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게시물에서 찾기no chr.!

5112개의 게시물을 찾았습니다.

  1. 2006/12/04
    12.1 국회 앞/영상..
    no chr.!
  2. 2006/12/03
    12.3 反戰 집회/12.6
    no chr.!
  3. 2006/12/02
    대추리 뉴스 #3
    no chr.!
  4. 2006/12/01
    폭동..
    no chr.!
  5. 2006/11/30
    11.29 투쟁 날..
    no chr.!
  6. 2006/11/29
    反FTA..(11.29)
    no chr.!
  7. 2006/11/28
    유럽/인종 차별주의..
    no chr.!
  8. 2006/11/26
    Sympathy for the Devil
    no chr.!
  9. 2006/11/25
    11.22/29 투쟁 날..
    no chr.!
  10. 2006/11/24
    네팔 평화 (??)
    no chr.!

12.3 反戰 집회/12.6

 

12.3 Anti-War Demo in Seoul

 

"Zaytun (name of the S.K. troops in Iraq) come back home"

 

Today, according to Voice of People (VoP), 400 people participated on the event (BTW still there are living 12,000,000 people in the S.K. capital^^). Beside the demand to bring the S.K. troops in Iraq back home, one of the main issues of the rally/demo was the struggle in Pyeongtaek/Daechuri. (C. Sheehan, she visited a short while ago Daechuri, said: "Daechuri has become 'ground zero' in the struggle against violent US military extremism".. harrharr)

 

 

 

Reports in Korean you can read here:

 

"자이툰 철군, 내년이 아니라 지금이다!" (VoP)

"평화유지 위한다면서 특전사 파병?" (OhmyNews)

 

 

 

Here you can see some more pics about the event:

[12월 3일] 자이툰 철군과 한반도 평화를 위한 반전평화 공동행동 

http://blog.jinbo.net/chmanho/?pid=77

http://blog.jinbo.net/save_nature/?pid=277

 

 

*****

 

 

 

Meanwhile on the same day, according to Yonhap, the S.K. ruling class is threatening once again the anti-capitalist movement (for coming Wednesday, 12.6, the next mass protest day against U.S.-ROK FTA is scheduled):

 

Police to get tough on illegal FTA protest

 

South Korean police said Sunday that they will take stern action against unionists and labor activists who are poised to stage rallies against the government's negotiations on a proposed free trade agreement (FTA) with the United States...

http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/Engnews/20061203/410200000020061203170835E0.html 

 

 

 

 

 




 

(aeh.. the small blue points... I have no idea how/from where..^^)

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

대추리 뉴스 #3

 

 

 

Hankyoreh wrote yesterday following:

 

Amnesty Int'l asks S.K. to free U.S. base move protestor
Man rallied against U.S. base land takeover, faces two years in prison

 
 
Kim Ji-tae, a 47-year-old village chief jailed for staging demonstrations to protest the relocation and expansion of a U.S. base in the village of Daechuri, Pyeongtaek, Gyeonggi Province, was designated as a 'prisoner of conscience' by Amnesty International, an international human rights organization.


On November 30, Amnesty International said it designed Kim as a prisoner of conscience and will take international action to ask for his release. Kim is the first South Korean to be designated as a prisoner of conscience without violating the notorious National Security Law. On November 3, Kim was sentenced for two years in jail on charges of interrupting public officials. He is now serving his time in a correctional facility in Anyang.


"Kim is a prisoner of conscience, who exercised his right to participate in a peaceful rally. He was arrested because of his ideology and beliefs," Amnesty International said. "Under international law, the government has no right to detain a prisoner of conscience."


On Dec. 1, a regional inspector at Amnesty International will meet Kim at his correctional facility and will send letters to the South Korean government and courts to appeal for Kim's release, according to Kim Hee-jin, an official at Amnesty International's Korean office.


Amnesty International issued three statements concerning the government's human rights violations in the process of the U.S. base relocation to the village of Daechuri. Priest Moon Jeong-hyun, co-president of an organization to ban the U.S. base's relocation to Pyeongtaek, said, "Kim didn't use physical force, while riot police and the defense ministry used violence."


Amnesty International defines a prisoner of conscience as someone imprisoned solely for the peaceful expression of their political or religious beliefs. In South Korea, former President Kim Dae-jung, poets Goh Eun and Kim Ji-ha, and professor Song Du-yul were designated as prisoners of conscience by the organization.

 

http://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_national/175528.html

 

 

For more informations about the struggle in Pyeongtaek/Daechuri please check out:

 

http://www.saveptfarmers.org

http://antigizi.or.kr

 

 

 

 


진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

폭동..

