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게시물에서 찾기2013/06

25개의 게시물을 찾았습니다.

  1. 2013/06/18
    김정은, 히틀러'나의 투쟁'...
    no chr.!
  2. 2013/06/17
    反JEI농성투쟁/매일밤 (#15)
    no chr.!
  3. 2013/06/16
    터키: 탁심연대/간절한 호소
    no chr.!
  4. 2013/06/14
    [6.07] H-20000 '모터쇼'...
    no chr.!
  5. 2013/06/13
    反JEI 농성투쟁 2000일..(#2)
    no chr.!
  6. 2013/06/12
    反JEI 농성투쟁 2000일..(#1)
    no chr.!
  7. 2013/06/11
    쌍용차 농성장 @대한문(#7)
    no chr.!
  8. 2013/06/10
    6.11(火): 反JEI 투쟁 2000일
    no chr.!
  9. 2013/06/10
    反JEI농성투쟁/매일밤 (#14)
    no chr.!
  10. 2013/06/07
    터키민중봉기/세계연대주말
    no chr.!

김정은, 히틀러'나의 투쟁'...

Since yesterday the int'l media is publishing - once again - a real strange, almost incredible story about North Korea:
Kim Jong Un handing out copies of ‘Mein Kampf’ to senior N. Korean officials 
Kim Jong Un schenkt seinen Beamten „Mein Kampf“ 
Kim Jong-un endorses Mein Kampf as guidebook for economic growth 
김정은, 히틀러 `나의 투쟁' 고위간부에 선물 

And all these stories are based on the following piece, published on yesterday's New Focus International:


North Korea looks towards Hitler and the Third Reich


Among Kim Jong-un’s gifts to some of North Korea’s high-ranking officials this year were copies of Hitler’s Mein Kampf, according to a trusted source who serves as a DPRK official in China. To mark Kim Jong-un’s birthday on January 8th, DPRK officials ranked departmental director and above in the National Defence Committee were presented with the autobiography of Adolf Hitler in the form of a “hundred-copy book”. (This refers to a limited edition of translated books which are officially banned but have been published in secret for the consumption of members of the North Korean elite.)

During the rule of Kim Jong-un’s father, Kim Jong-il, DPRK officials received holiday gifts of western liquor, tailoring fabric and other foreign luxury goods. Since Kim Jong-un came to power, however, the leader’s customary holiday gifts have been very different, including items such as imported sports equipment, CDs and foreign books in translation.

“Kim Jong-un gave a lecture to high-ranking officials, stressing that we must pursue the policy of Byungjin (Korean for ‘in tandem’) in terms of nuclear and economic development. Mentioning that Hitler managed to rebuild Germany in a short time following its defeat in WWI, Kim Jong-un issued an order for the Third Reich to be studied in depth and asked that practical applications be drawn from it,” the source told us in a telephone interview.

He added that Kim Jong-un highlighted sports as the secret behind Germany’s unity and ideological successes. Kim also stressed the superiority of Hitler’s thinking in childhood-related policies, and issued an order for propaganda departments to encourage a “Three Child” policy...
 
(the entire article you can read here, and the Korean version you'll get here!)


 

 




진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

反JEI농성투쟁/매일밤 (#15)

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진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

터키: 탁심연대/간절한 호소

Turkey:

URGENT APPEAL FROM TAKSIM SOLIDARITY

 

The officials who promised to keep Gezi as a park until the end of the court case have turned Gezi Park, Istanbul and our country into a war zone.

We condemn the police assault with rubber bullets, intense teargas and sound bombs on Gezi Park at a time where the park was populated with women, children and the elderly in the evening of the 15th of June and declare this a crime against humanity.

The attacks are continuing around Taksim and neighbouring areas and the whole country.

The infirmaries at Gezi Park and the Divan Hotel have been specific targets of this assault whose intense violence could not even be justified in times of war. Protesters from all areas of Istanbul are walking towards Taksim against government violence. There are protests all over the country.

As we speak we are trying to ascertain numbers in the current assault. The declarations by the governor or police chief are far from convincing. Many people are in police custody and hundreds have been wounded by plastic bullets. Many people cannot reach hospitals.

