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403개의 게시물을 찾았습니다.

  1. 2012/12/04
    2012 남한 대통령선거(#2)
    no chr.!
  2. 2012/11/05
    2012 남한 대통령선거(#1)
    no chr.!
  3. 2012/09/11
    통합'진보'당 (종료^^)...
    no chr.!
  4. 2012/08/14
    민주노총 vs. 통합'진보'당
    no chr.!
  5. 2012/07/04
    CNN: 박정근과 국가보안법
    no chr.!
  6. 2012/06/18
    통합'진보'당과/VS 북한...
    no chr.!
  7. 2012/05/03
    한번더: 법무부vs이주노조
    no chr.!
  8. 2012/04/13
    411 총선 (공식발표)...
    no chr.!
  9. 2012/03/13
    RSF: '국가보안법 폐지해야'
    no chr.!
  10. 2012/02/23
    국가보안법 폐지하라!(#3)
    no chr.!

남한'민주주의'... (#1)

Today's Korea Times reported the following:


US-based website on NK blocked


NK News, a Washington, D.C.-based website focused on North Korea...

 

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...has been partially blocked in South Korea for violating the National Security Law (NSL), authorities confirmed Monday.


“We’ve received some complaints saying, ‘Can we have our money back? Half the website isn’t working.’ That puts us in a difficult situation, all because of this archaic law from the 1940s,” Chad O’ Carroll, managing editor of NK News told The Korea Times from London.


The restriction by the Korea Communications Standards Commission (KCSC), enforced since October, reignites a long-running debate over the controversial law.


Officials here say that accessing material from North Korea is not problematic; however, spreading such material violates the NSL and has resulted in arrests.


The block affects a feature on the website called “KCNA Watch,” which extracts content from Pyongyang’s state-run Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) website in Korean, English and Chinese and turns it into data such as graphs. It provides access to KCNA articles dating back to 1997.


According to the KCSC, the block came after a “substantial part of the content” was filed for review by the National Police Agency (NPA). Upon examination of the website, the commission found the content violated the NSL, a KCSC official said on condition of anonymity..


Bernhard Seliger, resident representative of the Hanns-Seidel-Foundation(*) Korea, a German group with engagement projects in North Korea, suggested that the South has outgrown the law. “South Korea is a very successful economic and political (democratic) model and has nothing to fear from some (admittedly often bizarre) ‘information’ from the North,” he said...


* The Hans-Seidel-Foundation is associated with the German ultra conservative "Christian 'Social' Union"(the sister party of the ruling "Christian 'Democratic' Union")...

 

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진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

[12.30] 철도노조 파업...

BREAKING NEWS: Leaders of unionized rail workers agreed to end their prolonged strike after the ruling and opposition parties promised to form a parliamentary subcommittee aimed at ensuring no privatization of rail services...(Yonhap, 12.30)


But there was also confusion among workers on strike when the agreement was reported. Some members called the union office in inquiry or protest because the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU), an umbrella group, hosted a massive solidarity strike Saturday, promising more protests to come in support of rail unionists...(Korea Times, 12.30)


Only two days ago - during the KCTU Rally - Kim Myeong-hwan, the Korail union leader, said via a live video message: “Issuing a license to operate a subsidiary for a new bullet train service is tantamount to declaring war against the people. We cannot accept it. The Korail labor union will continue to stage a general strike into the new year unless the government cancels the license.”


But as far as I know, the gov't has NOT canceled the license, and Kim’s name is on the agreement made with lawmakers...^^

 

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No comment...

 

 

 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

박근혜정권vs 통합'진보'당

Last Monday(10.28) NK's Rodong Shinmun: "These days, the coteries of the puppet conservative party of south Korea are revealing their fascist plot to disband the Unified Progressive Party (UPP) under the pretext of 'plotted rebellion'..."

And today: the S. Korean government petitioned to the Constitutional Court to dissolve the minor Unified 'Progressive' Party, accusing it of "pro-North Korean activities". The Ministry of Justice also plans to push for disqualifying its six lawmakers and prohibiting the left-wing party from all political activities...(more detailed stories about the issue you can read here and here!)

