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朝鮮의 핵실험 #6

 

 

 

 

 

DPRK's (likely *) nuclear test: latest news, reports.. more threats and speculations

 

SANCTIONS = DECLARATION OF WAR

..New York and Tokyo will be blazed

We never speak empty words!

(o-tone DPRK officials)

 

 

Only few hours ago the German (bourgeois, but usually serious) SPIEGEL online headlined:

 

S. Korea is preparing for possible nuclear attack

 

..and DailyNK "completed":

 

If Nuke Bombed on Yongsan, 1.25 Million People Would Die

 

..of course such kind of stuff is just b.. sh..!

 

 

But there were also some more serious articles published in the last hours/days:

 

N Korea vows sanctions reprisals (Guardian)

Japan bans all trade with N Korea 

 

U.S. pushes new UN resolution on North Korea (AP/IHT)

Can sanctions hurt the regime? (IHT, 10.11)

 

Time plays into Pyongyang's hands (Asia Times)

 

N.K. warns of 'physical' reaction to sanctions (Korea Herald)

 

South Korean troops told to be ready (JoongAng Ilbo)

 

The S. Korean "left-liberal" daily Hankyoreh published y'day following

[Interview] N.K. diplomat says, ‘We had no options’

 

 

Korea Times, today once again, is participating on speculations:

‘North Korea Will Test H-Bomb’

http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/nation/200610/kt2006101217510111990.htm


 

*****

 

 

Last but not least we already should keep in our mind what KCNA is teaching us today:

 

Philosophy on Arms
  
The successful advance of the Korean revolution is firmly guaranteed by the great Songun politics, the philosophy on arms. The arms philosophy is a unique one advanced by Kim Jong Il, Songun commander of Mt. Paektu, with the viewpoint on the arms that the arms are the permanent companion and comrade of the revolutionaries.
 
    The philosophy is based on the principle that the revolution for the independence of the popular masses is initiated, advanced and accomplished by force of arms.
 
    If they want to make a revolution, the popular masses should not only be awakened to rise up but also firmly take rifles in their hands.
 
    This is because the reactionary exploiting classes, counter-revolutionary forces, violate and restrict the independence of the people in reliance upon the counter-revolutionary violence.
 
    The path for the revolution is explored by the people only when they make a breach in the counter-revolutionary violence by force of arms.
 
    The arms also play an important role in the whole period of progressing and carrying out the revolution.
 
    It is a serious lesson of the history left by the former socialist countries. A party, with millions of party members, ceased to exist as it failed to seize the army and some countries had socialism collapsed as they weakened military strength.
 
    The arms philosophy also includes the principle that the army is precisely the party, state and people.


    The party, the general staff of the revolution and the guiding force, can ensure its leading position under the protection of the army and demonstrate its invincible might.
 
    A party with a long history and tradition met its tragic end in the consequence of "depoliticizing" the army and neglecting ideological work within it. But the Workers' Party of Korea has made a victorious advance of the revolution by seizing the army under difficult conditions. These instances contrastingly show that the party with powerful revolutionary armed forces is invincible.
 
    The revolutionary army and the people's government share the destiny with each other proceeding from the commonness of their characters and basic mission. The independent and creative life of the people is unthinkable apart from a strong army.
 
    The unique philosophy on arms of Korea testifies to its correctness and vitality in the revolution thanks to the Songun politics based on the philosophy.

(Blablabla.., but the problem is, that they mean it serious, very serious!!)

 

 

* Several scientists, for example in France and Germany, are saying that if DPRK's test wasn't a fake event, at least it was a failure.





 

 

 

 

 

 

 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

朝鮮의 핵실험 #5

 

LUNATICS OF ALL COUNTRIES, UNITE!! (*)

 

 

While even the ruling "communist" parties in China and Vietnam, for example,

were/are condemning NK's (likely) nuclear test, only one "communist" party with some int'l influence - the Communist Party of the Philippines - welcomed this shit:

 

PRESS RELEASE
Information Bureau
Communist Party of the Philippines

 

CPP congratulates DPRK for nuke breakthrough
October 10, 2006

 

The Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) today congratulated the people and government of the Democratic People's Republic for successfully and safely carrying out its first-ever nuclear test and hailed the successful test as a “militant assertion of national sovereignty and the right of an independent country to develop its own powerful self-reliant defense capability amidst constant efforts by the US to impose its imperialist hegemony over the world, maintain its monopoly of nuclear weapons along with a few other powerful countries, and subvert the sovereign will of the DPRK.”

 


Yesterday, the DPRK government announced that it has successfully carried out an underground test of its nuclear weapons, developed after four decades of painstaking self-reliant efforts, “with 100% of sheer indigenous wisdom and technology… under secure conditions… at a stirring time when all the people of the country are making a great leap forward in the building of a great, prosperous, powerful socialist nation.” There were no reports of radiation leak from the test site. The announcement was met expectedly, however, with condemnation by the US government which called the test a “provocative act threatening international peace and stability.”

 


“The Filipino people and their revolutionary movement regard the DPRK nuclear test as a significant positive development in the effort of freedom-loving peoples the world over to challenge the US imposition of Pax Americana over the world, break the US and other big imperialist powers’ monopoly over nuclear weapons, and compel the world’s peoples to kneel before its hegemonic power,” said CPP spokesperson Gregorio “Ka Roger” Rosal.

