a coup d’état had not happened more than two days after his death. He said that he thought this was because they may be drawn by the American aid being offered.

@JUNGHOPARK
김정일 사망으로 모든 이슈가 묻히겠군요. 이런 시기에… 정말 그레이트 북풍이네요.”

Some, like @JUNGHOPARK, worried that the news of Kim’s death would end up overshadowing all other issues, calling this time ‘a great northerly wind’.

When news that South Korean intelligence had no knowledge of his death was revealed, some lost confidence in South Korea’s monitoring of North Korea’s activities.

@PRESSIAN_news
“정말 정부는 김정일 사망 사흘간 몰랐단거냐?” : “북한이 말을 해줘야 아는 우리나라가 더 쇼킹” http://t.co/SQNtNOOM

@PRESSIAN_news tweeted the headline, “Did the government really not know about Kim Jong-il’s death for 3 days? : North Korea having to tell South Korea the news in more shocking.”

PaulKim100
@sonkiza 17일 사망인데 대통령은 일본에… 대체 국정원 정보라인은 뭐하고 있는건지….

@PaulKim100 tweeted, “He died on the 17th and the President is in Japan…What in the world are the National Intelligence Service doing…”
Foreign reporters based in Seoul were also busy relaying information as it came in.

@koreareporter
No one knew about the death of KJI for more than two days. Now speculations are spreading everywhere what might happen.

Some also chimed in with their opinions based on experience and knowledge.

@danielrtudor
All eyes will be on Pyongyang.. but I think we should be looking at China’s reaction #Kimjongil

@polargom
지금 한가지 의문이 남는 건 조선중앙TV의 이춘희 아나운서가 지난 10월 19일 이후 50일 넘게 방송에 나타나지 않다가 오늘 특보에 나왔다는 거.

@polargom raised the interesting point that Chosun Central TV announcer Lee Chunhee was chosen to deliver the news despite not making an appearance since the 19th of October.

@yonhaptweet
中, 김정일 사망 공식 애도 표명(1보): 중국 정부는 19일 북한 김정일 국방위원장의 사망에 “깊은 애도”를 표시한다고 밝혔다고 신화통신이 전했다. ssh@yna…

Later in the day, Yonhap reported that China expressed deep sadness at the news of Kim’s death.

Posted in PoliticsComments

Can a Chocolate Snack bring down North Korea’s Economy?


It’s devastatingly delicious and Korean students can’t get enough of it. It’s the Chocopie! And somehow in the process of its delectable history, the dessert has become a threat to North Korea’s economy. Read the full story

Posted in Life, PoliticsComments

Dance Town


One of the many aspects of South Korean Cinema that is ripe for a PhD dissertation is the portrayal of North Koreans since the 1996 Constitutional Court ruling that declared the government could no longer censor films before their release. (Yes, like so many chronological demarcations, this one is hazy. As Darcy notes in his book New Korean Cinema: Breaking the Waves, 1997 had a series of censorship struggles. But as Darcy summarizes “the 1996 decision still stands as an important legal precedent and a symbolic milestone in the development of the Korean film industry.”) Although I personally didn’t find Shiri’s portrayal of North Koreans all that sympathetic, it does advance North Korean portrayals when compared with what South Korea’s former dictators and their censors required of previous films. Soon after Shiri, films such as JSA and comedies like The Spy and Spy Girl presented North Korean characters one could actually identify with, or in the case of the feature-length fast food company ad that was Spy Girl, a character South Koreans were encouraged to desire. Read the full story

Posted in MediaComments

AAJA Seminar in Seoul


For a country known to most of the world as a sea of black surrounded by the nighttime lights of the booming economies of Northeast Asia, North Korea is surprisingly active on the Internet.

North Korea’s slow embrace of the Internet as well as current challenges facing South Korea’s cyber community were discussed in depth during an Aug. 6 panel hosted by the Asian American Journalists Association in Seoul. Nanoomi volunteers helped organize the event and round up interested local journalists, foreign correspondents and those curious about the Internet in the world’s most wired country and arguably one of the world’s least.

The panel, moderated by Steve Herman of VOA, covered the use and challenges faced by both Koreas in the information age.

Martyn Williams from IDG News Service was up first and gave an insightful look into North Korea’s use of the Internet over the past decade and how they are using it now. It was interesting to learn that one of North Korea’s first websites was a gambling site which claimed to be fairer than other sites. He also discussed North Korea’s recent move of opening up the Internet to foreign journalists within North Korea.

