2013년 8월 13일 화요일

[Editorial] Japan’s wartime flag

[Editorial] Japan’s wartime flag

Koreans want to keep Japan at arm’s length

 
 
 The Japanese government under Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is reportedly moving to permit the use of the wartime rising-sun flag ― a symbol of horror to Asian victims of Japanese colonial aggression. If a recent report by the Sankei Shimbun, a conservative Japanese daily, is true, it shows the true colors of the right-wing, revisionist Abe government again.

Abe implied he was denying Japan’s imperialist aggression against its Asian neighbors when he impudently claimed that there was no established definition of invasion, either academically or internationally, earlier in the year. His government’s insensitivity culminated in Deputy Prime Minister Taro Aso’s recent proposal to surreptitiously revise Japan’s postwar pacifist constitution by following the example of the Nazis, focusing on war-banning Article 9.

A conflict over the use of the wartime flag came to the fore when the Korean Football Association lodged a complaint against Japanese soccer fans for unfurling the flag during an East Asian Cup match last month. South Korean soccer fans countered the Japanese with a banner that read: “There is no future for a people that have forgotten their past.”

The Sankei Shimbun claimed that the wartime flag, along with the official flag featuring only a red sun on a white background, was internationally accepted as symbolizing Japan. Korea, China and some other Asian countries, if not the entire world, would beg to differ.

To the victims of Japan’s militarism in those countries, the wartime flag evokes the horror of being mobilized to the frontlines of war, military brothels or mining pits. How could the daily say it was rude of Koreans to liken the flag to Nazi Germany’s swastika armband?

Koreans like to compare Japan with Germany, more for their postwar differences than for their wartime similarities. To Koreans, Germany appears to have made a clean break from its wartime past. In addition to making atonement to Jewish holocaust victims, it has banned the use of the swastika, the “Heil Hitler” Nazi greeting and Hitler’s “Mein Kampf.” German children are brought to concentration camps to learn of their country’s wartime past.

When the image of German children on their field trips to concentration camps is juxtaposed against that of Japanese cabinet members paying homage to Class A war criminals at the Yasukuni Shrine, it should not be too difficult to understand why Koreans are so strong in what the Japanese daily called their “anti-Japanese nationalism” in its report on the use of the wartime flag. It warned the Korean antipathy against Japan could hurt bilateral military cooperation.

So be it. Apparently, the Japanese daily is unaware that few Koreans want their country to be closely linked to Japan militarily. Instead, Koreans, who do not want to be victimized again by a wild right-wing Japanese desire to dominate Asia, would like to see their country keep Japan at arm’s length, be it militarily or not.
 
- The Korea Herald, 2013-8-8
 

 

Japan Must Stop Using Risingsun Flag

 


According to Sankei newspaper, the Japanese government plans to allow the use of the rising sun flag symbolizing imperial Japan. The plan is the latest lurch to the far right by the government of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.
 
During World War II, lots of sexslaves of Japan and people in Korea, China and South-east Asia shivered horrendously with extreme fear under the waving rising sun flag. It is just the exact equivalent of the Nazi swastika in Europe and moves to allow the use of the rising sun flag are expected to poison already strained relations with Korea and China.
 
 
We have to know that in Germany and Austria, not only hakenkreuz but also Celtic Cross are banned because Celtic Cross may give people the indication of Germanic people's superiority. Also, if you use hakenkreuz mark, you are punished in Hungary, Polland, Lituania and even in Brazil.
 
In addition, Sickle and hammer mark is not allowed in Eastern Europe because people in Eastern Europe were the victims of Soviet Union in the history. It is obvious that sickle and hammer mark provokes the fury of Eastern Europeans.
 
In the same way, rising sun flag is the symble of Japan's expanding militarism and atrocity during world war II. Japanese politicions should be more aware of its historic backgrounds, stop planing to allow the use of rising sun flag.

2013년 8월 9일 금요일

He is a citizen of Republic of Korea!!

AMnesty International is helping a citizen of Republic of Korea, Kim Kwang-ho. 