 


“Now, in the face of the DPRK's advance in scientific and technical knowhow with nuclear power, the US is significantly deterred from threatening and carrying out military strikes against the DPRK. The US is afraid that it can no longer try to bully the DPRK,” said Rosal. With the success of its first-ever nuclear weapons test, North Korea becomes the ninth country in the world to have nuclear weapons, along with the United States, Russia, France, China, Britain, India, Pakistan and Israel.

 


“Of course, US imperialism and other imperialist powers and their client states will condemn the DPRK’s nuclear breakthrough which broke their monopoly of nuclear weapons and confronts the imperialist-imposed pacifism that oppress and cause great hardships on the countries and peoples of the world,” said Rosal.

 


The CPP also regard the development of the DPRK's nuclear capability as an important breakthrough in fulfilling its energy requirements and further boosting its economic potential, aside from developing its capability to defend its national sovereignty.

 


“Contrary to imperialist propaganda, the strengthening of the nuclear capability of the DPRK does not pose a threat to other nations' sovereignty and to genuine world peace. In the past, the DPRK has shown respect for the independence of other countries in the same way that it wants the US to respect the sovereign will of the DPRK. The development of nuclear capability in the hands of independent countries that persist in the fight against US hegemonism and aggression realistically deters the US from using its nuclear weapons and military might to attack these countries, and is thus a positive factor in our common striving for genuine peace in the world,” added Rosal.


Reference:
Marco Valbuena
Media Officer
Cellphone Numbers: 09179776392 :: 09282242061
E-mail:cppmedia@gmail.com

 

http://www.philippinerevolution.net/cgi-bin/statements/releases.pl?refer=kr;date=061010;language=eng 

 

 

 

...and this kind of "communists", self-declared "progressives" are surprised that the majority of the "ordinary" people - everywhere - are disgusted from the idea of (such kind of) "progress"/"socialism"/"communism"!

 

 

* mi-anh hae-yo/I'm really sorry!! ^^

 

 

 

 

 


 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

朝鮮의 핵실험 #4

 

What was the aim of NK's yesterday's (likely) nuclear test?

According to the SK semi-official news agency Yonhap a NK gov't official said that the main aim was to push the world, especially the US to start talks with the DPRK.

Now instead to talk WITH the DPRK the world is talking ABOUT the DPRK and its "Dear Leader"(DL) Kim Jong-il. And the world is talking not positively about it, not really..

I really would like to know what NK diplomats/employees of DPRK's embassies, for example in Germany, are thinking about their leadership - especially the DL - in the home country when they had to see the today's front pages of many newspapers..

 

 

"The freak ignites the bomb"

BZ, Berlin's main yellow press newspaper

 


Australia



 

China/HK

 


Germany

 

 


"The progress is already here"

Yedioth Ahronoth, Israel

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PS:

The news about NK's (likely) nuclear test have also some serious impacts in SK:

"It ruined my and my friends lunch", Park Un-joo, 22, Korea Univ. student (Chosun Ilbo, 10.9)

 

 

 

 

 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

朝鮮의 핵실험 #3

 

 

 

 

 

Oops~ it seems that y'day I was a little to hasty to congratulate..

Only about 10 hours after I wrote my last "contribution" here... THEY DID IT!

 

Today in the morning - usually after I get up I have my breakfast(커피와 담배) and I check the latest news: at first on a German web site, after this Yonhap and then Yedioth Ahronoth, Haaretz and Al Jazeera.. - I had to found out that Kim Jong-il recovered and was now able to direct the nuclear test(f.. him!!!).

 

So KCNA was able to announce following this morning:

 

"The field of scientific research in the DPRK  [Democratic People's Republic of Korea] successfully conducted an underground nuclear test under secure conditions on October 9, 2006, at a stirring time when all the people of the country are making a great leap forward in the building of a great, prosperous, powerful socialist nation.

 

"It has been confirmed that there was no such danger from radioactive emission in the course of the nuclear test, as it was carried out under scientific consideration and careful calculation.

 

"The nuclear test was conducted with indigenous wisdom and technology, 100 per cent.

 

"It marks a historic event as it greatly encouraged and pleased the KPA [Korean People's Army] and people that have wished to have powerful self-reliant defence capability.

 

"It will contribute to defending the peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula and in the area around it."

 

Of course all around the world everyone is extremely outraged (about this situation, created now by the DPRK) ... except in S. Korea, especially on the "left" side there(anti-war, civil right, environment, political movement). 

 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PS:

 

Int'l news agencies/newspapers are writing this about the issue:

 

N. Korea's move threatens stability (IHT/NYT)

 

UN action against N Korea sought (Al Jazeera)

 

'We should be congratulated'  (Yedioth Ahronoth, Israel)

 

N. Korean test wake up call for South Koreans  

 

North Korea nuclear test
shocks world, stirs fears
  (Philippine Daily Inquirer)

 

 

Kim Jong Il Shocks the World (Der Spiegel, Germany)


The exclusive club of nuclear powers has a new member: North Korea. With his nuclear test, dictator Kim Jong Il has sent a strong message to the international community. American and Chinese efforts to contain his isolated regime have failed.


Early Monday morning in a mine, the North Korean army tested a nuclear warhead with the strength of 550 tons of TNT. North Korean leader Kim Jong Il and his generals are sure they have now added the decisive instrument of power to its arsenal. The logic of the regime in Pyongyang? Only the bomb can protect the country from the Americans, who have never before in history attacked a nuclear power.


