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Tuesday, March 30, 2010

CHINA: Bodies Of 21 Babies Found Dumped Along China River

March 30, 2010

by The Associated Press

The bodies of 21 babies washed ashore on a riverbank in eastern China and two hospital mortuary workers were detained for allegedly dumping them, state media reported Tuesday.

Video footage showed the bodies — at least one of which was stuffed in a yellow plastic bag marked "medical waste" — included some infants who appeared several months old. Some wore identification tags with their mothers' names, birth dates, measurements and weights.

The official Xinhua News Agency said there were also fetuses among the bodies. The number of girls or boys was not reported.

Residents discovered the remains under a bridge in the city of Jining, Shandong province, over the weekend. The tags on the ankles of eight of the babies helped investigators trace them back to Affiliated Hospital of Jining Medical University, Xinhua said.

An official from the hospital confirmed it was involved.

Hospital mortuary workers Zhu Zhenyu and Wang Zhijun were fired and detained by police, Xinhua reported, citing Jining city government spokesman Gong Zhenhua.

The babies' families had paid to have the bodies disposed, but instead the two workers dumped them at the Guangfu River, Gong said.

Three other top hospital officials were fired or suspended, Xinhua said.

The Shandong Broadcasting Company Web site broadcast interviews with residents who discovered the bodies. Video footage showed the bodies lying on parts of the riverbank, some in bags. They are all small and covered in dirt. At least one bag has "medical waste" written on it.

One of the identification tags visible in the video indicates the baby was born in April 2009.

An official from the information office of China's Health Ministry said she was not aware of the case. Phone calls to the Jining Health Bureau and the Shandong Health Bureau were unanswered Tuesday.

View article...

 

Monday, March 29, 2010

N. KOREA: North Korean Economic Crisis Complicates Transition

March 30, 2010

by Anthony Kuhn

Economic upheaval in North Korea may have cost one of the country's top economic policy officials his job, and maybe even his life.

If media reports in South Korea are accurate, earlier this month, North Korea hauled its equivalent of Alan Greenspan in front of a firing squad.

If not, then Pak Nam Gi, in charge of finance and planning for the ruling Workers' Party, may be doing just fine.

After all, even experts don't know who many North Korean officials are, much less whether they've been shot. But North Korea watchers agree that the economic reforms Pak presided over have failed disastrously, complicating North Korea's leadership transition.

Many analysts believe Pak was made a scapegoat for the currency reform.

"Pak Nam Gi's a technocrat. He's not a power man. He has just implemented what the politicians have wanted, but he was blamed for the failures of the currency reform," says Park Hyung-jung, a senior researcher at the Korea Institute of National Unification, a government think tank in Seoul.

New North Korean currency North Korea kicked off economic reforms by replacing its old currency for new (shown here) at the end of November 2009. But the effects of the changes have been devastating.  Jung Yeon-je/AFP/Getty Images

Currency Reform

At the end of November, North Korea scrapped its old currency for new. This wiped out household savings and investment capital, and sent food prices soaring.

The currency reforms were meant to confiscate merchants' wealth and give it to farmers, workers and soldiers in the state sector. Many state-owned firms have fallen idle, and their workers have gradually migrated to the free markets to survive.

The plan worked, at least for a while, says Kim Yun-tae, secretary general of the Network for North Korean Democracy and Human Rights, a Seoul-based group that gets information from a network of informants in North Korea.

"The government printed money and distributed it to farmers and the lower classes," Kim says. "People loved it at first. But when the working class spent all that money, it was eaten up by inflation, and their lives got even harder."

At the same time, the government has cracked down on foreign trade and the use of hard currency. Park, the researcher, says that the government may not have confiscated hard currency only for its own use, but also to generally exert central government control over trade, while punishing political rivals and rewarding allies.

Succession Dilemma

All of this complicates what is perhaps North Korea's most destabilizing problem: the succession to a third generation of the ruling Kim family.

In a clandestine video shot in North Korea, schoolchildren march through the streets of Pyongyang singing a song called "Footsteps." The lyrics declare: "Commander Kim is stepping forward" and "taking over." The song is believed to refer to ailing leader Kim Jong Il's third son and presumed heir, Kim Jong Un.

But North Korea's cryptocratic regime has never publicly mentioned the fact that Kim Jong Il even has a family, much less a presumed heir.

North Korea expert Kim Yun-tae says the currency reforms were supposed to be a curtain raiser for Kim Jong Un, who is still in his 20s and lacks leadership experience.

"Kim Jong Un could have gotten the credit for the currency reform, if it had succeeded," he says. "But since it failed, he can't. So this situation makes it hard to introduce him."

For now, Kim Yun-tae says, the succession is only mentioned within the ruling Workers' Party.

Critical Voices

Outside the party, meanwhile, signs of opposition to government policies are growing, says Kang Chol-hwan, a journalist at South Korea's Chosun Daily. He co-authored The Aquariums of Pyongyang, about the decade he spent in a North Korean labor camp before defecting to the South in 1992.

He says that under the threat of harsh punishment, North Koreans' only way to defy their government is through passive resistance.

"To express their resentment against the government, North Koreans stopped obeying official orders," Kang explains. "This became widespread in the 1990s. This time, with the currency reform, North Koreans have gone from refusing orders to speaking critically about the government."

For now, that criticism is spoken in private and in hushed tones. But the voices appear to be growing louder and bolder.

View article...

RUSSIA: Suicide Bomber Hit Station Next to Russia's Top Security Agency

Tuesday, March 30, 2010; A15

By Greg Miller and Peter Finn
Washington Post Staff Writers

The twin suicide bombings that killed at least 38 people in Moscow's crowded subway system on Monday included an attack on a station just steps away from the headquarters of Russia's premier security service.

The strike shortly before 8 a.m. at the Lubyanka station -- named for the forbidding building that houses Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB), the successor to the KGB -- is part of a wave of suicide assaults that target spy services engaged in violent confrontations with militant Islamist groups.

Monday's attack in central Moscow appeared designed to maximize the chance that Russian intelligence officials would be among the commuters caught in the carnage. If so, the assault would extend a string of losses for intelligence services, which are more accustomed to carrying out lethal operations than being attacked themselves.

A December bombing killed seven CIA employees and contractors near the Afghan city of Khost; the deputy chief of Afghanistan's intelligence service was assassinated in September; and a series of suicide strikes killed dozens of Pakistani operatives at facilities used by the country's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency in cities from Peshawar to Lahore.

A U.S. intelligence official said that spy services have become priority targets for militant groups, since spies are at the forefront of counterterrorist campaigns.

"While every counterterror conflict is different, the fact that the enemy wears no uniform and relies on stealth means that intelligence officers will be playing key roles," said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak on the record. "The more effective they are, the more likely they are to be targets."

The sophistication in a spree of recent attacks on spy services suggests that militant groups are also becoming more skilled at stalking their pursuers. Abdullah Laghmani, the No. 2 in the Afghan intelligence service, was killed last year by a suicide bomber who caught the deputy spy chief as he was leaving a mosque.

In some cases, militants have become adept at using methods that have long been the preserve of espionage agencies. The bombing of the CIA base in Khost was carried out by an al-Qaeda double agent who convinced CIA operatives that he was their asset, and lured officials to their deaths by promising to inform them of the whereabouts of top al-Qaeda leaders in Pakistan.

Monday's attacks in Moscow were aimed at a more vulnerable target: a subway system used by millions of commuters every day. It was carried out by female suicide bombers who penetrated security systems that were strengthened several years ago after a previous wave of strikes.

A second, less powerful blast at the Park Kultury station on Monday killed 12 people, but Lubyanka appears to have been the main target. It was the site of the first explosion, and at least 23 people were killed there. Security experts said Lubyanka was almost certainly selected because the name serves as such a potent symbol of Soviet and Russian security services.

"The choice of that station is a strategic one," said Sarah Mendelson, a fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, and co-author of the report "Violence in the North Caucasus: 2009, A Bloody Year." "They were trying to get people who work at Lubyanka on their way to work."