 

"ANARCHY" IN N.K.??

 

 

 

Already Nov. 9 the (in my opinion anti-DPRK) internet magazine DailyNK reported about riots in the city of Hoeryeong. Yesterday now the "left-liberal" daily Hankyoreh published following story:

 

One dead in N.K. clash between protesters, authorities
Citizens, upset about new market regulations, storm gov't office

 
 
Clashes between locals and the authorities broke out in the North Korean city of Hoeryong (Hoeryeong) in September and again in early November, according to a November 29 report in the Japanese newspaper Asahi Shimbun, which said the clashes related to regulations placed by authorities on a local market. The melee ended with one person dead and twenty arrested.
 

According to the report, the conflict began when authorities imposed stronger regulations about the operating hours and after-hours transactions at "Nammun Market" in this important border city in North Hamgyong province.


During the confrontation that took place in September, one woman died after being struck by a market official. In the second clash, in early November, 18 people were arrested after dozens of locals showed up at the market management office to protest the new regulations. The report said that two people were arrested later for allegedly playing leading roles in the protests and were taken away by North Korea's public security agency.

 

http://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_international/175273.html

 

 

Also yesterday DailyNK wrote this about the same incident:

 

20 Arrested in the Nammun Protest Incident


A protest incident at Nammun market in Hoeryong, N. Korea, which was first reported by the Daily NK on Nov. 8th, caused 20 people arrested by the North Korean authorities, according to the Asahi Shimbun report yesterday.
 

The Japanese newspaper also covered a death of a resident in a clash over management of the Nammun market in September.
 

Nammun market is located 2 km southeast from Hoeryong city and supplied basic necessities for local residents. The Asahi said “Residents resisted against the government’s regulation of opening hours of the market and prohibition of off-hour
Out of the 20 arrested, two were accused of inciting and leading the protest.


On November 8th, the Daily NK reported that about one hundred angry merchants, as a mass, requested the management authority to ‘return the market renovation payment’ and against ‘merge of Hoeryong markets,’ in a rudimentary form of demonstration.
 

The mass protest in North Korea, in which any sort of group movement is prohibited, would be the first kind of such incident known to the outside.

 

http://www.dailynk.com/english/read.php?cataId=nk00100&num=1364

 

 

Related articles:

 

  • Mass Protest at Hoiryeong Nammoon Markets, Provisional Settlement
  • Mass Protest Incident in Hoiryeong
  •  


     

     

     

     

     

    진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

    11.29 투쟁 날..

     

    11.29: S.K. in State of Emergency

     

     

    Despite at least 50,000 riot cops in readiness, massive street blockades by the cops all across the S.K. highway tollgates some thousand of demonstrators filled the streets in downtown Seoul, especially in the area around Myeong-dong, to protest the planned U.S.-ROK FTA(later I'll write more about it, especially my opinion about the current wave of protests..).

     

    Here some articles about y'day's protests by today's S.K. bourgeois newspapers:

     

    Anti-FTA protesters defy police ban (K. Herald)
     

    Thousands of farmers and workers yesterday clashed with riot police across the country in the second massive demonstration in a week against a free trade deal with the United States.


    Despite stern warnings from state authorities, about 120,000 anti-FTA protesters took to the streets in Seoul and six other major cities including Busan, Daegu and Gwangju, the Korea Alliance Against the Korea-U.S. FTA said.


    About 10,000 protesters, including 5,000 farmers from rural regions, converged in central Seoul to press for an end to the trade negotiations and reform of the government's agricultural policy.
     

    Around 50,000 policemen were mobilized to prevent rallies nationwide including some 10,000 in Seoul, the police agency said.

     

    11.29 Seoul City Hall Plaza..

     ..and the same place one week before (http://blog.jinbo.net/CINA/?pid=1001)


    Collisions took place at some highway tollgates as police tried to block farmers from entering Seoul. To keep regional activists from reaching Seoul, 13,000 policemen were at guard at over 1,000 tollgates.
     

    The police was .. on high alert following last week's massive rallies...
     

    The anti-FTA coalition of about 300 civic groups has been banned from staging further rallies after the turmoil.
     

    Pledging a peaceful demonstration this time, the alliance requested the police to permit its second rally, but their request was turned down. Despite the rejection, activists are also planning even more protests on Dec. 6, as Seoul and Washington prepare to open the fifth round of formal FTA talks...
     

    After declaring a "zero tolerance" policy toward violent rallies, the government has been seeking to take harsh measures not only against anti-FTA protests but all other potentially violent rallies.
     

    Blocking tollgates leading to Seoul, the police prevented several small groups of regional protesters from joining the demonstration in Seoul.
     