Kim Jong Il's regime is using this show of strength to force the Americans to the negotiating table. The goal is a peace treaty, followed by the withdrawal of US-troops from the Korean peninsula and a generous economic aid package for the starving rogue state.


China, North Korea's closest ally, seems to have been informed just prior to the detonation. Some 350 members of the Chinese Communist Party's Central Committee are currently in the capital Beijing for a meeting designed to pave the way for the next party convention. The leadership in Beijing responded immediately to the alarming announcement.


China objected to the test in unusually harsh terms, calling it a "brazen" act of defiance. North Korea has disregarded the international community by undertaking the nuclear test, Beijing said, further warning its neighbor to abstain from any "activities that could worsen the situation." That the paranoid and secretive regime in Pyongyang has acquired the bomb is highly troubling to China. A nuclear-armed North Korea upsets the balance of power in East Asia and beyond.


China is now surrounded by nuclear powers to the west (India and Pakistan) and to the east (North Korea). The Japanese are also expected to become more vocal in their demand for a nuclear arsenal. In fact, the newly-elected Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe announced on Monday that his country plans to expand its military capacity in cooperation with the United States.


The relationship between the comrades in Beijing and Pyongyang, who in a 1961 treaty swore to each other eternal loyalty, has long since cooled off. Kim Jong Il provoked the Chinese in the fall of 2005 when he decided to boycott the six party talks, which China had organized. The talks were to involve China, North and South Korea, the United States, Russia and Japan.


China has summoned Kim back to the negotiating table, but it is questionable whether the six-party talks even make sense any more. The talks were originally designed to dissuade North Korea's leadership from pursuing its nuclear ambitions. With the bomb in hand, North Korea's military would hardly allow it to be negotiated back out of its arsenal.


Admittedly, testing a nuclear warhead is not the same as mounting it onto a missile and launching it over the ocean. The North Koreans still appear to be far from that capability.


China loses face, America has failed


But politically, the Chinese have lost face. All diplomatic, financial and rhetorical attempts to dissuade North Korean from pursuing its nuclear ambitions have utterly failed.

 

The Americans, too, stand before the ruins of their failed strategy. They have rejected direct talks with Kim because they don't trust him. The six party talks were supposed to help integrate North Korea into the international community, alas to no avail. As a result, Washington's rhetoric is becoming more bellicose: "The United States condemns this provocative act," US President George Bush said on Monday. "The transfer of nuclear weapons or material by North Korea to states or non-state entities would be considered a grave threat to the United States and we would hold North Korea fully accountable for consequences of such action."


Despite the harsh reprisals, one cannot help but wonder what trump card the Americans still have up their sleeve that could bring Pyongyang to reason. Perhaps North Korea's nuclear armament could have been avoided had Washington engaged in direct talks with Kim Jong Il's people, thereby granting them the international recognition they crave.


The international community will most likely react to North Korea's provocation with economic sanctions. It is unlikely that this will help: China will only participate in the sanctions for a little while, if at all, only to then continue its support of North Korea.


Beijing is simply not interested in toppling Kim's regime. Especially not when it is sitting on an atomic bomb.


 

 

 


 

 

 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

朝鮮의 핵실험 #2

 

 

 

 

 

축하!!

 

According to int'l news agencies: The Korean Peninsula still exists(fortunately). Congratulation!!

 

 

The int'l media, here for example AP/CNN, is explaining the "real" reason why..:

 

North Korea may drop nuclear test


North Korea informed China it may drop its plan to test its first atomic bomb if the United States holds bilateral talks with the communist country, a former South Korean lawmaker said Sunday.
 

The North also denied speculation that its nuclear test was imminent and said the regime has not raised the alert level of the country's military, said Jang Sung-min, citing a telephone conversation with an unidentified Chinese diplomatic official.


North Korea warned the Chinese official, however, that it would accelerate its preparations for a nuclear test if the United States moves toward imposing sanctions or launching a military attack, Jang said, citing his contact.


The Chinese official was informed of North Korea's stance by North Korean officials Sunday afternoon, Jang said.


The official then telephoned Jang in South Korea with the news.


Jang is a former lawmaker of the then-ruling Millennium Democratic Party...

 

http://edition.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/asiapcf/10/08/nkorea.tests.ap/index.html

 

 

 

But actually I'm sure that Kim Jong-il was simply to drunken(after yesterday's f.. long party) to get up today(and to direct the nuclear test or anything else^^)..

 

 

To be continued(of course!!)...

 


 

 

 

 

 

 


진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

朝鮮의 핵실험 #1

 

 

 

"North Korea can have a future or it can have such (nuclear) weapons. But it cannot have both." (Chr. Hill, CNN Int'l, 10.7)

 

Int'l news agencies/-papers are expecting for the coming days - many are saying TOMORROW - a test of a nuclear bomb by/in the D.P.R.K.

 

(Of course especially) the S.K. "left" is downplaying this threat. For example the "left-liberal" newspaper Hankyoreh wrote before y'day: "Despite the North’s recent announcement that it would go ahead with a nuclear test, there are no signs that North Korea is preparing for one. Indeed, experts believe a test is not imminent..." although even Chinese government related officials said that "The dicision for the test is alraedy made"(Li Dunqiu, Research Center of the State Council, 10.4).