These attacks have taken place following the meetings our representatives had with the PM and while we were having an open and democratic discussion as to how the process would be shaped from here on in. The attacks have taken place when we had been working on how to reorganise ourselves in the park and at a time where there were no protests whatsoever in Taksim Square. This is a clear indication that the intention of the PM is to intensify polarisation in Turkey and oppress the people with his insatiable lust for authority.

Our decision making processes are open to everyone and we will be following up on our humane and fair demands together with our labour unions, democratic organisations, political parties and our volunteer participants.

We were in the process of reorganising our tents at Gezi Park when the assault took place. Despite this process which had already been conveyed to MPs by artists and other MPs, the violence is an indication that public order has been destroyed by the government itself in our country.

Here are our urgent demands:
1.This violent attack by the police forces has to stop immediately! The government is solely responsible for what happens tonight and tomorrow! 

2.The press should publicise our declarations and protect our people from the misinformation of a government at war with its own people.

3.We are very concerned about those who ended up wounded as a result of this harsh police intervention. Volunteering medics have been stopped from attending to those in need. Ambulance and other public health services should immediately be re-instated.

4.Tens of thousands of people are walking to Taksim from everywhere in Istanbul. Their voices must be heard.
 

TAKSİM SOLIDARITY(TAKSIM DAYANISMASI) 

16th June 2013, 01:20am(EEST)
 

 

Related:
Turkish police storm protest camp using teargas and rubber bullets (Guardian, 6.16)
The Gazi Battle, pictures (Spiegel, 6.16)
Today's news ticker (Nadir, 6.16)

 

 

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진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

[6.07] H-20000 '모터쇼'...

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So, one week ago(i.e. last Friday, 6.07) the "Dismissed Ssangyong Workers Motor Show Festival" took place in front of Seoul's City Hall. Here just some impressions, photographed by Jang Seong-ryeol:

 

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More pics you can see here(문화연대/Cultural Solidarity).


Related contribution:
'H - 20000 Project' with dismissed Ssangyong workers... (5.15)

Related articles/reports in Korean you'll get here (LabourStart)!!


 

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진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

反JEI 농성투쟁 2000일..(#2)

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Two days ago(6.11) - unfortunately only - a handful of activists (well, in the evening it was raining like during typhoon season!!) attended the struggle rally, organized by KCTU, in Seoul's Hyehwa-dong to mark the 2000th day of Jaeneung Sit-in Struggle...

 

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Related articles, reports(incl. videos) in Korean you'll get on LabourStart!

 

 

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진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

反JEI 농성투쟁 2000일..(#1)

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The Jaeneung Sit-in Struggle Collective(JSSC) is waging a fierce battle against the Jaeneung Education Institute(JEI) for 2000 days, and the struggle still doesn’t end (detailed background info about the strike you'll find here!)...

 

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Today's (bourgeois)Korea Times published the following feature:

 

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JEI workers’ protest on bell tower marks 128th day


Oh Soo-young, 39, the mother of a nine-year-old boy, has not seen her son for the last 128 days because she has been on the bell tower of Hyehwa Catholic Church in Seoul since February, taking part in a rooftop protest.


Along with her colleague Yeo Min-hui, 40, Oh began the public dissent on Feb. 6, demanding that JEI, a tutoring service company, reinstate 12 workers fired in December 2010 because they were members of a trade union.

 

The company claims that the union is illegal, despite a ruling by the Seoul Administrative Court in November 2012 that acknowledged the legality of the union and the right of the company’s employees to be members of it.


Tuesday marked the 2,000th day since the fired workers began their sit-in at the church(*)which is across from the main office of JEI in December 2007.


Of the 12 fired workers, one died of cancer in January 2012, and 11, including the two on the rooftop, have been engaged in public protests.


The two set up a tent on the 6-square-meter space at the top of the 20-meter-high bell tower.


“What we ask of Chairman Park Sung-hoon is to acknowledge the union and fix problems of the company in cooperation with workers,” said Oh.


The union leader said that she will not give up the fight.


Yeo, 40, said she climbed to the rooftop, hoping Chairman Park would see and think of them.
“I hope the chairman thinks of us. It does not matter whether he is scared or regrets what he did. I just want him to remember us.”


Oh and Yeo bow one hundred times on their knees every morning, in hope of winning the fight.


But it is not just unionists who are suffering from the long struggle. Oh said she could not forget the moment when her son told her to come down.


“I was so sorry to my son that I could not be with him. I just told him that I can’t stop this fight.”