    About 40 members of a construction labor union in Daegu and 33 farmers from North and South Gyeongsang Provinces were forced to return home.
     

    A member of the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions, one of the nation's umbrella unions, was arrested in Daejeon for violence against two policemen who tried to block him from entering Seoul.
     

    "We have already asked leaders of the alliance to halt all demonstrations. We have no other means but to forcibly disband all protests under lawful procedures," the police said.
     

    State police have already summoned 170 activists involved in last week's violent rallies. Since 163 of those protesters failed to show up, the police are planning to request arrest warrants.
     

    Labor workers joined in yesterday's unrest with the KCTU launching its second general strike opposing government-led labor bills and the FTA.
     

    Some 36,000 union members of Hyundai Motor, the nation's largest carmaker, and Ssangyong Motors joined in yesterday's walkout.
     

    The radical labor group launched a general strike last week, demanding the government scrap new labor regulations. The KCTU continued additional partial strikes throughout last week...

    http://www.koreaherald.co.kr/SITE/data/html_dir/2006/11/30/200611300006.asp

     

     

    Demo near Dongdaemun Stadium at around noon

     

    Anti-FTA Protestors, Police Clash (K. Times)

     

    Rallies in 8 cities go off without major violence (JoongAng Ilbo)

     

    Pitched Battles in Seoul as Police Block Anti-FTA Rally  (Chosun Ilbo)

     

     

    Eulji-ro, downtown Seoul, in the afternoon

     

     

    Some independent reports you can see, incl. video documentaries, here:

     

    http://www.ohmynews.com/articleview/article_view.asp?at_code=376689&ar_seq=2

     

    The Second People's Rally against FTA (VoP)

     

     

    Myeong-dong area during the evening:

     

     

    (sources of the pics: OhmyNews, VoP)

     

     

     

    S.K. TV coverage:


    KBS

    MBC

    SBS

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

    反FTA..(11.29)

     

     

    11.29, 2nd Central Protest Day

     

     

    While yesterday "Police said .. (that) they have sought arrest warrants for 42 farm leaders in connection with violent street demonstrations last week..." (Yonhap) the "entire" S.K. anti-capitalist movement is preparing for today's 2nd central protest day against the U.S.-ROK FTA.

    But also the S.K. national suppression machinery, i.e. nearly all units of the riot cops, are preparing for the event (for its crackdown?!!):

      

    Police prepare to curb ‘illegal' rally attempt (JoongAng Ilbo)
     

    Violence between riot police and protesters could be in the offing today, with the Korean Alliance against KorUs Free Trade Agreement vowing to go ahead with protest rallies for which permits have been denied and the police vowing to disperse protesters who gather.
     
    During a conference call with all provincial police heads yesterday, the National Police Agency agreed to deploy all available police to rally sites named by the organizer and attempt to break up the demonstrators before they coalesce.
     
    Kim Sung-ho, the justice minister, said yesterday that urban rallies by organizations with a history of violent protests are not allowed in principle. Police notified the anti-trade alliance yesterday that their rally permits had been denied, but the group told a press conference yesterday that it would not cancel its "peaceful protest."

     

    The police estimate that 20,000 farmers and protesters plan to converge in Seoul, with smaller demonstrations planned in other cities. The authorities said they would mobilize all 400 riot police units around the nation, some 50,000 men, for the expected confrontation today. They plan, they said, to block highways leading to major cities.

     

    The strike-prone Confederation of Trade Unions said that it had called a three-day general strike today to coincide with the anti-trade rallies...

     

    http://joongangdaily.joins.com/200611/29/200611290010061509900090409041.html

     

     

    *****

     

     

    Here the "official" schedule of the anti-FTA movement:

     

    4. 한미 FTA 저지 범국민촛불문화제  
     
    시간: 2006-11-29 오후 08:00:00 ∼  
     
    - 장소: 광화문
     

      

    3. 한미FTA 저지 2차 범국민총궐기 대회  
     
    시간: 2006-11-29 오후 04:00:00    
     
    - 장소: 서울시청 앞 광장

    - 본집회 이후 광화문까지 행진 
     

     

    2. 한미FTA 반대 민주노총 집회  
     
    시간: 2006-11-29 오후 03:00:00    
     
    - 장소: 청와대 인근 국민은행 청운동 지점

    - 민주노총 집회 이후 4시 본대회로 집결
     

     

    1. 한미FTA 반대 농대위 집회  
     
    시간: 2006-11-29 오후 02:00:00    
     
    - 장소: 서울역

    - 농대위 집회 이후 4시 본대회로 집결

     

    http://www.nofta.or.kr

     

     

    *****

     

     

    Korea Herald is writing following about today's planned events:


    Demonstrators defy protest ban 
     
     
    A head-on collision is anticipated today between police and the nation's farmers and anti-FTA activists who plan to go ahead with a second massive rally despite warnings from state authorities.