Alexander Bortnikov, director of the FSB, Russia's domestic security service, said those responsible for the bombings have links to insurgencies in the North Caucasus, a largely Muslim region of Russia that has been plagued by violence. The number of suicide bombings in the North Caucasus nearly quadrupled in 2009, according to the CSIS report, with most of the attacks directed at police and security services in the Russian republic of Chechnya.

The FSB has been heavily involved in counterterrorism operations in the Caucasus, battling what appear to be coalescing insurgencies in the republics of Dagestan and Ingushetia, as well as Chechnya. Rebels increasingly are adopting the tactics and language of militant Islamists.

Doku Umarov, an insurgent leader who has called for an Islamic emirate in the Caucasus, warned recently that he would strike at Russian cities, where he said the fighting in distant and impoverished Muslim-majority republics barely registers with the public.

"Blood will no longer be limited to our cities and towns," said Umarov in an interview with an extremist Web site. "The war is coming to their cities."

The FSB is routinely involved in raids, arrests and interrogations in the Caucasus. Human-rights groups have charged that Russia's campaigns in the region have also been marked by the torture, disappearances or targeted killings of suspected terrorists -- tactics that have deeply alienated the general population and bred extremism.

Russian officials have not yet said whether any FSB personnel were killed in Monday's attack.

Targeted agencies have tended to respond with promises of renewed vigor. The CIA has stepped up drone strikes in the remote corner of Pakistan where the Khost bombing is thought to have been planned.

Even so, the bombings have taken a significant toll. Among the CIA operatives killed in Khost was a longtime agency veteran who served as base chief and was one of the CIA's leading experts on al-Qaeda and other terrorist groups. In Pakistan, officials said that a string of bombings has forced the ISI to put operations on hold while it repairs buildings, assesses security breakdowns and finds officers to replace those who died.

At least 74 ISI operatives were killed over the past year in attacks that included the car bombing of an ISI facility in Lahore, a suicide strike at the agency's main base in Peshawar and a follow-on attack that damaged an agency building in Multan. Each was "a very significant setback," said a Pakistani military official. Intelligence operations "are a very specialized task in which only certain people can fit in."

Special correspondent Natasha Abbakumova in Moscow contributed to this report.

View Washington Post Article...

S. KOREA: A Korean Artist's Origins, by Parachute

Published: March 29, 2010

By SONIA KOLESNIKOV-JESSOP

SINGAPORE — Back in 2003 at the International Istanbul Biennial, the Korean artist Do-Ho Suh presented one of his large-scale fabric installations “Staircase (Installation for Poetic Justice),” a red ethereal fabric staircase suspended from the ceiling and running through two floors without quite reaching the ground. The artist is now revisiting the idea on a smaller scale and in a different medium. Working in residency at the Singapore Tyler Print Institute, Mr. Suh is creating a staircase in red threads laid over paper pulp.

“Almost all my fabric pieces are suspended from the ceiling and this accentuates the sense of gravity,” he said. “So here, I’ve tried to find a way to simulate lines that would almost be suspended in space, with thread in pulp and water, because the way the water pushes and pulls the thread on the paper creates these beautiful lines. The staircase connection is a literal one, but in my mind the connection and continuation with my previous installation is dealing with gravity in two-dimensional drawings,” the artist, who is based in New York, explained while recently in Singapore.

Thread, fabrics and sewing have played an important role in Mr. Suh’s site-specific installations which regularly explore the issue of cultural displacement and the relationship between individuality and collectivism.

Born in Seoul in 1962, Mr. Suh grew up in an artistic family. His father, Suh Se-ok, was a pivotal figure in Korean modern art for his use of traditional ink painting in an abstract style. In the 1960s, many of Korea’s traditional homes were destroyed to make way for modern buildings, but Mr. Suh’s parents had a small, traditional scholar’s house built of discarded wood from a demolished palace building.

This house and its traditional decorative elements have become central to the artist’s work as he reflects on his own feelings of cultural displacement and longing after moving to the United States in 1991. Right after his graduation from the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence in 1994, he was living in a noisy apartment in New York when he thought about recreating his quiet Seoul home using translucent organza.

“In many ways, this was a pivotal piece in my career because it was one of two or three major pieces that I did right after school,” Mr. Suh said. “I first sewed my studio and made some samples of the Korean house.” Then he got a grant and was able to realize the full version.

Two years later, Mr. Suh was invited to present four works in the Venice Biennale, which brought him international recognition. In “Some/One,” he used Korean military dog tags to form a giant imperial robe, and in “Floor,” 180,000 fragile plastic figures tightly placed against each other hold up a glass floor. The works reflect on the power and strength of the collective, sometimes at the expense of the individual.

“All of my works really come from the same idea. They all deal with space; being an architectural one or a figurative one like your personal space,” he said.

At the Singapore institute, Mr. Suh has revisited some of his previous themes but also explores some new ones. Several of his new works portray isolated figures with shadowlike forms hovering over them.

They are “based on the belief that one is not exactly one” but “many different things — other people’s influence, history, different personalities. But you don’t see it, it’s invisible,” he said.

The artist is now preparing a fabric installation for the Venice Biennale of Architecture (Aug. 29 to Nov. 21), where he will represent the facade of his brownstone apartment in New York. He’s also planning an installation for the 2010 Liverpool Biennial (Sept. 18 to Nov. 18), where he will place a replica of his childhood house in an empty lot with a parachute and the scattered contents of the house. The Liverpool installation continues work on a theme that explores a story Mr. Suh wrote in 1999 that resembles the opening scenes of “The Wizard of Oz.” A Korean house is lifted by a tornado over the Pacific, landing in Providence. With a parachute slowing its fall, the house gets stuck in the corner of a brownstone building similar to the one the artist lives in today.

In “Fallen Star: Wind of Destiny,” (2006), Mr. Suh represented that Korean house atop a tornado of carved Styrofoam and resin, and in “New Beginning,” (2006) he showed a large dollhouse-like representation of his 18th-century apartment in Providence with his family’s Korean home stuck in the middle of it.

Mr. Suh is also working on commissions from two American museums. One is for the Los Angeles County Museum of Art’s Korean gallery: an in situ a royal folding screen recreated in clear acrylic resin a section of the palace where the screen initially would have been housed. For his second museum commission, at the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, he is recreating a traditional Korean gate, but is doing so in a negative space that visitors can walk through.

“So here it’s also about transporting two traditional buildings in Korea to those institutions; it’s also about displacement of the space and transporting the space like my other fabric installation,” he said.

A version of this article appeared in print on March 30, 2010, in The International Herald Tribune.

View New York Times Article...

CHINA & JAPAN: Arrest over China-Japan 'poisoned dumplings' row

A packet of the Chinese-made dumplings

Chinese exports to Japan were hit by the scare

Page last updated at 10:57 GMT, Saturday, 27 March 2010

A man has been arrested in China accused of poisoning dumplings in a case which led to a diplomatic rift with Japan, state media reports.

Temporary factory worker Lu Yueting, 36, allegedly put insecticide in some frozen dumplings because he was unhappy with his pay and colleagues.

The food was exported to Japan, where 10 people became ill, sparking a scare over Chinese food.

China had denied that the contamination occurred on its territory.

Chinese police have found injectors used to poison the dumplings, according to a Ministry of Public Security statement reported by the Xinhua news agency.

Traces of methamidophos, a highly toxic insecticide were found in the dumplings.

Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama issued a statement praising China's efforts to clear up the matter.

Chinese food exports to Japan fell sharply after the incident, reports the AP news agency.

The incident followed other scares over the safety of Chinese-made products, including poisoned pet food and concerns over dangerous toys.

View BBC News Article...

JAPAN: Okinawa Debate

Okinawa's peace park 

Okinawa's peace park commemorates those who died in the bloody fighting

Page last updated at 00:15 GMT, Tuesday, 30 March 2010 01:15 UK

By Alastair Leithead
BBC News, Okinawa

The names of 200,000 Japanese troops and civilians are engraved in granite at Okinawa's memorial park, remembering the last major battle of World War II.