I especially liked how Martyn went into detail about when North Korea really started to become active on the Internet and described the different sites plus social networking accounts which North Korea operates. Since most of these sites are blocked here in South Korea, it was great to finally get a look at what modern North Korean websites look like. I was surprised to see that some sites are available in many different languages.

The next presentation was by Myung Seungeun, CEO of TNM. Unfortunately due to personal reasons he was unable to make the event but Cynthia Yoo from Nanoomi did a wonderful job of presenting it on his behalf. The presentation was about censorship of the internet within South Korea and went into detail about the ‘real name’ system which is currently in place here. You can see the presentation and read a full translation here.

After the presentations there was a Q & A session where we were joined by a veteran of the South Korean media scene, Sungkyu Lee, currently CEO of muzalive.com, a Korean music social network.

Lee helped answer questions about Korea’s real name system and portal sites.

I was impressed by the amount of questions that were asked by the members of the audience. There was a lot of interest in the real name system which was linked to a hacking incident a few weeks back.

The attack on South Korean company SK Communications Co., which runs the country’s third most visited portal site, released some 35 million users’ personal data, making it the worst hacking attack in the history of the country of roughly 48 million. South Korea’s real name system, which in effect holds Internet companies responsible for what users say on their websites is viewed by many to be a contributing factor to the severity of the attack. Having this information encourages the telecommunications companies to store users’ personal data for long periods of time to help protect itself from future lawsuits.

Martyn explained that although a lot of these hacking incidents are blamed on North Korea, it is hard to know if this is the truth or not.

It was a casual event held at a great venue, Platoon Kunsthalle in Nonhyun-dong. Platoon is an amazing building made from shipping containers with plenty of space for media, art and other culture related events. They also have a bar and DJ equipment if you need them for your function.

We started off with a barbecue lunch that was beautifully cooked by Elaine Ayo from Yonhap and Ramy Inocencio from CNN International. They did a fantastic job on what was a scorching hot day.

Journalists, bloggers and many others enjoyed the lunch with a drink or two.

It was an event that was pulled off well by all those involved and although I’m not a member of the AAJA myself, I look forward to attending more events like this in the future. It was definitely great to finally see so many faces I had only previously seen as twitter updates!

Posted in Media, TechComments

Learning from North Korean Human Rights Activists


By Josh White

Gwang Cheol Park saw his first public execution at 14 years old.

Park, now a 29-year-old North Korean defector and human rights activist living in South Korea, can’t forget the morning his schoolteacher made him watch a lineup of soldiers shoot a man 12 times. Being forced to witness public killings is part of a child’s education in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. It certainly taught Park to follow the rules.

But still, Park held a dream of the prosperity he might enjoy in China. He escaped from his famished country for the first time as a 17-year-old in 1998. In China, he couldn’t find work, but he learned a lot by unlearning the many lies about the outside world he’d believed his whole life. For example: He discovered that South Korea was a sovereign nation, and not, as he’d always been told, an American colony. Though he tried not to arouse the suspicions of neighbors and local authorities, he eventually was found out and forced onto a flight back to his homeland.

Read the full story

Posted in LifeComments

The Conman, the Soccer Sex-Rat, and the Dictator


Those whose job it is to take an interest in North Korea tend to go through phases, when it comes to their opinion of The World’s Only Remaining Stalinist State™. The first is ‘Damn, these bastards are crazy’; this is followed by the realisation that Kim Jong-il is an ‘evil genius’, a sort of cartoon Bond villain, crazy like a fox rather than just plain crazy. A more nuanced view may come later.

While Kim’s ability to play China and the US off against each other whilst poking sticks at Lee Myung-bak remains in little doubt, a recent scandal involving an international fraudster and a former England football manager must surely put a small dent in his crafty-as-a-bag-of-weasels reputation.

Read the full story

Posted in PoliticsComments

Dictator Philatelist


Postage stamps are more and more an anachronism these days. In South Korea if you go to the post office you are more likely to get an EMS barcode or a computer printed pre-paid sticker than a stamp.

But in North Korea, arguably a land of anachronisms, people still send letters, since the accessibility and reliability of electricity, let alone computers and The Dear Leader Comrade General™ Kim Jong Il’s version of the intranet, are not all that great.