    With about 5,000 protesters gathering in central Seoul, large anti-FTA demonstrations will be held in seven other provincial cities including Busan, Daegu, Gwangju and Jeju, according to statements from the Korea Alliance Against the Korea-U.S. FTA.


    Farmers from Chungcheong, Gangwon and other rural provinces will be joining the rally in Seoul.
     

    "As the constitution guarantees the right to hold peaceful rallies, we have decided to go ahead with our second protest despite police warnings," the alliance said in a press conference yesterday. "Although we plan to protest peacefully, we will fight back if the police clamp down on us without a justifiable reason."
     

    As a coalition of about 300 anti-FTA civic groups, the alliance has been banned from staging further rallies after last week's nationwide protests which caused turmoil in some regions.
     

    Over 73,000 farmers, workers and activists collided with riot police in 13 cities in one of the most violent protests in recent years...

      

    Pledging a peaceful demonstration this time, the alliance requested the police to permit its second rally, but their request was turned down. Despite the rejection, activists are also planning even more protests on Dec. 6, as Seoul and Washington prepare to open the fifth round of formal FTA talks.
     

    After declaring a "zero tolerance" policy towards violent rallies, the government reaffirmed that it will take harsh measures should the alliance disobey its restrictions.
     

    "We will disallow any rallies by activist groups with past records of violence," Justice Minister Kim Sung-ho said in a radio interview yesterday, indicating that the government will take suppressive action not only against anti-FTA protests but all other potentially violent rallies.
     

    "While fully securing the right to hold peaceful demonstrations, the government will use all possible measures through criminal charges, indemnity for damages and disciplinary steps to punish leaders and active participants," he added. "I have asked the prosecution to act following the 'zero tolerance' principle."
     

    But Kim said he was against the idea of introducing a stricter permit system for demonstrations.
     

    "As a democratic country, Korea should still guarantee the right for collective action - but only if it does not harm the public welfare," he said.
     

    State police have already summoned 170 activists involved in last week's violent rallies. Since 163 of those protesters failed to show up, the police are planning to request arrest warrants.
     

    The police also raided regional offices of the alliance in Daejeon, Daegu, Gangwon and North Gyeongsang - where the most violent rallies were held - and said officers had secured evidence that protesters were acting under specific orders.
     

    The evidence shows that the act of breaking into regional government offices and setting fires on the streets were intentionally planned before the protest, the police said.
     

    But the alliance emphasized that last week's violence was purely "accidental."
     

    "Violent collisions took place because some governors and mayors had failed to earnestly answer the protesters' questions during the demonstrations. It is only natural that farmers in rural regions are more concerned and enraged about the FTA issue," it said.
     

    "Instead of taking coercive measures, the government should try to analyze the reason why protesters became so violent."...
     

    http://www.koreaherald.co.kr/SITE/data/html_dir/2006/11/29/200611290015.asp

     


     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

    유럽/인종 차별주의..

    Following article The Guardian(UK) published today:

     

    Violence and persecution follow Europe's downtrodden minority across the continent


    Eight million Roma find political voice in face of evictions and mob attack


    Miha Strojan was tending to his sick mother when the mob arrived. Wielding clubs, guns and chainsaws, several hundred villagers converged on the cottage in a clearing in the beech forest with a simple demand. "Zig raus [Gyppos out]," they called in German, deliberately echoing Nazi racist chants. "Bomb the Gypsies."
    It was the last Saturday of last month, when the mob terrorised the extended family of more than 30 Roma, half of them children, into fleeing their clearing a mile over the hill from the farming village of Ambrus in eastern Slovenia.

     

    After the pogrom in Ambrus: Roma families are hiding in the forest


    "They were building bonfires on our land and shouting that if we don't move out, they will bomb us and crucify our children," recalls Mr Strojan, 30.
    A Slovene filmmaker, Fillip Robar Dorin, present at the scene, said it reminded him of the Kristallnacht pogroms of 1938 when the Nazis rampaged against the Jews of Germany and Austria. "We would have torched the place, but we were too late. The police got there before us," bragged one Ambrus villager.


    If the expulsion of the Strojans, living in Ambrus for decades and owners of the place they were living in for 12 years, was a trauma for the family, it was also an increasingly routine example of the epidemic of forced evictions of Roma settlements across the European Union, particularly in central and eastern Europe where the Roma are concentrated.