Asked what they want to do when they come down, Oh said that she wants go straight to a sauna. “We could not take a shower and bathe here. I wish that I could dip my body into hot water and enjoy a bath,” chuckled Oh.


Yeo said she would visit the tomb of her colleague Lee Ji-eun who died of cancer in January 2012.


“I will say to her that we finally won, and let her know she is reinstated in the workplace,” said Yeo, shedding tears.


During the daytime, they send their stories through social networking services. In the evening they make speeches through megaphones to supporters who host cultural events, such as singing, poetry reading, among others.


JEI said that the company suggested the protesters stop the rally first, and then they will have talks with the unionists.


“They are not workers in the company at the moment because their contracts expired a long time ago. So we suggest they stop the sit-in first, and have negotiations later,” said Jeon Cheol-ho, an HR manager.


Lee Young-ju, the senior vice chairman of the Korean Teachers and Education Workers Union, vowed to help the workers and offered to fight with them, saying that it is shame that society neglected them for 2,000 days.


“Two thousand days is nearly six years, a duration of time that a new-born baby grows up into a child who can eat and dress by themselves. I’m so sorry that nothing has changed even though the workers have protested for such a long time,” said Lee.

 

http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2013/06/116_137369.html

JEI workers’ protest on bell tower marks 128th day
 
 
Oh Soo-young, 39, the mother of a nine-year-old boy, has not seen her son for the last 128 days because she has been on the bell tower of Hyehwa Catholic Church in Seoul since February, taking part in a rooftop protest.
 
 
Along with her colleague Yeo Min-hui, 40, Oh began the public dissent on Feb. 6, demanding that JEI, a tutoring service company, reinstate 12 workers fired in December 2010 because they were members of a trade union. The company claims that the union is illegal, despite a ruling by the Seoul Administrative Court in November 2012 that acknowledged the legality of the union and the right of the company’s employees to be members of it.
 
 
Tuesday marked the 2,000th day since the fired workers began their sit-in at the church which is across from the main office of JEI in December 2007.
 
 
Of the 12 fired workers, one died of cancer in January 2012, and 11, including the two on the rooftop, have been engaged in public protests.
 
 
The two set up a tent on the 6-square-meter space at the top of the 20-meter-high bell tower.
 
 
“What we ask of Chairman Park Sung-hoon is to acknowledge the union and fix problems of the company in cooperation with workers,” said Oh.
 
 
The union leader said that she will not give up the fight.
 
 
Yeo, 40, said she climbed to the rooftop, hoping Chairman Park would see and think of them.
 
 
“I hope the chairman thinks of us. It does not matter whether he is scared or regrets what he did. I just want him to remember us.”
 
 
Oh and Yeo bow one hundred times on their knees every morning, in hope of winning the fight.
 
 
But it is not just unionists who are suffering from the long struggle. Oh said she could not forget the moment when her son told her to come down.
 
 
“I was so sorry to my son that I could not be with him. I just told him that I can’t stop this fight.”
 
 
Asked what they want to do when they come down, Oh said that she wants go straight to a sauna.
 
 
“We could not take a shower and bathe here. I wish that I could dip my body into hot water and enjoy a bath,” chuckled Oh.
 
 
Yeo said she would visit the tomb of her colleague Lee Ji-eun who died of cancer in January 2012.
 
 
“I will say to her that we finally won, and let her know she is reinstated in the workplace,” said Yeo, shedding tears.
 
 
During the daytime, they send their stories through social networking services. In the evening they make speeches through megaphones to supporters who host cultural events, such as singing, poetry reading, among others.
 
 
JEI said that the company suggested the protesters stop the rally first, and then they will have talks with the unionists.
 
 
“They are not workers in the company at the moment because their contracts expired a long time ago. So we suggest they stop the sit-in first, and have negotiations later,” said Jeon Cheol-ho, an HR manager.
 
 
Lee Young-ju, the senior vice chairman of the Korean Teachers and Education Workers Union, vowed to help the workers and offered to fight with them, saying that it is shame that society neglected them for 2,000 days.
 
 
“Two thousand days is nearly six years, a duration of time that a new-born baby grows up into a child who can eat and dress by themselves. I’m so sorry that nothing has changed even though the workers have protested for such a long time,” said Lee.
 