 

I'm really worrying that, even after NK accomplished the test, nobody in SK will really care about it..

 

Tomorrow I'll write more about my opinion about this issue(aeh~ I mean if it's necessary - if you're still alive..).

 

 

U.S. readies options on North Korea  (IHT/NYT, 10.6)


Amid signs Friday that North Korea was gearing up for a nuclear test, the Bush administration was developing an extensive list of possible new sanctions against Pyongyang, senior officials said.


The measures under consideration include renewing efforts that have been unsuccessful in the past - persuading South Korea and China to cut off energy supplies and trade - and potentially confrontational steps that include intercepting and inspecting sea shipments into and out of the country.


Many of the sanctions have been considered before, as part of a long- running argument within the Bush administration over the best way to deal with North Korea. After a series of emergency meetings, including one on Tuesday at the White House, officials on each side of that debate said a nuclear test would end the argument about whether the United States should emphasize rewards or penalties.


"If the test happens, all the arguments are over," said one senior official in the midst of the debate. "We'll end up going to full-scale sanctions; the only debate is what 'full-scale' means."


On Wednesday night, Christopher Hill, the assistant secretary of state for East Asia and a leading proponent of new creative diplomatic offers to North Korea, announced that "we are not going to live with a nuclear North Korea."


Bush administration officials concede that the United States has been living with a nuclear North Korea for years. But the fact that North Korea has not yet tested its weapons has created enough diplomatic ambiguity so that President George W. Bush has not had to confront how he would enforce his own declaration in 2003 that he would never tolerate a nuclear-armed North Korea.


U.S. intelligence agencies have long declared that North Korea has produced the fuel for nuclear weapons, but in recent days, their briefings have also included an assessment based on the expectation that North Korea is likely to make good on its threat to conduct an underground test.


The briefings include the important caveat that such assessments are based more on an evaluation of the political environment and North Korean strategy than on physical evidence that a test is imminent. The briefings were described by several government officials, who said they did not forecast a specific timetable for a test.


The question of sanctions is an enormously sensitive one, administration officials said, and they would not describe the options publicly because no decisions had been made. The officials who did discuss them, however, came from both camps in the administration, and they appeared unified in their effort to send a warning to North Korea that a test would galvanize Washington into actions that some administration hawks have been proposing for years.


Bush, several officials said, planned to call President Hu Jintao of China in coming days to urge him to send an emissary to North Korea to deliver a sharp warning about the consequences of a test.


Frederick Jones, a National Security Council spokesman, would say only: "Our objective is to try to use our influence, and the influence of others, to convince the North Koreans that they should not test a nuclear device."


But U.S. officials are clearly concerned that the appeal to Beijing will not prove sufficient.


"The last time the Chinese did this, after the missile tests" that North Korea conducted in early July, "their delegation was left cooling their heels for days," one senior official said. Others cautioned that China had always shied away from the ultimate sanction, cutting off oil to North Korea, for fear that it could trigger an economic or political collapse that would result in chaos along the long Chinese-North Korean border.


The threatened test comes as the administration is already trying to persuade the UN Security Council to make good on its threat to impose sanctions against Iran for defying a call for it to suspend uranium enrichment.


Some U.S. officials are concerned that adding North Korea to the list of countries the United States wants punished could complicate those efforts and fracture a fragile coalition.


The potential sanctions against North Korea are described in a series of classified options papers that have been circulating among senior administration officials.


The proposed sanctions, which are graduated, begin with a significant tightening on economic transactions - a process that began last year with action against a small bank in Macao that is believed to have handled transactions for Kim Jong Il and other North Korean leaders, and that U.S. investigators say was involved in money laundering.


A more escalated measure would involve inspection of all shipping, using a provision of a council resolution passed after the missile tests in July that allows nations to block missile or missile-related transactions.


Such interceptions have been practiced under the administration's Proliferation Security Initiative, a program begun to persuade scores of nations to cooperate in stopping illicit weapons shipments.


But the reality is that North Korea receives most of its goods over the Chinese and Russian borders. Kurt Campbell, a former Defense Department official who specializes in Asia, said, "Without leveraging the Chinese to put firm pressure on, very little can be accomplished by the U.S. through sanctions."

 

http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/10/06/news/nuke.php



 

 

 

 

 

 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

독일/매일 현실 #2

Following article was published yesterday in the German (bourgeois) magazine Der Spiegel:

 

HOLIDAY WITH THE FAR RIGHT
German Neo-Nazis in Paradise


Germany's far-right NPD party is expanding its influence even in holiday retreats like the Baltic Sea resort Usedom. Some locals are concerned that this could mean the end of a tourism boom for the idyllic coastal region. But no one likes to talk openly about the problem or its causes, and a climate of fear has seized the residents.


Jutta Arnold gets nervous every time she thinks of the coming season. She should have a dream job: She's Usedom's hotel director and regional head of the German Hotel and Gastronomy Association. Business is good. With its renovated Wilhelminian luxury hotels, gorgeous promenades and long white beaches, the Baltic Sea island lures more and more tourists every year to Germany's remote northeastern corner. At least until now.


After regional elections almost three weeks ago, Germany's far-right National Democratic Party (NPD) celebrated a fresh success on this island. The NPD won 7.3 percent of the vote across the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, but in most villages on Usedom it won just over 10 percent; and now the island's tourism industry fears tourists may decide to go elsewhere next summer.