    Last week in the Czech town of Vsetin police descended on a crumbling block of flats, put more than 100 Roma on lorries and dumped them in Portacabins up to 50 miles away. The mayor, Jiri Cunek, then sent in the bulldozers. "Cleaning an ulcer," he announced to local applause.


    Last month in the eastern Romanian town of Tulcea, police evicted 110 Roma from where they had lived for seven years, their previous accommodation having burned down.


    The European Roma Rights Centre in Budapest, Hungary, says the forced evictions are not restricted to eastern Europe. It is also dealing with incidents in Britain, France, Spain and Italy.


    The scandal in Ambrus occurred not in the poorest parts of Europe where such persecution is more common, but in Slovenia, the wealthiest, westernmost, and most successful of the eight new central European members. In January, Slovenia will adopt the euro.

     

    Slovenia: terrible situation in a camp..

     

    ..for Roma refugees


    "The case of the Strojans in Slovenia is part of a pan-European pattern at the moment," said Claude Cahn, the centre's programmes director. "It's really a crisis this year. This raw destruction of neighbourhoods is quite new."


    As well as frequent forced evictions across the towns and villages of eastern Europe, Mr Cahn points to major slum clearance and urban regeneration schemes currently planned in the capital cities of southern Europe. Istanbul, Sofia in Bulgaria, and Bucharest in Romania all have ambitious reconstruction projects under way. "These can have dreadful effects, entailing the large-scale destruction of Roma housing."


    In a recent study the Dzeno Association, a Prague-based Roma lobby group, noted: "The growing trend of forced evictions of Roma in Europe is becoming a human rights crisis."


    The evictions underline the plight of Europe's 8 million Roma as the continent's most downtrodden minority. Subject to entrenched harassment, discrimination, and ghettoisation, the Roma are liberty's losers in the transformation wrought by recent free elections and free markets.


    Last month Bulgaria's minister of health proposed compulsory abortions and criminalisation for pregnant under-18s from "minority groups", a categorisation that would affect most Roma girls. In Hungary, a mob beat a 44-year-old Roma man to death after he ran over an 11-year-old girl. A Budapest newspaper told its readers to drive off if they run over a Roma child.


    Confronted with this torrent of abuse and prejudice, Europe's Roma are beginning to fight back. Getting organised politically for the first time, they are engaging in grassroots, national and regional campaigns, in some ways recalling the black civil rights movement in the US, ranging from contesting segregation in schools, tenancy rights, legalisation of settlements to demanding political representation in local councils, national parliaments, and governments.


    One trigger for the rise in Roma consciousness and activism is the EU itself. When Romania and Bulgaria expand the union to 27 countries in January, up to 8 million Roma will be EU citizens, the bloc's biggest ethnic minority and a community that outnumbers the populations of at least eight EU states.


    There are now two Roma MPs in the European parliament. Last month a town in Romania got its first Roma mayor and a Roma administration. In Hungary or the Czech Republic there are Roma MPs, occasional government members, scores of local councillors.


    The courts are also being used to seek redress. Showing that Roma children are 27 times more likely to be dumped in remedial education classes than ethnic Czechs, Roma activists have taken the government to the European court of human rights in Strasbourg accusing Prague of deliberate segregation in schools. A similar case against Croatia has also gone to the court.


    In Slovakia there is a Roma news agency. In Slovenia the Roma are to get airtime on national television. A few years ago there was one Roma councillor in Slovenia, now there are 20.


    "Now in Slovenia in almost every municipality, the Roma voice can be heard," said Zoran Grm, Roma councillor for the town of Novo Mesto.


    Jernej Zupancic, a geographer and Roma researcher in the Slovene captal, Ljubljana, said: "The Roma are getting organised ... They're taking more responsibility and becoming much better negotiators."


    Still, it is a long-term process of small steps. "There is growing international Roma activism. A lot of progress. But is it enough to counter the pernicious determination in most places to see the Roma excluded?" asked Mr Cahn.


    Outside Ambrus, the geese, chickens, and turkeys are scratching around the Strojans' hurriedly abandoned homestead. In the forest opposite, sodden mattresses, children's clothing, and old car batteries still lie under a "tent" of plastic sheeting and tree branches where the family sought refuge from the mob attack, which was apparently triggered following a violent brawl between a local man and a non-Roma man living within the Strojan compound.


    In Postojna, at the other end of Slovenia, the Strojans are condemned to the squalour of a disused barracks once used as a refugee centre until it was closed last year as unfit for human habitation. There is neither heating nor hot water. They have been there for a month.