Like all state published documents in dictatorships stamps fulfill an important and distinct propaganda role – after all it is stamps that are most likely to reach “the outside world” unfiltered by news agencies like Yonhap or commentators and academics.

And indeed this is the case with a set of four stamps issued by North Korea earlier this month meant to reflect The Korea Worker’s Party (KWP) annual statement of intent, known as the New Year’s Editorial. Yonhap reports:

March 2, SEOUL, South Korea — Seen here is one of the North Korean stamps recently issued to reflect the message of the communist country’s Jan. 1 New Year’s joint editorial, calling for improvement in light industry, agriculture and living standards, strengthening defense and easing inter-Korean tensions. The editorial, jointly released by North Korean papers, including the Rodong Sinmun of the North’s ruling Workers’ Party, is considered a blueprint for Pyongyang’s policy goals.(KCNA-Yonhap)

And here they are:

Looking at some of the elements in each of the postage stamps, the red flag, top left indicates the stamp’s association with the New year Editorial. (공동 사설 literally means “Editorial”) Across the top “농업부문에서는 당의 종자혁명방침 두벌농사방침 감지농사혁명방침콩농사방침을 철저히 관철하자” refers tot he actually text of The Editorial (as far as I can make out) and talks about implementing agricultural policies. interestingly I translate 당의 종자혁명방침 as “Seeding party policies”. Of course I beg someone with more Korean skills to correct me, but I wonder if the pun using “seed” is actually in he Korean?

Notwithstanding the ample harvest of corn and sweet potato (which is obviously bullshit) it is ironic and perhaps a jab at donors like South Korea that there are plentiful sacks of fertilizer (비료) in the scene.

Across the well dressed, tanned and smiling farmer reads 농업전선은 인민생활문재해결의 생명선 or something about upholding the lifeline of the people etc etc. Contrast it with a recent picture of the North Korean countryside, especially the absence of shiny new tractors.

Across the bottom: 조선 (Should be familiar to readers – Chosun) 우표 (Post so together 조선우표 is Korea Post)주체 100 (The 100th year of Juchae) (2011) 30원 30 won.

The 70 won stamp reflect the ongoing military first policy of North Korea or 선군 in Korean. I have some issues with the translation of this one in that there is the North Korean use of a funky looking ㅌ, but the upshot is that the official Editorial says something along the lines of “We are badass, we are awesome, blah blah blah we will crush the American capitalist running dogs blah blah blah”

At 10 won the cheapest of the stamps depicts North Korean industry. I didn’t go as far as to try and translate the policy on this one – as it w=is probably all crap. But of interest is the prominence of CNC화. As far as I can tell, and from what I remember reading North Korea Economy Watch, CNC stands for Computer Numerical Control and is supposed to be the holy grail that will launch North Korean industry into the 21st century. Pity it sounds like (and is probably in real life) something to do with giant computers, back up tapes and punch cards.

Note also the jars of 된장 in the corner. I have a feeling that the same art assets are being used here as in some other recent propoganda pictures including one that I used as a header for this site recently.

The erstwhile North Korean worker holds a copy of the 로동신문 (Rodong Shinmun) North Korea’s state controlled newspaper. The skyscrapers and apartment blocks in the background really do look like something out of the 50s and I am a little disappointed that the recently completed Ryugyong hotel isn’t seen looming in the background.

The most expensive stamp at 112 won deals with unification of the Korean peninsula and says something along the lines of “The North and South Nations projecting overseas power, let’s open a new phase of independent reunification!” “북과 남 해외의 온 민족이 힘을 함쳐 자주통일의 새 국면을 열어나가자!”

And then the youth of the combined Korea smashing a missile with a big ‘N’ on it which I can only take to mean American nuclear arms, given along the bottom 북침전쟁연습 무력증강책동 refers to war games and maneuvers.

So next time you are at the Pyongyang post office be sure to pick up a couple of these stamps as souvenirs. (They are bound to actually be worth more than their face value).

(And a big thank you to anyone who would like to add to or correct my Korean in the comments.)

Posted in CultureComments

Yeonpyeong – Or How I stopped Worrying and Learned to Love the Bomb


With apologies to Mr Kubrick.

Introduction

The last week of November saw what amounts to (another) unprovoked attack by North Korea on South Korea.

Well unprovoked as much as the two countries are still technically at war as CNN et alare fond of reminding their viewers.