Alongside them are the 12,500 Americans who also perished in the brutal, inch-by-inch fight for the small, tropical island of coral 1,000 miles south of Tokyo.

The United States has been here ever since, but a peace deal signed 50 years ago was not an equal one, agreed in the aftermath of war, surrender, then occupation.

There are now 24,000 US troops on Okinawa, most of them marines, and their bases, airfields, housing and training facilities cover a fifth of the island.

The people of Okinawa felt their lives were sacrificed in the war for the sake of the country, and they now believe they are shouldering more of their share of the burden of hosting US forces - with three quarters of American facilities in Japan on their small island.

"We provide the Japanese government with a credible deterrence force - a highly effective, highly trained and very mobile force that is very strategically located," said Lieutenant General Terry Robling, commander of US marine bases in Japan.

"We think the stability of the region has been caused by our presence here. Over 50 years now there's been relative peace in the Asia region."

But it comes at a cost.

Local tensions

Japan pays $4bn (£2.6bn) a year to host the 50,000 US troops stationed across the country, and the noise, safety fears and disturbance of having so many troops in built-up areas is creating tension.

Futenma base seen from the air (Image: US Marine Corps)

Futenma air base is surrounded by densely-packed residential areas

The 1995 gang rape of a young girl by US troops in Okinawa shook the relationship, a helicopter crash near Futenma air base in 2004 shocked people in Ginowan City which has grown to surround it, and crime by US personnel is also something local people complain about.

"We have not had an accident aboard Futenma since 2004 - there were no accidents at all that I know of prior to that or since then," said Colonel Dale Smith, who commands Marine Corps Air Station Futenma.

"As far as safety goes we do a number of things. Helicopters come in at more steep angles and climb out at more steep rates, which gives more distance between us and the urban terrain and decreases the noise levels."

But at Futenma Elementary School, which has a playground backing on to the end of the runway, the deputy head teacher Muneo Nakamura says he fears for the children's safety every day.

'More equal'

After years of discussions the Japanese and American governments agreed a deal to restructure US forces on Okinawa.

General Robling

We think the stability of the region has been caused by our presence here

General Robling

It involved closing Futenma air base, building a new runway on reclaimed land and relocating troops at a base in the less populated north of the island. Japan would pick up $6bn of the $10bn cost.

As part of the deal, 8,000 US marines would also move to Guam, where President Obama is due next week.

But last year Yukio Hatoyama was elected prime minister, after 50 years of almost unbroken rule by the Liberal Democratic Party.

He made a campaign promise to move US troops off Okinawa as part of a creating a "more equal" partnership with America.

The original deal was put on hold and he is now torn between a threat from ruling coalition partners to withdraw support if he breaks his promise, and pressure from the US. He has promised to announce a new plan by the end of May this year.

Mr Hatoyama's stance has strained the alliance, but America has to tread carefully as it also relies on Japan as the centre of its strategic operations in Asia.

"I think the US presence is an incredibly stabilising factor. Asia is going through a period of historic strategic change in the balance of power," said Raymond Greene, the US consul general in Okinawa.

"We have the nuclear missile programmes in North Korea; obviously the rise of China is something we welcome, but as it rises economically there are many questions about military modernisation programme and its transparency, or lack thereof."

Security hub

The razor wire on the beach surrounding the northern base where troops could be moved to is covered in ribbons and protest banners.

A sign in Okinawa telling the Marines to go home

Crime and noise pollution have led to a rise in anti-base sentiment

Small but vocal demonstrations are held periodically - there is a growing feeling that Japan should go its own way and reduce its reliance on America.

But generations of Okinawans have made a living out of the US military.

Shinichiro Isa used to work on a base but is now retired. His son, Hiroyuki, currently works at Futenma air base and they accept the large American presence in exchange for the money it brings.

"It's not just because I worked on the base that I am in favour of the Americans being here," Mr Isa said.

"It's important not just for the security of Okinawa or Japan but for the whole of the region from South Korea to the Philippines."

But he does not know if there'll be the chance for his two year-old grandson, Shunpei, to follow the family tradition.

The future of US forces here depends on the military alliance continuing, and the direction in which Japan's new government wants to take the country.

View BBC News Article...

CHINA: Rio Tinto Reports Misguided

2010-3-30

By Jin Dou

CHINA'S investment environment is far from perfect, hampered as it is by many elements such as business bribes.


Cracking down on bribes would help clean the field for doing business in China, but CNN, BBC and a host of other Western media argued otherwise in their loaded reports of the Rio Tinto case.


The Shanghai No. 1 Intermediate People's Court yesterday sentenced four employees of the British-Australian mining giant, including one Australian national (Stern Hu, who headed the firm's Shanghai office), to seven to 14 years in prison for bribery and stealing commercial secrets.


CNN reported yesterday: "Executive Stern Hu's admission of accepting bribes led to leniency, the court said, reducing his sentence to 10 years total... The case against Hu and three other employees of the British-Australian company was closely watched over fears of a government crackdown on foreign companies doing business in China."


Indeed, Stern Hu admitted he had taken bribes. It was not a forced guilty plea. How could this man's fall from grace translate into "a government crackdown on foreign companies doing business in China?" In so strenuous an argument, CNN was literally saying that Stern Hu represented most foreign business people in terms of morality. He did not.


Apparently knowing that such an argument could only turn CNN into a laughing stock, a CNN anchorman yesterday tried to appear more critical by asking why China had singled out Rio Tinto for punishment while bribery is not uncommon in China.


This anchorman should have done more solid homework by researching how many Chinese officials and business people had been arrested, even executed, for bribery or embezzlement. If he were an average, not to say a good, journalist, he would not have used the phrase "singled out" to describe China's handling of the Rio Tinto case.


The BBC wrote yesterday: "The trial has heightened concerns among the foreign business community in China. Australian diplomats have expressed concern about the lack of transparency in China's conduct of the trial."

If the trial really "heightened concerns," it did so among bribe takers, foreign or Chinese. It would only be victory for the business community, foreign or Chinese, who are clean and honest.
As for a fair trial, China's laws are there for all to see before anyone enters the Chinese market.


The laws say clearly that a case involving commercial secrets can be handled in private if one party so proposes. Rio Tinto knew that when it came to China. BBC reporters should have known that before they wrote the story. China did not twist its laws just for Rio Tinto. China is open to criticism, but critics need to be capable of critical reasoning in the first place.

View Shanghai Daily Article...

S. KOREA: Korea's self-sufficiency in oil, gas grows

Monday, March 29, 2010

This file photo shows a natural gas production platform in offshore Vietnam partly operated by Korea National Oil Corporation. [KNOC]

Korea's self-sufficiency in energy supply sharply increased last year thanks to active acquisition of oil and natural gas fields overseas, the government said yesterday.

The Ministry of Knowledge Economy said that the rate in oil and gas increased to 9 percent of local demand from 5.7 percent in 2008 as Korea spent $5.18 billion - a 32 percent increase - on energy exploration projects and acquisition of energy assets last year.

However, Korea must be more active in acquiring oil and gas fields as competition for energy security has heated up among major players with deep pockets, experts said.

The growing demand for energy along with the recovery of the global economy is pressuring countries to enhance their energy security, they added.

Compared with other global major energy firms, Korea's investment in oil and gas exploration overseas - plus the capital size of its state-run oil developer - is still small, an energy expert in Seoul said.

"It is a money game, favorable to those who can pay much more than others. So China, which holds an estimated $2 trillion in foreign reserves is undoubtedly at the fore," said Choi I-tae, manager of the planning and international cooperation team, at the Energy & Mineral Resources Development Association of Korea.

PetroChina Co., a state-run oil developer, said it will spend at least $60 billion in the next decade on overseas acquisitions in a recent interview with Bloomberg.

PetroChina, also known as Sinopec, is the world's largest company in the field by market value, while KNOC is ranked 50th, Choi said.