"To be perfectly honest, the election results will only harm tourism," says Arnold. "That's why I don't understand how people here could vote for the extreme right. We're shooting ourselves in the foot."


Meanwhile, the NPD has learned to deal with the accusation that it scares off tourists. "Tourists welcome, asylum-swindlers out!" say posters still attached to street lights after the election. Arnold knows from experience that those are hollow words. A dark-skinned visitor was recently accosted, she says -- at least one particular tourist was not welcome. "Either I've misunderstood something here," Arnold says about the NPD slogan, "or the NPD has." She candidly admits, "We can only protect our guests on the hotel premises."


What makes Jutta Arnold special is that she'll talk about the danger from the right. Granted, it's part of her job description as a tourism functionary. But an open-mouthed policy on neo-Nazis is nevertheless not typical on the island of Usedom.


The NPD taboo


Many passers-by here would simply rather not discuss it. Some do, then ask not to be named. Others speak fairly openly, give their names, then send pleading e-mails days later: For God's sake, please don't quote me!
 

What's going on? How great must the fear in Usedom be for so many to fall silent?


Those who speak anonymously about the far right don't admit to voting NPD. No one does: That's the first realization. The second is that almost everybody has some sympathy for NPD voters. They're going against the "established parties," people say. The third is that one often hears the claim that the right-wingers aren't causing problems. "They're always well-dressed, they greet you, and they behave themselves."


In Usedom, such well-bred right-wing extremists made the headlines when they assaulted a group of school kids on a camping trip. Six years ago, a homeless man was beaten to death in Ahlbeck. Today, seniors sitting on a park bench in Ahlbeck let the turbulent holiday life pass them by as they say-again, anonymously-that the incident was the work of hooligans, who can be found anywhere and not just in Ahlbeck. The NPD is a different story, though; they are a legitimate political party.


Ahlbeck, Bansin and Heringsdorf are Western Pomerania's three bath resorts from Germany's imperial era, built as majestic summer retreats. Tourists lounge around here in the white sand, eat ice cream, buy amber souvenirs, and enjoy the idyll of beach life on the Baltic Sea. It is here of all places that these tourists now have to grapple with how the NPD has become so popular right in the middle of mainstream society. An East German couple from Bernau near Berlin tries to explain it this way: "One can understand that the people here would vote out of protest." The two tourists do not get any more specific, saying only that people in Western Pomerania have ample reason to complain, despite the fact that "it's much worse with the foreigners" in West Germany.


Bleak winters in the village


A more complete answer to the question of the NPD's rise in popularity can be found beyond the city's promenades, where the holiday paradise ends and a very different region starts. Life here grows especially gray during the winter, when seasonal workers are unemployed. The hinterlands of Usedom can be very bleak, to say nothing of the mainland.


So bleak, in fact, that the NPD could count on a measure of success with its massive and expensive ad campaign. Western Pomerania is among Germany's least-developed states. It's marked by high unemployment and a rural population that "has always been kinda simple," as one man here put it (again, anonymously). Ideal conditions for a party whose most prominent members come from the west in order to win power using equally simple phrases.


"Preserve local schools. Rap the knuckles of fat cats!" an NPD placard demands. This is not really objectionable in and of itself, says Lars Bergemann, the party whip for the left-wing Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS): "The NPD is not stupid. It reads people's lips and has understood how to skillfully address their needs. They have been successful, and we are left with hindsight."


The politician heads the district commission for youth welfare services and has a seat on the council against right-wing extremism. He's willing speak openly about the NPD, as he tries to explain the climate of fear that has spread throughout the region. "It's a big taboo. People don't trust each other," he says. Even obvious NPD supporters don't want to talk about their motives and the party. And since the extremists remain incognito, not even those who want to "work against this democratically" have the courage to come out of hiding. "To some extent this fear is justified, not so much because of the violence, but because it's easy to make a person's life hell in a village."


Bergemann assumes the NPD has a loyal following here. The election result "wasn't just out of protest. All you have to do is ask around." The NPD has taken hold "because the long-established parties have failed." It's not just Bergemann who says this out of a will to criticize; people say the same thing on the street. The NPD won because the other parties have done nothing.


A youth club here, a bonfire there -- little achievements earn the NPD credit. In Zirchow, near the middle of the island, a muscle-packed young man with a bald head claims that "over the past 15 years," people have tried every party. None did enough. "So they voted for the NPD, who doesn't do any less than the others." He voted for the Greens. "The fact that I am bald is purely a coincidence."


Another native who prefers to remain anonymous says that "half of the people stayed home because they were frustrated. The other half went to the polls for the exact same reason." Unmet expectations, palpable neglect -- these are the issues in Western Pomerania. "It's no solution that our youth has to go to Norway or Bavaria to find work," complains a Lassan woman. In this small village, the conservatives got 158 votes, the social democrats got 138, and the NPD got 129. "Someone has to take care of us."


The first NPD mayors?


Indeed, many people leave the region, above all the well-educated, the young, and the women. What remains are the old "and the young men with relatively meager educations. This is an ideal breeding ground for the NPD," the PDS politician Bergemann says.
 

Western Pomerania's problems are difficult to solve. On the one hand, there's uncertainty about the future and the social decline of the older generation, who lost their jobs after German reunification. On the other is the lack of prospects for a young generation of Germans who listen to right-wing identity-branding -- with words like 'pride' and 'honor' -- and whose self-esteem swells when large parts of society become afraid of them. The same principles are at work in urban street gangs -- but in the case of gangs, an organized party can't make political capital out of the kids.