But apart from a few hushed suggestions to make sure you know where your passport is if you are a visitor to South Korea, and the first civil defense exercise worth a damn in maybe the last five years, what was (or is) the effect of the North’s shelling of Yeonpyeong in late November?

You’d be forgiven for thinking nothing. But we’ll get to that. First some background. Three things could be said to have been at play prior to the shelling of Yeonpyeong on November 23rd.

Background

Firstly The Yellow Sea (West Sea) that straddles the boarder between the two Koreas has been a constant point of contention since about the 1970s. The original border between the two Koreas (the blue A line in the map below) was created by the Armistice commission at the end of the Korean War. It’s major flaw is that it was established in the days when nations commanded a three nautical mile Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). The line is actually The Northern Limit Line (NLL) or the far north limit of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ).

[Map: Wikipedia]

From the start of the 1970s North Korea began to violate the NLL. With the establishment of the 12 nautical mile EEZ North Korea, perhaps rightly, saw that it could control some very lucrative and fertile fishing waters if the border was redrawn. Thus, rather than using the NLL as a border, North Korea chose to recognize the Military Demarcation Line (DML) – literally the line that runs through the middle of the DMZ splitting North from South Korea – as the boarder and has done so officially since 1999 while paradoxically maintaining the terms f the armistice that keeps 5 of the western islands under the control of The United Nations.

The MDL is noted in the above map by the red A line and you can see how it skirts around Yeonpyeong (1), Baengnyeong (2) and Daecheong (3) Islands.

Since, from the point of view of The United Nations Command (UNC), nothing has changed, South Korea (and the US) still recognize (the blue) NLL as the border

Secondly was another incident in waters around Baengnyeong that happened in March this year – The sinking of the Republic of Korea Navy Corvette Chonan – officially blamed on a North Korean torpedo fired from a  midget submarine.

[Map: Wikipedia]

The third factor at play is North Korea’s growing Nuclear Weapons program. North Korea is known to have a handful of Nuclear devices and are working hard to miniaturize the technology for deployment on its considerable arsenal of short and medium range missiles and artillery You’ll recall the North’s Missile tests late last year. In addition, just prior to the bombardment, North Korea again reiterated it’s desire for Nuclear weapons and unveiled it’s continuing efforts to enrich uranium.

A fourth factor at play is the fact North Korea is ruled by the world’s only dynastic Stalinist regime which has the temperament of a small child prone to throwing its proverbial toys out of the proverbial pram if it doesn’t get its own way. In Geopolitical terms this is known as “Brinksmanship”. Others might call it “being a bit of a dick”

23 November 2010

It was a not-so-sunny late autumn day when North Korea used coastal artillery batteries to bombard Yeonpyeong Island. Was the attack unprovoked? (You’ll notice my use of italics so far). Well that kind of depends on your point of view.

On the South side there were two military exercises scheduled for the 23rd. One – the so-called Hoguk exercise – a joint drill between The Korean Armed Forces and the US and the other – a monthly artillery drill conducted on Yeonpyeong which usually saw artillery fired southward (as opposed to towards or into areas considered by the North as their territorial waters). Indeed a Colonel on Yeonpyeong reported firing shells to the South East towards Incheon as part of the monthly drill.

At 8am on the 23rd North Korea sent a telex to the South politely enquiring as to the nature of the Hoguk exercise (who uses a Telex?) and whether or not it was an invasion of North Korea (Who asks if you are invading them?).

Two hours later the monthly firing exercise began.

At 2:34 on the afternoon North Korean coastal artillery based on Mudo opened up on Yeonpyeong in two waves each lasting about 10 minutes. The North is said to have deployed 122mm MLRS or Multiple Rocket Launcher System. Here is a rendering of The North’s “Grad” MRLS based on the Russian Katjusha (2nd picture).

[Image: Planeman]

[Image: Wikipedia]

The North’s coastal artillery batteries are designated HARTS or Hardened Artillery Site. Google Earth provides us with a wealth of information when it comes to these installations north of the DMZ. The ones on Mudo and Kaemori which engaged Yeonpyeong probably look something like this:

[Image: Planeman]

Or from ground level:

[Image: Planeman]

In all the north fired about 150 rounds, with 60 of them falling on Yeonpyeong. After dispatching various aircraft to the scene to make sorties of the area South Korean artillery returned fire and the highest military alert “Jinditgae Hana” (think DEFCON 1) was issued. South Korean Marines on Yeonpyeong sent 50 shells sailing northward using 155mm K-9 Howitzer self propelled artillery:

[Image: Wikipedia]

The K-9 (foreground) and the K55 automatic ammunition supply vehicle – built by Samsung!