 

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This evening: a tiny protest against the "fascist plot" in front of Seoul's City Hall...



PS: Although I don't see the U'P'P as a "progressive" party.. I'm not happy with the current development! But on the other side... it was predictable!!


Related stuff:
Fate of far-left party hangs by thread (K. Times, 11.05)
UPP group spread pro-North propaganda (JoongAng Ilbo, 11.05)
Students Damn Lee Seok Ki Conspirators (DailyNK, 11.04)
Lefty politician accused of plotting rebellion (TMH, 8.28)

 

 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

남한-일본 '친선'... (^^)

Today's top newsmaker(^^) in the S. Korean press...

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진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

인사동(서울시) '재개발'...

Next month - possibly - the southern area of Insa-dong (one of Seoul’s most beloved downtown districts), incl. the last part of Pimatgol, faces the bulldozers...
 

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Related:
Goodbye, Insa-dong? (Korea Times, 9.02)

 

 

 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

'무장혁명인민기구'만세(^^)

(주말) 독서를 즐기다!!

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As today's "weekend reading" I would like to suggest following article, published in last Monday's Guardian(UK):


Korean unification: dreams of unity fade into past for young South Koreans


South Koreans questioning goal of union with poor neighbours reared on different values as even the shared language diverges


Unified Korea is a desperate, dystopian country, beset by police tyranny, ravaged by organised crime and roamed by a growing underclass of destitute northerners.


Lee Eung-jun paints a chilling portrait of 2016 for readers in prosperous, ordered South Korea. But perhaps the most striking aspect of his novel The Private Life of a Nation is its rarity: portrayals of a unified Korea are unusual enough – never mind such a bleak challenge to the rosy official image of the future.


Periodic crises and North Korean sabre-rattling frequently fix the world's attention on the divided peninsula, yet scant consideration is given to what might one day emerge from such tensions – an oversight, said Lee, that impelled him to write the book.


"The North Korean nuclear weapons [programme] is a scary problem, but it is a one-time issue; the more frightening problem is what would happen afterwards," he declared.


The peaceful pursuit of unification is inscribed in South Korea's constitution. Questioning it would be political suicide for public figures, say analysts, because ethnic nationalism is a key element of political belief across the spectrum.


But there is growing indifference, doubt and even opposition among ordinary citizens who fear the cultural, social and economic impact could crush their society. "It's still strong as an ideal," said Stephen Epstein, an expert on South Korean society and its images of the North at the University of Victoria in Wellington, New Zealand.


"If you ask them: 'How about tomorrow?' Everyone backs off … When confronted with it as something that might happen, people are a lot less sanguine."


In 1994, 92% of South Koreans considered unification "necessary"; by 2007 that had fallen to 64%, according to research by Seoul National University. Support is lowest among the young: a 2010 survey found that only 49% of twenty-somethings judged it necessary, compared with 67% of over-50s.


For many, the peninsula's crude division by foreign powers remains a traumatic historical anomaly. "As a foreigner perhaps you can think of other options, but unification is so natural to me," said Kim Seok-hyang, a professor at Ewha Women's University in Seoul. "No one really asked any Koreans, do you want to be divided and stay like that for over 60 years? With your family members separated?"


But fewer and fewer have close relatives across the border. Not many remember life before the split: less than a tenth of South Koreans were born before 1940.


The differences between North and South are ever starker. In the early decades after the division, South Korea repeatedly fell under military rule and lagged behind the North economically. Now it is a technologically advanced democracy with cultural clout and powerful economic ties across the region.


"I think young Koreans these days feel they have more in common with an American or European student than with North Koreans," said Kim So-young, a 21-year-old student in Seoul. She grew up at the height of the "sunshine era" of engagement with the North, when unification was more easily imaginable.


Her friend, 22-year-old Park Min-jin, said: "I thought it would come by the time we were in high school or university … I imagined running around with [North Korean] children in their uniforms."