Korea is likely to acquire two or three oil and gas fields this year with an $8.7 billion budget, said Park Soon-kee, director of the resource development policy division at the Ministry of Knowledge Economy. The government hopes to increase self-sufficiency in oil and gas to 18.1 percent by 2012.

"The number of oil and gas fields listed in the market has increased from before the Lehman crisis," he said.

Energy demand growing

Experts say the world will see a significant increase in energy prices with demand growing this year.

"Oil prices have been rising since late last year with signs of economic recovery appearing around the world," said Hana Daetoo Investment analyst Chung Min-kyu in a recent report.

The market price of Western Texas Intermediate surged to $80 per barrel in December last year from $30 per barrel in early 2009.

Investors are also pouring funds into the commodity market as the value of the U.S. dollar drops and they try to find a stable source of investment. Oil and gas fields, in this respect, are likely to gain value.

"This is why Korea has to step up its effort in securing energy overseas and invest in a long-term perspective. If we lose in the energy competition now, China and other major firms will dominate the market scene, offering us no chances to secure more energy sources in the future," Choi said.

As major energy firms based in Europe and North America have already dominated major oil and gas fields around the world in the past years, China, Japan and Korea are looking for new markets in Africa, Middle East and South America that still have higher political risks.

"Korea can think of seeking cooperation with Japan, to deal with giant energy firms funded by the Chinese government," he said.

(christory@heraldm.com)

By Cho Chung-un

View Korea Herald Article

JAPAN: Sky Tree Now Tallest Structure in Japan

News photo

What's the limit?: Tokyo Sky Tree in Sumida Ward, at 338 meters tall and growing, on Monday became the tallest structure in the country.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Kyodo News

Tokyo Sky Tree, a new tower under construction for terrestrial digital broadcasting, reached 338 meters Monday, surpassing Tokyo Tower and becoming the tallest structure in Japan.

The new tower in Sumida Ward will be 634 meters tall when it is completed at the end of 2011. Tokyo Tower, a 333-meter radio and TV transmission tower in Minato Ward, was the country's tallest structure for 52 years.

Even though Tokyo Sky Tree will not open to the public until spring 2012, it has already become a tourist attraction.

About 100 people were on hand Monday to witness the moment it overtook Tokyo Tower and applauded when a sign showing its height was updated to 338 meters, following the installation of an elevator section at the tip of the new tower at around 10 a.m.

"We are relieved that Sky Tree has become the tallest (structure) in Japan, but we will continue our construction work . . . to make it the world's tallest self-standing radio tower," said Tobu Tower Sky Tree Co., operator of Tokyo Sky Tree.

Saying more than 160 million people have visited Tokyo Tower, operator Nippon Television City Corp. pledged to continue its "service as a landmark in Tokyo" and celebrate its 100th anniversary in 2058.

View Japan Times Article...

EAST ASIA: Japan, South Korea, China to hold talks

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

SEOUL (Kyodo) Senior officials from Japan, South Korea and China are to meet on South Korea's southern island of Jeju on Friday to prepare for a trilateral summit and foreign minister talks, a South Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman said Monday.

South Korea will host the trilateral summit and the foreign ministers' meeting this year.

South Korean Deputy Foreign Minister Lee Yong Joon, Chinese Assistant Minister for Foreign Affairs Hu Zhengyue and Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs Kenichiro Sasae will attend the meeting on Jeju.

"There will also be a wide-ranging discussion on ways to further deepen cooperation among the three countries, on situations in Northeast Asia and other global affairs," South Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman Kim Young Sun told a press briefing.

View Japan Times Article...

CHINA & JAPAN: Kan Beijing-bound to discuss economics, yuan

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Bloomberg

Finance Minister Naoto Kan will head to Beijing this weekend to discuss economic issues, including the status of the yuan, Vice Finance Minister Naoki Minezaki said Monday.

Kan is to meet with top officials, including Premier Wen Jiabao, Minezaki said.

They will also talk about fiscal policy and the role of the Group of 20 nations, he said.

The trip comes just as debate heats up between China and U.S. lawmakers over whether the Chinese currency should appreciate.

Kan's other deputy, Yoshihiko Noda, said this month that a more flexible yuan is desirable for the Chinese and global economy.

Kan has largely refrained from talking about the yuan since taking office in January, saying only that he was prepared to discuss it at a Group of Seven meeting last month "on the understanding that stable growth in China is desirable for Japan."

Wen's government has kept the yuan at 6.83 against the dollar since mid-2008 to shield exporters from the global recession and a contraction in world trade.

Kan's visit to China, the biggest market for Japanese goods, also comes as it is poised to overtake Japan as the world's second-biggest economy.

In January, Kan said it is a "good thing" that China is growing, while adding that he had a "sense of sadness" that Japan will lose its status as the No. 2 economy and the largest in Asia.

View Japan Times Article...

JAPAN: Hakuho admits relief at Osaka win

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

SAKAI, Osaka Pref. (Kyodo) Yokozuna Hakuho admitted Monday he was a relieved man after winning the first basho of the post-Asashoryu era at the Spring Grand Sumo Tournament in Osaka.

With Asashoryu having recently retired from sumo amid claims he attacked a man in January, all the pressure was on Hakuho as the lone yokozuna to capture his 13th Emperor's Cup.

The Mongolian was pushed all the way by Estonian sekiwake Baruto but held his nerve to slam down ozeki Harumafuji in the final bout of the tournament to finish with a perfect 15-0 record.

"It was incredibly tough. I am relieved more than anything," Hakuho told a news conference. "No matter how much I drank (celebrating) last night, I could not get drunk. Maybe that means I have become stronger both in body and mind," joked Hakuho.

View Japan Times Article...

JAPAN: Hatoyama backpedals on Futenma timetable

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Kyodo News

Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama indicated Monday his administration won't be able to come up with a single proposal for the relocation of the Futenma U.S. military base by Wednesday, saying it is not legally bound to do so.

Hatoyama's remarks came shortly after Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada indicated prior to talks Monday with Defense Secretary Robert Gates in Washington that Japan doesn't have to narrow its proposals down to one before it begins negotiating with the United States in earnest.

"There is no legal basis on which we must come up with a government proposal within this month," Hatoyama said, backpedaling on an earlier promise to come up with a plan by the end of March.

The administration is mulling several alternatives to the existing plan to relocate the Futenma airfield within Okinawa Prefecture, with Hatoyama promising to resolve the issue by the end of May.

Hatoyama said the government will come up with one proposal soon because only about two months are left before the end of May.

"It may be natural for there to be several proposals at the beginning," he said. "But there can't be multiple ones as (the government) negotiates and puts together (a deal) over a government plan in the end."

The opposition was quick denounce Hatoyama's remarks, with Liberal Democratic Party Secretary General Tadamori Oshima demanding his resignation.

"The prime minister's words change every day," Oshima told reporters. "I suggest that he step down."

The U.S. has called on Japan to follow through on the existing plan, saying it is the best option. The plan is part of a broader agreement forged in 2006 on the realignment of U.S. forces in Japan.

The accord, which took years to hammer out, calls for transferring the aircraft operations of the Futenma base, now situated in the crowded city of Ginowan, to Camp Schwab's Henoko coast.

Once the replacement base is operational, 8,000 marines are to be relocated from Okinawa to Guam.

View Japan Times Article...

CHINA: China Sentences 4 Rio Tinto Employees To Jail

March 29, 2010

by Louisa Lim

A Chinese court sentenced four employees of mining giant Rio Tinto with jail terms of seven to 14 years on bribery and commercial secrets charges. The judge said the crimes committed by the four had caused major losses to the Chinese steel industry.

TRANSCRIPT

RENEE MONTAGNE, host:

NPR's business news starts with China sending a foreign executive to prison.

(Soundbite of music)

MONTAGNE: A court in Shanghai has sentenced four executives of an international mining company to jail. One was an Australian citizen. The men were working for the mining giant Rio Tinto. The case has riveted foreign business community in China.

NPR's Louisa Lim was in the courtroom, and has this report.