This return temporarily halted the North’s firing but a second volley of 20 shells soon landed on Yeonpyeong with The South responding with another 50 rounds before South Korea sent another telex (!?) demanding a halt to the shelling.

The whole exchange lasted just over 2 hours and looked something like this:

[Image: Wikipedia]

A more “Boy’s Own” rendering might have you think that it looked more like this:

[Image: Donga Ilbo] (Click to embiggen)

Video showing a (very lucky) individual and shells landing on Yeonpyeong

Aftermath

In the aftermath of the shelling of Yeonpyeong two Republic of Korea Marines were killed, six seriously injured and 10 treated for minor injuries.

In addition two civilians were killed and the vast majority of the Island’s population were evacuated to Incheon and the mainland.

Marine Seargent Seo Jeong Wu and PFC Moon Gwang Wuk were afforded military honours at their funerals for their defense of South Korea.

The shelling of Yeonpyeong reminds us that indeed because the 1950-1953 Korean war ended only in an armistice the two sides (well North Korea and The UN) are still at war and this of course isn’t the first clash on or around the disputed western sea boarder. A number of skirmishes took place in the late 1990s and of course the RoK Navy corvette Chonan was sunk in March this year purportedly by a North Korean submarine.

Add to this the continuing changes and machinations that are going on in Pyongyang even as you read this surrounding the succession of Kim Jong Il and various factions competing for power and influence within te ruling elite and this probably won’t be the last. With nine months hindsight, observation and analysis (and speculation we can see that there were at least one hiring and one firing amongst Pyongyang’s gliterati as a result of the Chonan sinking)

And just as this might be seen as for domestic consumption north of the DMZ so too has been the response in the South. North Korea received widespread condemnation from around the world for it’s actions while Lee Myung Bak, South Korea’s president, threatened severe retaliation the next time something happened. Previously promised food aid (the first from the right wing conservative Lee regime) was promptly cancelled and UN resolutions were quickly sought.

The South Korean public, annoyed at the sloppy handling of the Chonan incident were quick to get behind Lee’s stronger stance, but still skeptical of it’s government’s reactions and dissemination of information concerning the incident. Defense minister Kim Tae Young resigned after being criticized for being too limp wristed in his reaction to the attack.

True to form The North came out with some wicked rhetoric stating that North Korea responded after the South had made a “reckless military provocation” by firing dozens of shells into North Korean territorial waters around Yeonpyeong Island from 13:00, as part of “war maneuvers”. It warned that “should the south Korean puppet group dare intrude into the territorial waters of the DPRK even 0.001 mm, the revolutionary armed forces of the DPRK will unhesitatingly continue taking merciless military counter-actions against it

A hundredth of a millimeter if you will!

The North later noted that the death of South Korean civilians on Yeonpyeong was regrettable but was a result of The Southern Puppet Regime’s use of them as human shields etc etc etc….

Officially North Korea shelled Yeonpyeong in response to the South’s shelling in its (The North’s) territorial waters. The real reason may never be known. I have suggested the power game motive above. Pusan National University’s Robert Kelly postulated that North Korea was instead trying to take some of the limelight off South Korea after it successfully staged a G20 leader’s meeting.

My primary guess is that this is a response to the recent international prestige taken by South Korea at the G20. The G20 highlighted North Korean backwardness in the same way that it highlighted that South Korea was a partner of this global elite organization, setting international rules and the North Koreans don’t like this

Time Magazine

Elsewhere the toy-throwing hypothesis might have come into play – with North Korea piping up because it needs food aid. And in perhaps the most far fetched idea (or perhaps not) The JoongAng suggests that Dear Leader Comrade General™ Kim Jong Il ordered the attack himself having visited the Kaemori Artillery installation perhaps only a day before on 22 November with son and heir apparent Kim Jong Un

And meanwhile the residents of Yeonpyeong have probably spent more time than they would care to in the Island’s Bomb shelters and bunkers over the last couple of weeks as further drills and exercises have been undertaken.

And as for we expats, unless you actually live on Yeonpyeong it’s business as usual with more concern being focused on “worker’s favourite lunch dishes” in the local English press (I prefer the Doenjjang) than anything else.

And for the record, my passports are in my sock draw.

Posted in PoliticsComments

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    Photos on flickr