    When the mob marched on the Strojans' house, the government sent in riot police and cabinet ministers. The interior minister announced an "agreement". The family had volunteered to leave.


    "We left because of the pressure from the police and the people. We were afraid," says Mr Strojan.


    Matjaz Hanzek, the parliament-appointed human rights ombudsman, asks: "How can an agreement be voluntary when 500 people are threatening to kill you? The state and the government did what the angry crowd wanted. They moved the people from their home. Such events are inconceivable in a state governed by the rule of law."


    The Strojans tried to go home at the weekend, but did not get far. Another mob, 1,000-strong, set up roadblocks and fought with riot police. The Strojans turned back. At least two other attempts to house them elsewhere in the Ambrus district and in Ljubljana have also foundered because of local protests.


    Backstory


    The Roma, who can be sub-divided into at least five different groupings, migrated to Europe from the Indian sub-continent 1,000 years ago. Although commonly seen as nomadic, more than 90% of Roma in Europe are settled and sedentary. Of some 10 million worldwide, around 7-8 million live in Europe, concentrated in central and eastern Europe and the Balkans. Around half a million Roma perished in the Holocaust. Accurate figures on the spread of Roma are unavailable. Figures are estimates: Romania 2 million; Bulgaria 800,000; Slovakia 600,000; Hungary 600,000; Greece 300,000; Czech Republic 250,000; former Yugoslavia 250,000; and Poland 50,000.

     

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,,1958405,00.html

     

     


     




    진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

    Sympathy for the Devil

     

     

     

     

    "..every cop is a criminal.."

     

    The Rolling Stones

    Sympathy for the Devil (*)/Rock and Roll Circus, Dec. 1968 (**)

     

     

     

     

     

    Please allow me to introduce myself
    I'm a man of wealth and taste
    I've been around for long, long years
    Stole many man's soul and faith
     

    And I was 'round when Jesus Christ
    Had his moment of doubt and pain
    Made damn sure that Pilate
    Washed his hands and sealed his fate
     

    Pleased to meet you
    Hope you guess my name
    But what's puzzling you
    Is the nature of my game
     

    I stuck around St. Petersburg
    When I saw it was a time for a change
    Killed the tsar and his ministers
    Anastasia screamed in vain
     

    I rode a tank
    Held a general's rank
    When the blitzkrieg raged
    And the bodies stank
     

    Pleased to meet you
    Hope you guess my name, oh yeah
    Ah, what's puzzling you
    Is the nature of my game, oh yeah
     
     
    I watched with glee
    While your kings and queens
    Fought for ten decades
    For the gods they made
     
     
    I shouted out,
    "Who killed the Kennedys?"
    When after all
    It was you and me
     

    Let me please introduce myself
    I'm a man of wealth and taste
    And I laid traps for troubadours
    Who get killed before they reached Bombay
     

    Pleased to meet you
    Hope you guessed my name, oh yeah

    But what's puzzling you
    Is the nature of my game, oh yeah, get down, baby
     

    Pleased to meet you
    Hope you guessed my name, oh yeah
    But what's confusing you
    Is just the nature of my game
     

    Just as every cop is a criminal
    And all the sinners saints
    As heads is tails
    Just call me Lucifer
    'Cause I'm in need of some restraint
     

    So if you meet me
    Have some courtesy
    Have some sympathy, and some taste

    Use all your well-learned politesse
    Or I'll lay your soul to waste, um yeah
     

    Pleased to meet you
    Hope you guessed my name, um yeah

    But what's puzzling you
    Is the nature of my game, um mean it, get down 

    Woo, who
    Oh yeah, get on down
    Oh yeah
    Oh yeah!
     

    Tell me baby, what's my name
    Tell me honey, can ya guess my name
    Tell me baby, what's my name
    I tell you one time, you're to blame

    Oh, who...
     

    What's my name
    Tell me, baby, what's my name
    Tell me, sweetie, what's my name...

     

     

     

    * For more about the song:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sympathy_for_the_Devil

     

    ** For more about the show:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Rolling_Stones_Rock_and_Roll_Circus

     

     

     

     

     

     

     


    진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

    11.22/29 투쟁 날..

     

    11.22 SHORT, SMALL

    "PEOPLE'S UPRISING"

     

     

    AND NOW.. THE S.K. GOV'T IS

    STRIKING BACK!

     

     

    Police Raid Anti-FTA Rally Organizers (K. Times)
      
    Police raided nine offices of civic and farmers’ groups in five regions nationwide early yesterday as part of their investigation into Wednesday’s violent rallies, which were organized by a coalition of civic groups opposing the nation’s proposed free trade agreement (FTA) with the United States.