LOUISA LIM: Australian Stern Hu gave no visible reaction when his sentence of 10 years in prison was read out. Foreign journalists have been allowed to watch the verdict on closed circuit television. Hu and three Chinese Rio Tinto employees were found guilty of accepting bribes and violating commercial secrets. The longest sentence was 14 years, handed down to an employee found guilty of taking $9 million in bribes.

In the matter of commercial secrets, the court said the men had collected information about closed meetings held by the China Iron and Steel Association. It said the actions of the four Rio Tinto employees had caused losses of $150 million to China's steel industry and seriously damaged its competitiveness.

Louisa Lim, NPR News, Shanghai.

View article...

SHANGHAI, CHINA: Excited crowds greet remade Bund

Tens of thousands of Shanghai residents and tourists swarm the Bund yesterday as the city's landmark site reopens after nearly three years' renovation work, just in time for visitors to the Shanghai World Expo. A vehicular tunnel beneath the promenade, designed to lighten traffic on the Bund itself, also opened yesterday.

2010-3-29

By Zha Minjie

ALONG the riverfront promenade that stretches along the west bank of Huangpu River, eight-year-old Shao Meirenyu gave out a yell.  "I can see it, I can see it."


Shao was just a pre-school girl three years ago when the Bund was closed for renovation. And the riverfront and the high-rises facing the river were just subjects on television or pictures for her.

Yesterday, she and her classmates and teacher joined the tens of thousands of people who poured onto the riverfront to view the renovations as the place made its long-awaited return on a Sunday that shone with sunshine after days of overcast weather in Shanghai.


The area, once a terminal for docks and a lane for lovers, was closed in 2007 as the city planned to make it "as charming as the Champs Elysee in Paris."

Three years, to locals, are not long enough to forget, but long enough to remember.

"It's worth being remembered by heart and documented by pen," said resident Tao Jun.

Tao, 81, said he used to stroll along the Bund at night. "I felt at peace as I watched the rolling river."

"Peace" seemed to be a thing that could be found nowhere yesterday, however.

Crowds leaned against riverfront barriers, where once stood concrete walls that had permitted a less-open view of the river. They walked along the broad new promenade that stretches over 2,000 meters.

Many stood on the 2,000 new benches to take photos.

"It's amazing to see so many people," said Smets Karel, a visitor from Holland.

During his last trip to the city in January, the area was still blocked to the public. He could only view the Bund from across the river in the Pudong New Area.

To Judy McKinney, a teacher from the United States, the trip meant a huge difference.  "When I came here 25 years ago, I could not see so many high buildings along the skyline," said McKinney.  "Are there still senior people doing tai chi in the early morning around here?" asked McKinney. She remembered the groups of people, exercising in morning light, who typically gathered along the Bund riverside.

Though some facilities have not been fully completed and shops not opened, curiosity was hard to resist.

The 500 parking spots in the area were filled by morning and some cars had to park on nearby streets.

About 400 bottles of water at two small stands selling soft drinks soon sold out.

In contrast to the hubbub above, the underground tunnel which also opened yesterday saw a quiet beginning.

No congestion was reported as it was not a workday, police said.
The tunnel, which runs beneath the promenade, aims to alleviate heavy Bund traffic.

Visitors generally gave high marks for the brand-new facilities, but some people, especially elderly ones, complained of too few places to get shade from the sun.

Authorities said they would make some improvements after soliciting people's suggestions.

The grand project formally opened at 9:30am, after a 30-minute ceremony attended by Shanghai's top government officials and local celebrities.

"Everything is under control," shouted a police officer to his walkie-talkie as the speeches ended and the crowds, which had been standing outside the ceremony site, swarmed in to catch places along the riverside.

View Shanghai Daily Article...

Sunday, March 28, 2010

THE KOREAS: Broken ship found off North Korea

Marine looks through binoculars

South Korea has not given up all hope of finding survivors

The South Korean military says it has located the stern of its warship that sank in mysterious circumstances on Friday following an explosion.

The authorities are hoping that some of the 46 crew members still missing may be alive but trapped in underwater air pockets in the wreckage.

Military diving teams were due to begin a search for survivors.

The vessel sank close to the sea border with North Korea; the South says it is open-minded on the cause of the blast.

Rescue officials said on the weekend that the explosion had broken the ship into two parts, which had sunk to the seabed.

Rescue race

The BBC's Korea correspondent, John Sudworth, said navy divers had been hampered by strong currents and murky waters, but had now located the stern, lying on the sea bed.

It is the part of ship that contains the sleeping compartments, so thought to be the most likely location in which survivors might be found.

But it is now a race against time, our correspondent says.

If any of the 46 missing crew members are still alive, calculations suggest that any oxygen in the trapped air will soon run out.

The 1,200-tonne Cheonan naval patrol vessel sank near the disputed maritime border with North Korea but military officials say there is no indication the North was involved.

Our correspondent says that although the two navies have exchanged fire along the sea border in recent years, no unusual military movements were detected on Friday night, leading to speculation that the sinking was due to some kind of accident.

Whatever the cause, as well as a disaster for the South Korean navy, it is moment of terrible, personal tragedy for the families of the missing, their trauma, and sometimes anger, played out on national television as the whole country waits for answers.

Tensions rise

Map

At his latest emergency briefing on the rescue, the South Korean president has urged all available personnel and equipment to be mobilized to search the sunken ship as soon as possible.

Meanwhile, North Korea has accused the South of psychological warfare for allowing journalists to enter the two countries' demilitarised zone, and warned of "unpredictable incidents".

"If the US and the South Korean authorities persist in their wrong acts to misuse the DMZ for the inter-Korean confrontation despite our warnings, these will entail unpredictable incidents including the loss of human lives in this area for which the US side will be wholly to blame," the statement said.

Dramatic warnings from the North are not unusual - on Friday the North had threatened "unprecedented nuclear strikes".

However, they are dissected by Korea-watchers for hints of movement on the primary issue of importance to North Korea's neighbours - it's readiness to re-enter talks about how to end its nuclear programmes.

Separately, North Korea's Foreign Ministry issued a statement on Monday castigating the United Nations for its criticism of the North's human rights record.

South Korea recognises the Northern Limit Line, drawn unilaterally by the US-led United Nations Command to demarcate the sea border at the end of the Korean War. The line has never been accepted by North Korea.

View BBC News Article...

JAPAN: Japanese pair win world's top architectural prize

Ryue Nishizawa (left) and Kazuyo Sejima

The duo were praised for the way their work blends into its surroundings

A duo of Japanese architects, Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa, have won the most coveted award in architecture, the Pritzker Prize, the has jury announced.

The 2010 winners were praised for using everyday building materials to create ethereal structures that shelter flowing, dreamlike spaces.

Their art museums, university buildings and designer-label fashion boutiques span Japan, the US and Europe.

The prize will be awarded formally in May in New York.

Sejima and Nishizawa, who are partners in the architectural firm Sanaa, said they did not see themselves as working within any sort of distinct Japanese architectural tradition.

But they acknowledged being influenced by the austere construction methods, lightweight materials and porous boundaries between inside and outside space that characterise traditional Japanese buildings.

"If you see Japanese temples made of wood, you can see how the architecture is made up," Nishizawa said.

"They have a clear construction and transparency and they are quite simple. I think this is one of the big things that we are influenced by."

Among the projects mentioned by the Pritzker jury were the Christian Dior Building in Tokyo's Omotesando shopping district and the Toledo Museum of Art's Glass Pavilion.

The Swiss Federal Institute of Technology's newly opened Rolex Learning Centre was also cited; it is a single-storey slab-like concrete and glass structure that undulates over a four-acre site, punctured in places to let light enter the massive open space that makes up its interior.

The 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art Kanazawa, Ishikawa, Japan (image: Sanaa)

The duo's 2004 art museum in Kanazawa, Japan, was admired

View BBC News Article...

CHINA: China Court Due To Rule On Rio Tinto Workers

By ELAINE KURTENBACH , 03.28.10, 08:50 PM EDT, Associated Press

SHANGHAI -- A Shanghai court is due to rule Monday on bribery and commercial secrets charges against four employees of mining giant Rio Tinto - a case seen as a barometer of China's treatment of foreign business in a time of rising trade friction.