Kim has moved from indifference to outright opposition. Unification is impractical, she said: "There will be a lot of costs and problems. What should we do to help North Korea with cultural and economic issues? It's not just the financial cost. They have had such a different education."


Park acknowledges the problems, but believes South Korea's responsibilities cannot be dodged. "I might be a little bit naive, but I wish the younger generation was not so preoccupied with economic priorities and would think in a more historical and humanitarian context."


Even the way people speak has diverged, leaving new arrivals in the South puzzled by differences in the vocabulary: as the old joke has it, they are divided by a common language.


Epstein believes growing knowledge of the North has increased rather than bridged perceptions of difference.


"There are almost 25,000 North Koreans in the South. The North is no longer anywhere near as mysterious as it was," he said. "Because of the famine and malnutrition, the difference between the two is not just linguistic, it's been inscribed physically at this point."


Many refugees struggle to adapt; research three years ago found high unemployment rates and an average income of roughly half the average South Korean salary.


They lack the social networks for career success. Their manners and mores are different."There's no longer this mystic idea of 'we are one' … They think: they are really different, [this is] a pain in the ass and why do we have to deal with all these sorts of issues economically just to bring them back into the fold?" Epstein added.


The gulf stretching between North and South dwarfs the gap between East and West Germany before reunification. There, the difference in per-capita income was 1:2 or 1:3; in Korea it is at best 1:15 and some think closer to 1:40, Andrei Lankov writes in his book The Real North Korea. This year, Seoul's finance ministry estimated that unification could cost the South up to 7% of annual GDP for a decade, although it would benefit from cheap labour and the North's natural resources.


Earlier research commissioned by the Unification Ministry suggested the cost would be between 371.5tn won (£215bn) and 1,253.5tn won if it happened by 2020. That unification would almost certainly be born of a crisis increases its difficulties. Attempts to manage the transition – such as controlling population movement while the North developed – could quickly be overtaken by events. Yet unification might prove equally traumatic for northerners, even if it brought a rise in living standards.


"A better option might be: 'You go your way, we go ours; let's do business with you and see you treat your own people better,'" suggested Epstein, who otherwise foresees rampant exploitation and an underclass.


Tellingly, Lee's protagonist is a North Korean – a former army hero who has turned to crime – and his novel highlights the marginalisation and exploitation of northerners. He believes his compatriots should face unification head-on instead of seeking to avoid it. He thinks they have avoided discussion of the issue because of its complexity.


"Unification will come soon. I would say before 10 years and we need to prepare," he said. "Let's say it is understandable that ordinary people don't want to talk about it but this is a problem at the political and administrative level, with structural problems in that the government is not ready either.


"We need to know what to do when we are living next to each other."


http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/may/27/south-north-korea-unification

 


Have a nice, relaxing weekend!!


 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

남한자본주의: 남양유업...

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The Namyang Diary "scandal": Well... it's just another (bizarre) example depicting the ugly reality of capitalism "Made in Korea". But it's just the tip of the iceberg...
 

Related articles:
Namyang Dairy Products Forces Products onto Distributors... (Kyunghyang Shinmun, 5.06)
Foul language and brutual sales tactics lead to anti-Namyang campaign (TMH, 5.06)
Convenience store owners boycott scandal-ridden dairy producer (Yonhap, 5.08)
Namyang Dairy in crisis (Korea Herald, 5.08)
Victims of corporate abuse air their grievances (Hankyoreh, 5.08)

 

 

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진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

'전쟁나면 서민만 고생...'

No comment...

 

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진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

2012 남한 대통령선거(#5)

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 Source: Chosun Ilbo(12.19, short before midnight KST)

 

 

No comment(^^):

 

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Related articles:
Challenges for President-Elect Park Geun-hye (Kyunghyang Shinmun, 12.21)
After her election, Park needs to make good on her promises (Hankyoreh, 12.20)

 

PS: "Park Geun Hye is a disgusting political prostitute",  according to KCNA(2012.4.6)...

 

 

 




진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

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