Bergemann looks skeptically at the years ahead. The next election is scheduled for 2009. Mayoral and district executive positions will be at stake, and Bergemann fears that the NPD's current grassroots work will pay off. "In some villages, the NPD today already has 30 percent of the vote. It is possible that they will soon gain a foothold with mayoral positions," he says. "I am afraid of that."


Hotel director Jutta Arnold puts it this way: "If nothing happens, things will get bad for us. And as far as I can see, nothing is going to happen."

 

 


Propagandistic powerlessness

Anti-nazi poster in Erfurt(south-east Germany)

 

 

 

 

 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

하하하~

Following f.. crazy story I found few days ago on (the notoriously) DailyNK:

 

Soccer Ball Rescue Mission


In North Korea, receiving gifts from Kim Il Sung or Kim Jong Il is the most honorable event...

Kim Jong Il often gives presents during field inspection or on holidays to the people. Each individual or organization that received a gift from Kim is supposed to be ‘very grateful’ and solemnly swears an oath of loyalty...

 


However, 18 years ago, four young soldiers died because of a soccer ball, a gift by Kim Jong Il.
 

It was a fine spring day in 1988, in a coastguard regiment under the Korean People’s Army’s Fourth Corps in South Hwanghae Province. As a Kim Il Sung’s birthday commemorative gift, Kim Jong Il sent various gifts to the troops stationed near DMZ (demilitarized zone). Soccer balls were included.
 

Several soldiers, relaxing after a coastal patrol mission, played soccer with the ball given to them by Kim Jong Il...
 
 
During the soccer game, somebody who could not control his power kicked the ball into the sea. There were angry waves smashing the coast.
 

Someone shouted “Save the ball.” A platoon leader dived into the sea. The lieutenant, however, failed to get the ball and was almost drowned.
 

Other platoon members jumped into the sea to save the lieutenant. 3 others and the platoon leader were swept away by the waves.
 

A rescue team from the company headquarters arrived, but it was too late. The part of sea was an estuary, where a river joined with the sea and created a powerful whirlpool. Four soldiers were swept too fast.


Dear leader Comrade Kim Jong Il’s present must be saved regardless of the situation.


The coastguards knew danger of diving into such waters. However, they sacrificed their lives to save a soccer ball because the ball was a Kim Jong Il’s gift. Dear leader Comrade Kim Jong Il’s present must be saved regardless of the situation.
 

After a few days, South Korean army notified the KPA through Panmunjom, a North-South Korean negotiation post along the DMZ, to accept four bodies of North Korean soldiers.

 

The bodies were buried in a mountain near the platoon they served in. It was reported to Kim Jong Il and Kim ordered to award the soldiers medals and other honors posthumously. The four were recorded as killed in action.
http://www.dailynk.com/english/read.php?cataId=nk00100&num=1151



 

 

 

 

 

 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

추석.. Made in D.P.R.K.

 

 

 

 

"Today the Korean Nation is standing at the crossroad between life and death" (KCNA, 10.03)(*)

 

It seems that the DPRK is preparing for a special Chuseok present.

 

Today, while I was checking thge news about Palestine I saw on Yedioth Ahronoth(Israeli daily) following news: "Any North Korean nuclear test would be 'unacceptable' and the international community would respond 'harshly', Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said on Tuesday, after Pyongyang said it would conduct a test in the future.". And I said to myselfe: "Oops.. is Kim Jong-il preparing for a special Chuseok gift??!!" Later I found out that nearly everywhere - in Europe(**), Asia(aeh~ perhaps in S. Korea nobody is alarmed and scared..), the US,even in the Middle East(for example on Al Jazeera it's today's top story!)... - everyone is alarmed about NK's annoncement to test a nuclear bomb soon.

 

 

 


North Korea vows to test a nuclear weapon (IHT, 10.03) 


North Korea said Tuesday that it would test a nuclear weapon despite U.S. warnings that such a move would provoke harsher sanctions and perhaps even military action.


The announcement by the North Korean Foreign Ministry marked the first time the regime had declared its intention to conduct a nuclear test and raised the stakes dramatically in negotiations on how to deal with North Korea's nuclear weapons programs.


The statement gave no indication when a test might occur. Last month, Kim Seung Kyu, director of the National Intelligence Service, told the South Korean Parliament that North Korea was capable of conducting an underground nuclear test at any time.


Although Pyongyang declared in February 2005 that it possessed nuclear weapons, it has never conducted a known test on its territory to prove its claim. A successful test would confirm North Korea as the eighth declared nuclear power, following the steps of the United States, Russia, Britain, France, China, India and Pakistan. Israel is an undeclared nuclear power.


Confirmation that North Korea has nuclear weapons, experts said, would disrupt the arms balance in Northeast Asia and possibly compel Japan, which lies within the range of North Korean missiles, to amass its own arsenal. That in turn would encourage South Korea to pursue its own nuclear arms program.


In Tokyo, Foreign Minister Taro Aso said: "It is a threat to peace. We would never be able to forgive such a move."..


"The DPRK will in the future conduct a nuclear test under the condition where safety is firmly guaranteed," the North Korean Foreign Ministry said in a statement..