The verdict comes as multinational companies like Rio Tinto are facing increasingly strict oversight into their business dealings worldwide, as both developed and developing countries gradually tighten enforcement of anti-corruption rules.

Stern Hu, an Australian executive of Rio Tinto, and his three Chinese co-workers pleaded guilty to charges of taking bribes in a three-day trial held last week. Their pleas on commercial espionage charges were unknown as those hearings were closed and lawyers said they were barred from commenting.

"Please kindly understand that my colleagues and I are obliged to keep any and all of the secrecy matters in most strict confidence even after tomorrow, pursuant to professional regulations in China," said Jin Chunqing, a defense lawyer for Hu.

The court was due to issue a verdict and sentences Monday afternoon, Rio Tinto and the Australian government said. An Australian consular official was to attend the hearing.

Jin said he was wary of speculating on the likely sentence for the secrecy charges, which he described as "technically complicated and sophisticated."

"It is an unprecedented case for China, in its international business history and law enforcement," Jin said.

China warned against politicizing the case, while the Australian side lobbied for greater transparency and protested the court's decision to close sessions handling the commercial secrets charges.

But investigations aren't limited to just China or Rio Tinto.

German automaker Daimler AG, accused of paying tens of millions of dollars in bribes through subsidiaries to officials of at least 22 governments, including China, is among many companies snagged by the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, which makes it unlawful to bribe foreign government officials or company executives to secure or retain business.

China Petroleum & Chemical Corp., Asia's biggest refiner, acknowledged Friday that Daimler AG had allegedly paid bribes to one of its employees. It urged the government to tighten oversight of lawbreaking foreign companies.

With most major economies still struggling to recover from the fallout from the global financial crisis, many Asian governments also have sharpened their scrutiny of multinational companies, says Robert Broadfoot, managing director of the Political and Economic Risk Consultancy in Hong Kong.

"There is nothing like a severe global recession to get people to focus on corruption," Broadfoot said. He noted, however, that graft cases also are used to advance the political agendas of those doing the accusing.

China ranks 10th among 16 countries the consultancy tracks in its political corruption survey of more than 2,000 executives working in Asia, the U.S. and Australia. Indonesia, Cambodia and Vietnam were the three worst.

In China, anti-corruption campaigns are a perennial political strategy of the Communist Party, which recognizes the damage to its image from widespread graft but enforces its crackdowns selectively.

Whistleblowers often run greater risks than the officials caught abusing their positions, especially if party leaders fear the accusations could threaten their hold on power.

In the Rio Tinto case, the government has said nothing official about the local businesspeople accused of giving the bribes.

"It's clearly a selective application of the law," Broadfoot said.

The arrests of the Rio Tinto employees last August were initially thought linked to Beijing's anger over high prices it paid for iron ore - a key commodity for China's booming economy. Rio Tinto, based in London and Melbourne, is one of the top suppliers of ore to China and a key industry negotiator in price talks with China's state-owned steel mills.

Few details of the allegations against Hu and the others have been released, and none has been allowed to make any public comment since they were detained.

Reports in the past week on the Web site of the Chinese financial magazine Caijing said one of the Rio Tinto employees, Wang Yong, was accused of receiving $9 million from Du Shuanghua, a steel tycoon whose company, Rizhao, has chafed at the state-dominated pricing arrangements, setting his own agreements with overseas suppliers.

The contrast between the Daimler case, which will be presented to a U.S. federal court next week, and Rio Tinto's highlights China's secretive way of handling such issues.

U.S. court documents available online outline in great detail the allegations against Daimler, reflecting the results of five years of investigations. No such materials on the Rio Tinto case are available in Shanghai; court officials refuse comment and defense lawyers said they were barred from commenting on the secrecy charges.

Australia's consul-general, the only outside official allowed to attend the bribery section of the trial, planned to attend Monday's hearing, and his government said it would comment after the verdict is announced.

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed

View AP Article on Forbes...

N. KOREA: North Koreans Use Cellphones to Bare Secrets

Mun Seong-hwi, a North Korean defector, speaking to someone in North Korea to gather information at his office in Seoul.  Jean Chung for The New York Times

March 28, 2010

By CHOE SANG-HUN

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea, one of the world’s most impenetrable nations, is facing a new threat: networks of its own citizens feeding information about life there to South Korea and its Western allies.

The networks are the creation of a handful of North Korean defectors and South Korean human rights activists using cellphones to pierce North Korea’s near-total news blackout. To build the networks, recruiters slip into China to woo the few North Koreans allowed to travel there, provide cellphones to smuggle across the border, then post informers’ phoned and texted reports on Web sites.

The work is risky. Recruiters spend months identifying and coaxing potential informants, all the while evading agents from the North and the Chinese police bent on stopping their work. The North Koreans face even greater danger; exposure could lead to imprisonment — or death.

The result has been a news free-for-all, a jumble of sometimes confirmed but often contradictory reports. Some have been important; the Web sites were the first to report the outrage among North Koreans over a drastic currency revaluation late last year. Other articles have been more prosaic, covering topics like whether North Koreans keep pets and their complaints about the price of rice.

But the fact that such news is leaking out at all is something of a revolution for a brutally efficient gulag state that has forcibly cloistered its people for decades even as other closed societies have reluctantly accepted at least some of the intrusions of a more wired world.

“In an information vacuum like North Korea, any additional tidbits — even in the swamp of rumors — is helpful,” said Nicholas Eberstadt, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute who has chronicled the country’s economic and population woes for decades.

“You didn’t used to be able to get that kind of information,” he said of the reports on the currency crisis. “It was fascinating to see the pushback from the lower levels” of North Korean society.

Taken together, the now-steady leak of “heard-in-Korea” news is factoring into ever swirling intelligence debates about whether there is a possibility of government collapse, something every American president since Harry S. Truman has wished for, and none have witnessed.

The news the informants are spiriting out is not likely to answer the questions about the North’s nuclear program or leadership succession that the United States cares about most. There is no evidence so far that these new sources have any access, or particular insight, into the North Korean leadership or military elite.

The informers themselves remain of limited use to American and South Korean spymasters, in part because the North has no broad cellphone network, making it easier for the authorities to eavesdrop on calls and harder for handlers to direct operatives in real time.

As one senior American intelligence official put it, “You’re not going to find the North Korean uranium project from these guys.”

So the traditional methods of intelligence collection — using satellite imagery, phone and computer intercepts, and informants and agents of South Korea’s intelligence service — remain the main sources of information.

Still, the Web sites appear to have inflicted damage. North Korea’s spy agencies, which almost never admit to weaknesses, recently warned that South Korea’s “plot to overthrow our system, employing all manners and means of spying, is spreading from the periphery of our territory and deeply inland.”

They vowed retaliation, especially against “human trash,” an apparent reference to the North Koreans who have betrayed their leaders’ code of silence out of principle or for pay to supplement their usually meager wages.

The informers’ networks are part of broader changes in intelligence gathering rooted in the North’s weaknesses. The first breakthrough came in the 1990s, when famine stoked by a breakdown in the socialist rationing system drove defectors out of the country and into the arms of South Korean and American intelligence agencies. The famine also led North Korea to allow traders to cross the border into China to bring home food, leaving them vulnerable to foreign agents, the news media and, most recently, the defectors and activists intent on forcing change in the North.

The first of their Web sites opened five years ago; there are now five. At least three of the sites receive some financing from the United States Congress through the National Endowment for Democracy.

The Web reports have been especially eye-opening for South Koreans, providing a rare glimpse of the aptly named Hermit Kingdom untainted by their own government’s biases, whether the anti-Communists who present the North in the worst light or liberals who gloss over bad news for fear of jeopardizing chances at détente.

“I take pride in my work,” said Mun Seong-hwi, a defector turned Web journalist with the site Daily NK, who works with the informers and uses an alias to protect relatives he left behind. “I help the outside world see North Korea as it is.”