 
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2013/06/116_137369.html
JEI workers’ protest on bell tower marks 128th day
 
 
Oh Soo-young, 39, the mother of a nine-year-old boy, has not seen her son for the last 128 days because she has been on the bell tower of Hyehwa Catholic Church in Seoul since February, taking part in a rooftop protest.
 
 
Along with her colleague Yeo Min-hui, 40, Oh began the public dissent on Feb. 6, demanding that JEI, a tutoring service company, reinstate 12 workers fired in December 2010 because they were members of a trade union. The company claims that the union is illegal, despite a ruling by the Seoul Administrative Court in November 2012 that acknowledged the legality of the union and the right of the company’s employees to be members of it.
 
 
Tuesday marked the 2,000th day since the fired workers began their sit-in at the church which is across from the main office of JEI in December 2007.
 
 
Of the 12 fired workers, one died of cancer in January 2012, and 11, including the two on the rooftop, have been engaged in public protests.
 
 
The two set up a tent on the 6-square-meter space at the top of the 20-meter-high bell tower.
 
 
“What we ask of Chairman Park Sung-hoon is to acknowledge the union and fix problems of the company in cooperation with workers,” said Oh.
 
 
The union leader said that she will not give up the fight.
 
 
Yeo, 40, said she climbed to the rooftop, hoping Chairman Park would see and think of them.
 
 
“I hope the chairman thinks of us. It does not matter whether he is scared or regrets what he did. I just want him to remember us.”
 
 
Oh and Yeo bow one hundred times on their knees every morning, in hope of winning the fight.
 
 
But it is not just unionists who are suffering from the long struggle. Oh said she could not forget the moment when her son told her to come down.
 
 
“I was so sorry to my son that I could not be with him. I just told him that I can’t stop this fight.”
 
 
Asked what they want to do when they come down, Oh said that she wants go straight to a sauna.
 
 
“We could not take a shower and bathe here. I wish that I could dip my body into hot water and enjoy a bath,” chuckled Oh.
 
 
Yeo said she would visit the tomb of her colleague Lee Ji-eun who died of cancer in January 2012.
 
 
“I will say to her that we finally won, and let her know she is reinstated in the workplace,” said Yeo, shedding tears.
 
 
During the daytime, they send their stories through social networking services. In the evening they make speeches through megaphones to supporters who host cultural events, such as singing, poetry reading, among others.
 
 
JEI said that the company suggested the protesters stop the rally first, and then they will have talks with the unionists.
 
 
“They are not workers in the company at the moment because their contracts expired a long time ago. So we suggest they stop the sit-in first, and have negotiations later,” said Jeon Cheol-ho, an HR manager.
 
 
Lee Young-ju, the senior vice chairman of the Korean Teachers and Education Workers Union, vowed to help the workers and offered to fight with them, saying that it is shame that society neglected them for 2,000 days.
 
 
“Two thousand days is nearly six years, a duration of time that a new-born baby grows up into a child who can eat and dress by themselves. I’m so sorry that nothing has changed even though the workers have protested for such a long time,” said Lee.
 
 
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2013/06/116_137369.html
JEI workers’ protest on bell tower marks 128th day
 
 
Oh Soo-young, 39, the mother of a nine-year-old boy, has not seen her son for the last 128 days because she has been on the bell tower of Hyehwa Catholic Church in Seoul since February, taking part in a rooftop protest.
 
 
Along with her colleague Yeo Min-hui, 40, Oh began the public dissent on Feb. 6, demanding that JEI, a tutoring service company, reinstate 12 workers fired in December 2010 because they were members of a trade union. The company claims that the union is illegal, despite a ruling by the Seoul Administrative Court in November 2012 that acknowledged the legality of the union and the right of the company’s employees to be members of it.
 
 
Tuesday marked the 2,000th day since the fired workers began their sit-in at the church which is across from the main office of JEI in December 2007.
 
 
Of the 12 fired workers, one died of cancer in January 2012, and 11, including the two on the rooftop, have been engaged in public protests.
 
 
The two set up a tent on the 6-square-meter space at the top of the 20-meter-high bell tower.
 
 
“What we ask of Chairman Park Sung-hoon is to acknowledge the union and fix problems of the company in cooperation with workers,” said Oh.
 
 
The union leader said that she will not give up the fight.
 