    The raid was conducted to find evidence of allegations that the nationwide violent rallies were planned in advance after demonstrators in the five regions attacked public buildings and broke into them at similar times.

     

    State terror against civic organizations, here in Gwangju

     

     

    The groups included the anti-FTA coalition, a farmers’ association and the Korean Advanced Farmers Federation...

    http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/nation/200611/kt2006112417315211990.htm

     

    Read also:

    Police Will Get Tough With Rallies
     

     

    Seoul declares 'zero tolerance' on violent rallies (K. Herald
     
    The government yesterday declared a "zero tolerance" policy towards defiant rallies, vowing to launch a massive crackdown on unionized laborers and activists who protested against a free trade deal with the United States earlier this week.
     

    "The government will no longer tolerate illegal and violent protests. We will see to it that all participants of the illegal collective action receive the rightful punishment," Justice Minister Kim Sung-ho read from a joint statement of four ministers...

    http://www.koreaherald.co.kr/SITE/data/html_dir/2006/11/25/200611250002.asp

     

     

    Gov't has 'no tolerance' for violent anti-FTA rallies  (Yonhap)

     

    Police vow legal crackdown on violent protests (Hankyoreh)

     

     

     

    But, dear comrades, always remember Mao Zedong's (毛澤東) words: "When your enemy is fighting you, this is good and not bad."^^

     



     

     

     

    진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

    네팔 평화 (??)

    11.21 Nepal Peace Agreement

     

    To end the civil war that raged for more than 10 years the Communist Party of Nepal [Maoist/CPN(M)] signed a peace deal with the government on Tuesday night, with a pledge to lock up their guns, at least for now, and let voters decide the future of the country.

     

    11.22, Kids in Kathmandu celebrating the Peace Accord

     

    Everywhere in the world the political "leaders", even the S.K. government (*), praised the agreement as a "new beginning for a bright future" for the South-Asian country.

     

    But actually it's not really clear if the "People's War" now is on its very end.

     

    At least after I read an Interview in the German "socialist" daily Junge Welt (11.23) with Dinanath Sharma, a member of the CPN(M) central committee (I met him nearly 4 weeks ago in Berlin on a meeting and I was a kind disappointed because except some empty political statements he had nothing new to say, especially about the current situation in Nepal).

    Asked if a in the future Nepal will have a multiple-party-system (mps) he answered: "Yes, after we smashed all fuedal and capitalist structures, there will be a mps, formed by all anti-feudal and anti-imperialist forces." (**)

     

    But please remember the interview by Daily Telegraph with CPN(M) chairman Prachanda (http://blog.jinbo.net/CINA/?pid=979).. And there was nothing written about "smashing all .. capitalist structures".

    But actually it might mean that either comrade Sharma don't know what's going on in his party, or that there are already (at least) two complete different political lines in the party and perhaps also in the PLA. And this, perhaps, is not a good base for a "bright furure", not really..

     

    Anyway, here you can read a NYT/IHT article about the agreement:

    Maoist rebels sign peace deal in Nepal 

     

    Here a statement by Gefont (General Federation of Nepalese Trade Unions):

    http://www.gefont.org/summary.asp?flag=3&cid=195

     

    And finally here you can read the entire text of the "Comprehensive Peace Accord":

    http://www.kantipuronline.com/englishagree.php

     

     

    * S. Korea welcomes Nepali peace accord (Yonhap)

     

    ** The entire interview (in German^^) you can read here:

    http://www.jungewelt.de/2006/11-23/028.php


     

     

    Just let's see what will bring the future!!

     

     

     

     

     

    진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

    11.22 투쟁 날..

     

     

     

    Rallies Blanket Nation (K. Times)
      
    Tens of thousands of anti-globalization demonstrators fought (yesterday, 11.22) with police in cities across the country, attacking pubic buildings and blockading streets in protests against a proposed free trade accord between Korea and the United States.
    The rallies _ organized by unionized workers, teachers and farmers called for the government to withdraw from its talks with the U.S. _ began peacefully but turned violent in many cities, resulting in the injuries of dozens of police officers and protestors.
     

    According to police, public buildings and facilities in more than 15 cities nationwide were attacked by the protestors. More than 80,000 people participated in Wednesday's rallies, including 13,000 in Seoul.
     

    More than 10,000 people joined the rallies in Kwangju with some protestors wielding rocks, steel pipes, and enflamed tin cans as they attempted to advance into the city hall building. Riot police put up barricades and fought back with riot cannons, forcing the protestors to disperse.
     