Even in the days of the Iron Curtain, North Korea was one of the world’s most closed societies. There were few Western embassies where spies could pose as diplomats. And with citizens deputized to watch one another for suspicious activities, strangers could not escape notice for long.

Of the 8,400 agents South Korea sent over the border between the end of the Korean War in 1953 and 1994, just 2,200, or about 1 in 4, made it home. Some defected, according to former agents, but many were killed.

As recently as 2008, when the North’s leader, Kim Jong-il, reportedly had a stroke, it was long-distance sleuthing rather than on-the-ground spying that broke the news. South Korean agents intercepted a government e-mail message containing his brain scans, according to the Monthly Chosun magazine.

The Web sites have not uncovered news that delicate, although the implications of their reports on the currency crisis, later confirmed by South Korean government officials, were far-reaching. They said that the North was requiring people to exchange old banknotes for new ones at a rate of 100 to 1, as well as limiting the amount of old money that could be swapped. That suggested that officials in the North were cracking down on the few glimmers of private enterprise that they had tolerated, dashing hopes that the country might follow China’s lead of at least opening its economy anytime soon.

Still, the Web sites are plagued with challenges. The cellphones work on China’s cellular networks, so they operate only within several miles of the Chinese border. Because North Koreans cannot travel freely in their country, the Web sites are forced to depend mostly on people who live near China.

Beyond that, Ha Tae-keung, who runs one of the Web sites, says that some sources are prone to exaggerate, possibly in the hopes of earning the bonuses he offers for scoops. He and other Web site operators, meanwhile, are vulnerable to “information brokers” in the North who sell fake news.

But Mr. Ha said that the quality of the information was improving as Web sites hired more defectors who left government jobs and remained in touch with former colleagues, often by cellphone.

“These officials provide news because they feel uncertain about the future of their regime and want to have a link with the outside world,” he said, “or because of their friendship with the defectors working for us, or because of money.”

While such contacts would have been unimaginable 20 years ago, one thing has not changed: the danger.

Mr. Mun of Daily NK says his informers engage in a constant game of cat and mouse with the authorities. The North Korean government can monitor cellphone calls, but tracing them is harder, so the police rove the countryside in jeeps equipped with tracking devices.

The informants call him once a week; they never give their names, and they hide the phones far from their homes.

Despite those precautions, they are sometimes caught. This month, Mr. Ha’s Web site reported that an arms factory worker was found with a cellphone and confessed to feeding information to South Korea. A source said the informant was publicly executed by firing squad.

David E. Sanger contributed reporting from Washington.

An earlier version of this article was published in print in the International Herald Tribune on Jan. 25, 2010, and was published on nytimes.com on Jan. 24, 2010.

View New York Times Article...

Saturday, March 27, 2010

S. KOREA: 46 South Korean sailors missing after naval ship sinks

South Korean naval ship Cheonan sinks.

The Cheonan, in background, sinks near South Korea's Baengnyeong Island as a coast guard vessel attempts to rescue its sailors. (Ha Sa-hun / Associated Press / March 27, 2010)

Fears of possible warfare with North Korea spread overnight, but officials later back away from claims that there was an attack on the vessel.

March 27, 2010

By John M. Glionna, Reporting from Seoul

Forty-six sailors were missing Saturday after a South Korean naval vessel sank along the country's disputed western sea border with North Korea, an incident that military officials here at first believed was caused by an attack by their northern enemies.


Fears of possible renewed warfare filled South Korea's capital with dread overnight. As naval ships rescued 58 crewmen from icy waters, President Lee Myung-bak and Defense Ministry officials convened an emergency meeting.


For hours, officials believed the ship had struck a mine or was hit by a torpedo late Friday, and Lee dispatched an armada of ships to investigate and search for imperiled crewmen.


The possibility of an outbreak of hostilities between the two Koreas caused the South Korean currency, the won, to slip against the U.S. dollar. Pentagon officials said the U.S. was monitoring developments.


But by dawn, South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff said they could not conclude that the reclusive North was behind the sinking of the 1,200-ton patrol boat Cheonan, which was on routine duty near Baengnyeong Island with 104 crew members when it began taking on water.


An official from the president's office said satellite pictures showed no sign of hostile military activity in the area. Other officials, noting that the area was known to be rocky, speculated that the ship may have had an accident.


An apparent explosion ripped a large hole in the ship's stern, the Yonhap news agency reported. The blast shut down the engine, and the ship swiftly sank as the crew jumped into the frigid waters of the Yellow Sea.


Half a dozen naval ships and two coast guard vessels, along with helicopters, converged on the site. At one point, skittish troops on alert for attacks opened fire on what officials later said was a flock of birds.


One Baengnyeong resident told Yonhap that he thought he heard sounds of a gun battle. "The loud firing sound remained for about 15 minutes, while I watched TV. I never heard such loud firing sound in my entire life . . . and the sound was definitely different from those heard from usual drills," he said.


The ship's foundering along the disputed Yellow Sea border occurred amid growing tensions between the two Koreas as the North refuses to accede to international pressure to return to six-party talks on dismantling its nuclear arsenal.


Only hours before the naval incident, North Korea had threatened "unpredictable strikes." In November, North and South Korea exchanged gunfire for the first time in years, damaging ships from both sides. In January, the North fired about 30 artillery rounds not far from Baengnyeong, and the South responded by firing about 100 rounds.

Ju-min Park of The Times' Seoul Bureau contributed to this report.

View Los Angeles Times Article

Friday, March 26, 2010

CHINA: China Now Leads World in Diabetes Cases

Published: March 25, 2010

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

HANOI — After working overtime to catch up to the West, China now faces a new problem: the world’s biggest diabetes epidemic.

One in 10 Chinese adults already have the disease and an additional 16 percent are on the verge of developing it, according to a new study. The finding nearly equals the U.S. rate of 11 percent and surpasses other Western nations, including Germany and Canada.

The survey results, published Thursday in the New England Journal of Medicine, found much higher rates of diabetes than previous studies, largely because of more rigorous testing measures. With 92 million diabetics, China is now home to the most cases worldwide, overtaking India.

“The change is happening very rapidly both in terms of their economy and in terms of their health effects,” said David Whiting, an epidemiologist at the International Diabetes Federation, who was not involved in the study. “The rate of increase is much faster than we’ve seen in Europe and in the U.S.”

Chronic ailments like high blood pressure and heart disease have been steadily climbing in rapidly developing countries like China, where people are moving out of farms and into cities, where they have more sedentary lifestyles.

Greater wealth has led to sweeping diet changes and increasing obesity rates, a major risk factor for Type 2 diabetes, which accounts for 90 to 95 percent of all diabetes cases among adults.

“As people eat more high-calorie and processed foods combined with less exercise, we see an increase of diabetes patients,” said Huang Jun, a cardiovascular professor at the Jiangsu People’s Hospital in Nanjing, who did not participate in the study.

Previous studies over three decades have shown a gradual climb in China’s diabetes rates. The sharp rise in the latest study, conducted from 2007 to 2008, is largely explained by more rigorous testing methods, said the lead author, Dr. Wenying Yang from the China-Japan Friendship Hospital in Beijing.

Earlier nationwide studies relied only on one blood sugar tolerance test, while this survey of nearly 50,000 people caught many more cases by checking levels again two hours later, an approach recommended by the World Health Organization.

The study did have some limitations, sampling more women and city residents — 152 urban districts compared with 112 rural villages. Dr. Yang said she was alarmed by the findings, and the Chinese Ministry of Health has been alerted. She said there were plans to promote a national prevention strategy.

Diabetes occurs when the body is unable to regulate blood sugar. It is a major risk factor for heart disease, which is the biggest killer in China.

“I don’t think it’s unique to China, but it’s certainly a concern that the rates are high,” said Colin Bell, a chronic disease expert at the W.H.O.’s regional office in Manila. “It emphasizes the need for strong prevention and treatment programs.”

The Asia-Pacific region was highlighted in another study last year estimating that it would be home to more than 60 percent of the 380 million diabetes cases globally by 2025.