North Korea's statement, carried by its official press agency, KCNA, said the "U.S. extreme threat of a nuclear war and sanctions and pressure compel the DPRK to conduct a nuclear test, an essential process for bolstering nuclear deterrent."...


North Korea's statement came just days before planned visits by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to Beijing and Seoul, Nam noted. Abe, a hawk on North Korea, was expected to discuss North Korea as a top agenda item in his meetings with Chinese and South Korean leaders...


Robert Joseph, the U.S. under secretary of state for arms control and international security, said last week that Washington was prepared to seek a UN Security Council resolution that would invoke Chapter 7 of the UN Charter, which allows for military force. The use of Chapter 7 has been vehemently opposed by China and South Korea.


In the recent weeks, there have been news reports in Washington, Tokyo and Seoul that North Korea may be preparing for an underground nuclear test. The reports cited activities around facilities near the border with China or on the North's remote northeast coast.


http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/10/03/news/nuke.php

 

 

* Please keep in mind that there is only ONE Korean nation(N+S.K.)!!

** The German TV news Tagesschau was talking about "the communist military dictatorship in North Korea.." - haehae~

 

 

 

Anyway:


I WISH EVERYONE BEAUTIFUL

CHUSEOK HOLIDAYS!!^^
 
 


 

 

 

 

 

For the latest news/articles about the issue please check out following:

 

N Korea threatens nuclear test (Guardian, 10.04)

 

Pyongyang defiant on nuclear test 

 

North Korea raises stakes

 

Asian allies warn on nuclear test by N. Korea (IHT)
  

N Korea rejects nuclear test criticism (Al Jazeera)

 

North Korea calls the shots (Asia Times)

 

Pyongyang's bluster and bluff

 

S. Korea warns N. Korea not to test nuclear weapons  (Yonhap)

 

And last but not least here you can read the full text of 10.3 announcement by NK's "news" agency KCNA:

 

DPRK Foreign Ministry Clarifies Stand on New Measure to Bolster War Deterrent



 


진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

독일/1990年10月3日

 

Korea Times'/한국일보 logo

 

No logo - just German reality

 

 

Today 16 years ago Germany was reunited.


Since that date in Germany, mainly in the eastern part, at least 135 people were killed because of racial or "ideological" - mainly people who were looking like "leftists"(for example punks or young men with long hair..) but also homeless or disabled people - motives by neo-nazis/fascists. Just four days after the re-unification the first men, a visitor from Poland, was killed near Berlin.


Already in the first days(end of 1989) of the demonstrations which led to the collapse of the East German/GDR(German Democratic Republic) regime neo-nazis started to hunt mainly young leftists/anti-fascists. About one of the most infamous mass attacks by German neo-nazis, but also "ordinary" people, against migrants I already wrote nearly four years ago here: http://base21.jinbo.net/christian/020913.html

 

Rostock 1992, migrants' house after neo-nazi attacks

 

 

 

Following story about one of the victims of racial violence in the reunited Germany was published some days ago in the German(bourgeois) magazine Der Spiegel:


NOEL MARTIN'S FINAL STRUGGLE
Neo-Nazi Victim Battling to the Death


Noel Martin plans to take his own life in less than a year. Just over 10 years ago, a neo-Nazi attack left him paralyzed from the neck down. He plans to fight right-wing extremists to the very end.


Noel Martin has already chosen July 23, 2007 to be the day he dies. On that evening, his pulse will gradually slow down until it stops completely. He has decided to die as a result of a lethal blend of drugs -- administered in Switzerland by Dignitas, an organization that offers its clients medically assisted suicide.


Martin publicly announced his decision in June, 10 years after the attack that left him paralyzed and destroyed his will to live. He plans to celebrate his last birthday -- he'll be 48 -- and then drink the cocktail that will put him out of his misery.


He has 297 days left.


The attack occurred on June 16, 1996 in Mahlow, a town in the former East German state of Brandenburg where the dark-skinned, Jamaican-born Briton was employed as a construction worker. A stone crashed through the windshield of his car and Martin's car veered off the road. He remembers seeing a tree careening towards him and jerking the steering wheel.


And then, a thud. Darkness.


When Martin woke up, he was lying on his back. He heard a voice. "Can you feel my hand on your leg?" it asked him. "But you're not touching my leg," Martin replied.


"I am not a part of life. I just exist"


Two young Germans, Sandro R. and Mario P., had thrown a lump of concrete at Martin's car. They were 17 and 24 years old at the time and their motive was "explicit xenophobia," as a court later determined. They were sentenced to five and eight years in prison. Noel Martin never got an apology, but by now he doesn't care any more. "It would be a waste of time. God will take care of them," he says, "life will take care of them." Both of his attackers are now free. But Martin is still imprisoned -- in his own body.


The attack left Noel Martin paralyzed from the neck down. "I am not a part of life," he says, 10 years and three months later, "I just exist." At home in Birmingham, he leans his heavy head against the headrest of his giant wheelchair. He fixes his weary eyes on his interviewer. "Everything has to be figured out by your head. It's torture, mental torture," he sighs. Martin will never be able to move his arms or legs again and he'll never be able to feel what his fingertips touch. He'll never have sex again, never go to the toilet by himself. Nor will he ever feel his own heartbeat.


Martin feels comparatively happy this afternoon. He was up at 8:00 and it only took until noon for him to be washed, massaged, and dressed.