    During the morning hours, about 600 farmers blockaded a section of the Honam Expressway, which connects the southwest of the city with downtown, causing massive traffic disruption.
     

    In Taejon, demonstrators smashed the windows of the South Chungchong Provincial Office with rocks and steel pipes, and even attempted to set the building on fire by burning trees planted nearby.
     

    The largest rallies were organized in the capital city of Seoul, which added to the city's severe traffic congestion during the commuting hours, but ended without reports of violence.
     

    About 13,000 people, including members of the Korean Teachers and Education Workers' Union (KTU) and the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU), held demonstrations in front of the Seoul Plaza, the grass square in front of Seoul City Hall.
     

    About 7,000 KTU members from around the country gathered there at 1 p.m. to blast plans to introduce teacher assessments and a graded bonus system. The participants all took a day's leave from work, despite warnings that authorities will take stern measures against their ``illegal'' collective action.
     

    About two hours later, the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU) staged a demonstration at the same place to protest the government's plan to legislate a labor reform bill.
     

    The umbrella labor union said it would hold an indefinite strike until their demands are met.
     

    It said about 200,000 unionists nationwide took part in a full walkout yesterday. The union said its members would stage partial strikes for four hours per day from today through next Tuesday, and full strikes again on Nov. 29 and Dec. 6.
     

    The Ministry of Labor said only 56,000 workers participated in the walkout Wednesday.
     

    About 3,500 unionists who gathered at the demonstration site joined another rally held there by a coalition of civic groups opposing South Korea's plan to sign a free trade agreement (FTA) with the U.S.
     

    From 4 p.m., the KCTU unionists and about 5,000 members of the coalition demanded the nation scrap the FTA negotiations, stop importing beef from the U.S. and increase the screen quota.
     

    The coalition's regional branches also held rallies in 12 other cities nationwide with a total of 72,000 people participating.
     

    The rally in downtown Seoul got bigger as some 1,500 street vendors joined it after holding a separate rally in front of Seoul Station.
     

    After the rally, about 1,000 participants marched from the plaza to Chongno and held a candlelight vigil at the Chonggye Plaza. The coalition previously planned 5,000 members for the march, but reduced the number as police refused to allow the larger group to march. The union is also planning rallies for Nov. 29 and Dec. 6.
     

    Police mobilized 7,700 riot control officers to maintain order, but failed to prevent traffic jams in the city center.


    http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/nation/200611/kt2006112217570710510.htm 

     

    Actually, according to some S.K. independent/progressive media all across the country between 100,000 and 150,000 people - workers, farmers, street vendors, student activists... - took the streets.

     

    But the "left-liberal" daily Honkyoreh is writing following:

    Turnout low for nationwide labor demonstrations

     

     

    C. Sheehan (U.S. "anti-war activist") on the rally in Seoul

     


    Following you can read more reports in English by (bourgeois) S.K. newspapers:

     

    Defiant unions stage mass rallies (Korea Herald)

    Even street vendors shun FTA (JoongAng Ilbo)

    Korea Sees Worst Labor Protests in Years (Chosun Ilbo)

     

    Some trouble...

     

    A (nearly) complete coverage, incl. many pictures, but "only" in Korean, about all rallies and demonstrations, held all across S.K. you can find on Voice of People (VoP):

    http://www.voiceofpeople.org/new/index.html

    A collection of photos (by VoP) you can see here:

    [포토]전국에서 타오른 민중의 분노 



    ...in the province.. (source of the pics: VoP)

     

     

    "Photo News slide show":

    성난 농심, 전국 곳곳서 폭발 (OhmyNews)

     


    Uprising in..


    Gwangju..


    ..and Daejeon (Source: OhmyNews)

    "Public buildings and facilities in more than 15 cities

    nationwide were attacked by the protestors" (K. Times)

     

     

     

     

     

    BTW.. already eight days ago K. Times wrote about the then planned demos/rallies, actually took place y'day: "..sources forecast the scale of the protest to be massive enough to rival the ``June Protest’’ against the then-military dictatorship in 1987."

     

    And it was, perhaps, just the beginning: According to the organizers of y'day's demos the same will be happen at least next Wednesday and on Dec. 6! (*)

     

     

     

     

    UPRISING/REVOLUTION

    UNTIL VICTORY!!

    투쟁!(**)

     

     

     

     

     

    * For this case S.K. bourgeois, i.e. the reactionary, newspapers (11.24 editions) are reporting following:

    Police to Block Anti-FTA Rallies (K. Times)

    Police chief orders ban on anti-FTA protests (K. Herald)

    Seoul considers flat ban on anti-trade protests (JoongAng Ilbo)

     

    ** ^^

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     


    진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

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