The Associated Press

View New York Times Article

RUSSIA & US: Ripple Effect Of U.S.-Russia Nuke Pact

S. KOREA: S. Korea Ship Sinks Near Maritime Border With North

March 26, 2010

By Mark Memmott

Update at 12:55 a.m. ET. The Associated Press now reports from Seoul that:

"Military officials say a South Korean navy ship has sunk off an island not far from North Korea. An official with the Joint Chiefs of Staff in Seoul said early Saturday (local time) that the ship sank some four hours after it began taking on water. The official spoke on condition of anonymity, in line with department policy."

Also from Seoul, Doualy Xaykaothao reports for NPR that South Korea's president held an emergency meeting at the Blue House (South Korea's equivalent of the White House) and that there is an investigation under way into whether the ship was hit by a North Korean torpedo. It's unclear, she adds, whether the reports about a shot being fired by a South Korean vessel refer to the ship that has been sunk or to another South Korean ship in the area.

Our original post:

"A South Korean Navy ship is sinking off the west coast near (the country's) maritime border with North Korea," according to South Korea's Yonhap News Agency, saying it gets that news from South Korean Government officials. It adds that "officials also said South Korea fired a shot at an unidentified vessel toward the North."

Reuters says other South Korean media are reporting that the ship was "possibly ... hit by a North Korean torpedo and (that) several sailors were killed."

The Associated Press reports the ship may already have sunk. Yonhap says it has a crew of 104, and that at least 58 have been rescued.

South Korea's Cabinet is holding an emergency meeting, the news agency also says.

View NPR Article

THE KOREAS: S. Korea Ship Sinks In Waters Off N. Korea

03.26.10, 01:34 PM EDT

By KWANG-TAE KIM, Associated Press 

SEOUL, South Korea -- A news report says a number of South Korean sailors died when their military ship sank off an island not far from North Korea.

South Korea's Yonhap news agency cited an unidentified naval official early Saturday as saying there were some deaths. The military says it cannot confirm the report but says 58 of the 104 crew members on board the ship that sank late Friday were safe.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - Military officials say a South Korean navy ship has sunk off an island not far from North Korea.

An official with the Joint Chiefs of Staff in Seoul said early Saturday that the ship sank some four hours after it began taking on water. The official spoke on condition of anonymity, in line with department policy.

The official said at least 58 of the 104 crew members have been rescued. There was no immediate confirmation of casualties. A rescue operation was still under way.

The cause of the sinking was not immediately clear.

View Forbes Article

THE KOREAS: Sunken Warship Raises Korea Tensions

The Korean Peninsula ranked high on most Davos participants' lists of the world's most dangerous flash spots. Reports today that a South Korean warship has sunk at night in part of the Yellow Sea disputed by the two Koreas is a significant raising of the risk level.

The vessel, possibly either a guided-missile-carrying frigate or a corvette (Update: it is a corvette, the Cheonan), with a crew of 104, went under following an explosion in the stern. The cause is unknown but the BBC is reporting that a torpedo was involved. South Korean media say authorities in Seoul are investigating whether it was a torpedo attack from North Korea. (Update: South Korean officials have played down early reports that the sinking may have been the result of North Korea attack, saying it is premature to ascribe a cause to the incident.)

Pyongyang has been building up its coastal defenses, particularly artillery and rocket launchers, since the end of last year. In January, it designated six zones on either side of the peninsula as naval firing zones and its guns shot hundreds of shells out to sea during military exercises, prompting South Korea to open fire on one occasion.

One interpretation of all this is that Pyongyang is trying to keep Seoul and Washington guessing over quite what level of security threat North Korea represents; this year's annual U.S.-South Korean joint military exercises earlier this month were scaled down. Pyongyang may also be looking for a bargaining chip to reestablish the six-nation nuclear talks that have stalled since North Korea pulled out, sensing that Beijing's currently tetchy relations with Washington open up an opportunity that it may be able to exploit with its unpredictability.

Another interpretation is that Pyongyang, in the throes of a long-term succession transition, needs an external distraction from the internal consequences of its disasterous currency reform last November that stoked inflation and caused supply shortages exacerbating the increasingly biting effects of U.N. sanctions imposed last June after missile and nuclear tests.

Deadly maritime exchanges between North and South Korea have occured on several occasions over the years. They are part of the tension of a game in which North Korea's leader Kim Jong-il repeatedly plays a high-risk hand. He looks now to be holding fewer cards than ever. At some point he will overplay his hand.

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CHINA & US: Sino-US tensions show no sign of easing

0013729e4abe0d162f9d13Zhong Shan, vice-minister of commerce, visited Washington.[ZHANG JUN / XINHUA]

Updated: 2010-03-26 06:58

By Li Xiaokun and Ding Qingfen (China Daily)

BEIJING - There are no clear signals of an easing in trade and political tensions in Sino-US relations despite the hope generated by the visits of two Chinese vice-ministers to Washington.

Vice-Commerce Minister Zhong Shan said in the US capital on Wednesday that Beijing will reform its currency regime gradually and keep the exchange rate stable.

Rejecting mounting US calls to allow the yuan to rise more quickly, Zhong said changing the exchange rate was not the way to fix a huge bilateral trade gap, and that it could upset the global economy.

"Revaluing the renminbi is not a good recipe for resolving problems," he told the US Chamber of Commerce.

"It is in nobody's interest - China's, the US' or other countries' - to see big ups in the renminbi or big downs in the dollar," Zhong said.

He asked Washington not to blame others for its own problems, "otherwise, the outcome would just be the opposite".

Zhu Min, deputy governor of the People's Bank of China, the central bank, also said on Thursday that Beijing will refine its exchange rate regime but declined to set a timetable.

US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said it was critical for China to allow its currency to rise.

"We can't force them to make that change," he said in an interview with CNN. "But it is very important that they let it start to appreciate again. And I think many of them understand that," he said.

US Senators are crafting a law that would slap import duties on Chinese goods to offset what they believe is the low value of its currency.

The sponsors of the bill, Democratic Senator Charles Schumer and Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, also want the Barack Obama administration to formally label China a currency manipulator in a semi-annual Treasury Department report due on April 15.

Referring to Vice-Foreign Minister Cui Tiankai, who was on a transit visit in Washington earlier this week, the Foreign Ministry said on its website that he received promises from high-level US officials that Washington "attaches great importance to China's stance and concerns on issues related to Taiwan and Tibet" and would "cautiously handle the sensitive issues".

Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said on Thursday at a regular press briefing that the visits aimed to "clarify China's positions and policies and listen to opinions from all quarters in the US" to seek a solution to the current problems.

Shi Yinhong, an expert on American studies at the Renmin University of China, said the latest developments are not a clear signal of mending ties.

"Washington should take positive steps (to show its sincerity). For instance, whether it will go ahead with the move to label China a currency manipulator in April is crucial in defining bilateral relations."

Huo Jianguo, dean of the Trade Research Institute affiliated to the Ministry of Commerce, urged Washington to tread cautiously. "The US government should be sober-minded on the issue of labeling China a currency manipulator. It should not be carried away by domestic political pressure," he said.

This year, the two countries have had spats over issues related to Taiwan, trade and human rights. Adding to the tensions was Google's decision on Tuesday to exit the Chinese mainland market.

Two other US companies appeared to have joined Google on Wednesday.

The two Internet services providers said they would halt registration of Chinese domain names because the Chinese government has begun demanding pictures and other identification documents from their customers.

Shi said the exits are individual decisions.

"Maybe some are for political reasons while some are just for business purposes," he said. He added that as long as China's economic and investment conditions remain good, foreign firms would stay.

Derek Scissors, research fellow at the Heritage Foundation, told China Daily that one or two Internet companies following Google's departure could not change the whole business environment.

"In determining whether this is an issue of Internet restrictions or a broader issue, it is much more important whether different kinds of American companies - in agriculture, banking, entertainment, and so on - are also reconsidering their China business.

"Thus far, that does not seem to be the case," he said.

Ai Yang and Cheng Guangjin in Beijing,Tan Yingzi in Washington contributed to the story

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