Mornings aren't always this easy. Sometimes his ulcers bleed and bleed, until his dark face goes ashen and his eyes fall shut from sheer exhaustion. Sometimes his nurses slap his face to wake him up again. They have to slap his face -- that's the only part of his body that Noel Martin can still feel.


Losing control of your body hurts


On this particular afternoon, the idea of death seems absurd. Warm rays of sun shine through the garden window, casting patterns of light on the living room carpet. He looks around at the gilt moulding between the high ceiling and the green walls, at the heavy wooden furniture, the red leather couch and his television. There's a little fire place built into one wall. His huge old desk is covered with photo albums and sheets of paper. Dozens of birthday cards line the cornice along the wall. The room is full of life. This is Martin's kingdom. This is where he spends almost every day.


His wheelchair is in the middle of the room. His nurses have dressed him in black trousers and a casual black sweater. His roundish paunch protrudes underneath the sweater. "I used to be fit," Martin says. "I used to run in the mornings. Then I would do sit-ups. I did kung-fu and boxing too." Today he's plagued by chills and hot flashes. His broad shoulders have gone slack. He still has some control over his right shoulder -- which allows him to operate his wheelchair with a joystick and use his phone. Apart from that, Martin needs the assistance of his eight nurses for everything else.


They keep an eye on him 24 hours a day. Even now, a small woman with a blonde ponytail is standing in the doorway. "Cath, give me some wine please," Martin says. The nurse reaches him a glass of chilled white wine. He drinks it through a straw. "Good. Give me a cigarette please," he says. Cathy puts one in his mouth and lights it. Martin takes a drag. Then Cathy removes the cigarette from his mouth -- until he wants to take another drag.


This constant dependence on other people is agony for Martin. "I can never be alone." The self-confident man suffers from his loss of control. Suddenly he twists his face into a grimace -- he can't stand it anymore. "Cath, scratch please." The nurse wipes his face with a towel. This will happen about 10 times before the afternoon is over.


"You can't suffer every day of your life"


Jacqueline, his strong-willed wife, used to take care of him. She died of cancer six years ago. Two days before she passed away, they married at Jacqueline's sickbed -- after having lived together for 18 years. Martin says he spent 36 hours with her after their marriage before she fell into a coma. "I miss her every day," he says. His voice, which normally sounds so resolute, cracks. He can see her grave outside in the garden.


After the attack, he promised Jacqueline to try and hold on for eight years. On the evening of July 23, 2007, 11 years will have passed since the event that changed his life forever.


Martin's announcement that he plans to commit suicide has caused an uproar. The phone rang constantly for days. "The only one who didn't call was God," he jokes. Countless journalists asked him for an interview and outraged Christians urged him not to commit such a sin. But Martin says he doesn't need their advice. "Cath, cigarette please." He takes a deep drag and says that "99 percent of them" would already have "ended it all" years ago, in his situation. What does he think about other handicapped people who want to "end it all"? "Suffering is individual," he replies. "And you can't suffer every day." No, he says, he's not afraid to die. "No one escapes death anyway." He seems relaxed now -- almost cheerful. These are thoughts he has often thought.


Neo-Nazis are already celebrating the imminent death of the man they despise in their Internet forums. After all, the attack gave rise to an unprecedented campaign against xenophobia. Citizens in Mahlow spontaneously started up a local project called "Tolerant Mahlow." Martin returned to the city in 2001 and he called on its citizens to continue to stand up for the rights of others. He also established a charitable foundation against xenophobia.


Right-wing extremists, for their part, see it as a provocation that he is still alive. One of their Internet forums features a post by a neo-Nazi urging Martin to burn himself alive on a market square, noting that this would save money. The author of the post adds that he would be "happy to donate the gasoline." What does Martin think about the neo-Nazis? "Foolish people who know nothing about life. They love white skin, but they lie down in the sun to get a tan." He says to let them talk -- after all, there is such a thing as freedom of speech. "I wasn't afraid of them then, and I'm not afraid of them now," he says.


Noel Martin hasn't yet turned his back on life


Black people still aren't safe in Brandenburg today, 10 years after the attack on Noel Martin. "The government should make sure everyone can go wherever they want and be safe," he says. Martin knows how far-reaching the problem is. The first time he heard the word "nigger" was decades ago, back home, in the British industrial town of Birmingham.


And so Martin wants to make the most of the time that's left before the evening of July 23, 2007. His nurses, Cathy and Charity, spread out sheets of paper on the carpet. Martin discusses his appointments with the two nurses and makes a few phone calls. He hasn't turned his back on life yet. He's working on his book and in October he has a meeting with Brandenburg's governor, Matthias Platzeck in London. Later, he wants to return to Mahlow another time.


"I want to tell people they should stop apologizing for their past. They should just teach their children the value of life," he says. He's sure to receive public attention now -- and Martin is using it to support his foundation and other projects.


The right-wing extremists may well celebrate his death as a late triumph, but Noel Martin takes a very different view. "I have some bad news for those people," Martin says. He raises his head and his voice as if he were preparing to give a speech: "Of the 6 billion people in the world, 5 billion are people of color. Sooner or later they'll all mix." He grins. "Who knows? Maybe the children of these Nazis will marry a black man or a black woman one day?"


He likes the idea. The Nazis are running out of time -- with or without Noel Martin.

 

 




진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

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    자본주의 박살내자!
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    no chr.!

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