 
Yeo, 40, said she climbed to the rooftop, hoping Chairman Park would see and think of them.
 
 
“I hope the chairman thinks of us. It does not matter whether he is scared or regrets what he did. I just want him to remember us.”
 
 
Oh and Yeo bow one hundred times on their knees every morning, in hope of winning the fight.
 
 
But it is not just unionists who are suffering from the long struggle. Oh said she could not forget the moment when her son told her to come down.
 
 
“I was so sorry to my son that I could not be with him. I just told him that I can’t stop this fight.”
 
 
Asked what they want to do when they come down, Oh said that she wants go straight to a sauna.
 
 
“We could not take a shower and bathe here. I wish that I could dip my body into hot water and enjoy a bath,” chuckled Oh.
 
 
Yeo said she would visit the tomb of her colleague Lee Ji-eun who died of cancer in January 2012.
 
 
“I will say to her that we finally won, and let her know she is reinstated in the workplace,” said Yeo, shedding tears.
 
 
During the daytime, they send their stories through social networking services. In the evening they make speeches through megaphones to supporters who host cultural events, such as singing, poetry reading, among others.
 
 
JEI said that the company suggested the protesters stop the rally first, and then they will have talks with the unionists.
 
 
“They are not workers in the company at the moment because their contracts expired a long time ago. So we suggest they stop the sit-in first, and have negotiations later,” said Jeon Cheol-ho, an HR manager.
 
 
Lee Young-ju, the senior vice chairman of the Korean Teachers and Education Workers Union, vowed to help the workers and offered to fight with them, saying that it is shame that society neglected them for 2,000 days.
 
 
“Two thousand days is nearly six years, a duration of time that a new-born baby grows up into a child who can eat and dress by themselves. I’m so sorry that nothing has changed even though the workers have protested for such a long time,” said Lee.

 

 

* Mistake by K. Times: 128 days on the bell tower and 2000 day's on the streets of Seoul...

 

MUST SEE: Here you can watch videos, recording yesterday's events in Hyehwa-dong!

 

 

 

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진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

쌍용차 농성장 @대한문(#7)

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Y'day(6.10) in the morning in front of Daehanmun, the main entrance of Deoksu-gung(palace) in central Seoul: Riot cops - once again - attacked the Ssangyong Memorial Site, destroyed its remaining parts and arrested at least 16 activists... 
 

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Related shortnews:
Ssangyong rally over? (Korea Times, 6.10)
Protest Removal (JoongAng Ilbo, 6.11)
No more sit-in (Hankyoreh/Yonhap, 6.11)

Several more detailed reports(in Korean) you'll get here (LabourStart)!


And finally here you can watch a short video report by VOP-TV!  


 

 

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진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

6.11(火): 反JEI 투쟁 2000일

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진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

反JEI농성투쟁/매일밤 (#14)

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진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

터키민중봉기/세계연대주말

Appeal for Global Solidarity with the Turkish People's Uprising


Calling on people of all cities of the world! Come out this weekend and reclaim your public spaces to show solidarity with #OccupyGezi and the many waves of protests in Turkey!

 
What began as a small occupation to protect Istanbul’s Gezi Park erupted within a matter of days into massive protests that spread like wildfire across Turkey. A key trigger was the disproportionate use of force by the police. Just as Gezi Park crystallized the struggle over an ever-shrinking public space hijacked by neoliberal authoritarianism, the pepper gas that security forces doused on Istanbul literalized the desparate need for breathing space. Hundreds of thousands of people streamed into the streets in support of the Gezi Park occupation despite a total media blackout, defying police brutality. Now we have reclaimed not only Gezi Park but also Taksim Square, the very heart of Turkey’s public sphere, where mass expressions of discontent have repeatedly been banned throughout the republic’s history. As Taksim and Gezi swell every night with thousands of people who come to celebrate their solidarity, victory and power, our resistance in other parts of Istanbul and other cities across Turkey continues. Of one thing we are certain: Nothing will ever be the same again.

 
Show your support and solidarity this weekend, 8-9 June 2013. Reclaim Tahrir, Syntagma, Zuccotti (& Gwanghwamun!!)... your local streets, squares and parks! Be a part of the movement for freedom and democracy.


Updated articles, reports etc., related to the current situation in Turkey, you'll find here on LabourStart!

 


 

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진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

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