DOCUMENT - CHINA: FAMILY FACE FORCIBLE RETURN TO NORTH KOREA

UA: 185/13 Index: ASA 17/025/2013 China Date: 19 July 2013
URGENT ACTION
FAMILY FACE FORCIBLE RETURN TO NORTH KOREA
A family of five are at risk of forcible return to North Korea after being arrested by Chinese authorities. If returned to North Korea they are at serious risk of torture and other ill-treatment, forced labour and death.
The Chinese authorities are holding five North Koreans, Kim Kwang-ho, his wife Kim Ok-shil, their daughter, and two other relatives Kim Song-il and Kim Son-hye in a detention facility in the city of Yanji, Jilin province, north-eastern China. If returned to North Korea, illegal border-crossers typically face arbitrary detention, torture, and other ill-treatment, including forced labour. They would also be at risk of enforced disappearance in North Korea.
Kim Kwang-ho, Kim Ok-shil, and their daughter previously fled North Korea and settled in South Korea in August 2009. However, they left South Korea for China in December 2012. Kim Kwang-ho then returned to North Korea followed later by his wife and daughter. In January North Korean media interviewed Kim Kwang-ho, his wife and another North Korean who had returned from South Korea. In the interview they said that they had been lured to South Korea.
In their latest attempt to flee North Korea, Kim Kwang-ho and his family are reported to have left North Korea on 24 June. They were in China seeking means to return to South Korea when the shelter they were staying in was raided on 14 July by the Chinese police.
The circumstances behind their return to North Korea between December 2012 and early January remain unclear. There are concerns that their return may not have been voluntary, and that the media interview was used primarily as propaganda to deter others from trying to go to South Korea. This means that they are at heightened risk of punishment and risk to their lives including the death penalty if returned to North Korea.
Although China is a state party to the UN Refugee Convention it has prevented the UN refugee agency, the UNHCR, from having access to North Koreans in China. Amnesty International believes that all North Koreans in China are entitled to refugee status because of the risk of serious human rights violations if they are returned.
Please write immediately in English, Chinese or your own language:
Call on the authorities not to forcibly repatriate Kim Kwang-ho, Kim Ok-shil, their daughter and their relatives, Kim Song-il and Kim Son-hye;
Urge them to let Kim and his family travel to South Korea, or seek asylum in China and other countries,
Call on them to provide Kim and his family access to the UNHCR
PLEASE SEND APPEALS BEFORE 30 AUGUST 2013 TO:
President
XI Jinping Guojia Zhuxi
The State Council General Office
2 Fuyoujie
Xichengqu, Beijingshi 100017
People's Republic of China
Fax: +86 10 6238 1025
Email: gov@govonline.cn
Salutation: Your Excellency
Premier
LI Keqiang Guojia Zongli
The State Council General Office
2 Fuyoujie
Xichengqu, Beijingshi 100017
People's Republic of China
Fax: +86 10 65961109 (c/o Ministry of Foreign Affairs)
Salutation: Your Excellency
And copies to:
Minister of Foreign Affairs
WANG Yi Buzhang, Waijiaobu
2 Chaoyangmen Nandajie
Chaoyang District, Beijingshi 100701
People's Republic of China
Fax: +86 10 65591516 or 65961109 or 65962660
Email: webmaster@mfa.gov.cn
Also send copies to diplomatic representatives accredited to your country. Please insert local diplomatic addresses below:
Please check with your section office if sending appeals after the above date.
URGENT ACTION
FAMILY FACE FORCIBLE RETURN TO NORTH KOREA

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

North Koreans are not allowed to travel abroad without state permission however, facing significant risks, many do cross the border into China every year without permission. China considers all undocumented North Koreans to be economic migrants, rather than asylum-seekers, and returns them to North Korea if they are caught. However, international law prohibits the forcible return either directly or indirectly of any individuals to a country where they are at risk of persecution, torture or other ill-treatment, or death.
Kim Jong-un who came to power after his father’s death in December 2011 has increased border controls, condemned border crossers and threatened them with severe punishment, including death. On 19 June North Korean state news published a statement by the Ministry of People’s Security vowing to “take substantial measures to physically remove despicable human scum” who leave the country without permission – an act the North Korean government views as treason. According to South Korean government figures, there has been a significant drop in the number of North Koreans reaching South Korea in 2012: 1,509 compared to 2,706 in 2011.
In March 2013, the UN Human Rights Council voted to establish a Commission of Inquiry (CoI) into human rights violations in North Korea. The CoI is tasked to investigate alleged violations of the right to food, freedom of expression, right to life and freedom of movement, and abuses in political prison camps, torture and other ill-treatment, arbitrary detention, discrimination, and enforced disappearances.
The North Korean government refuses to recognize or grant access to international human rights monitors, including Amnesty International and the UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in North Korea. Ongoing restrictions on access for independent monitors, intergovernmental organizations and humanitarian organizations impede efforts to assess the human rights situation in the country.
Name: Kim Kwang-ho (male); Kim Ok-shil (female); their daughter (female); Kim Song-il (male); Kim Son-hye (female)
Gender m/f: both
UA: 185/13 Index: ASA 17/025/2013 Issue Date: 19 July 2013

Brother of Kim Kwang-ho: Please save my brother

Brother of Kim Kwang-ho: Please save my brother

2013.07.19 00:11:43 


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Kim Joo-cheol, a North Korean resident in the U.K., has appealed to the international society to save his brother and his family. His brother Kwang-ho and his family, who miraculously succeeded in escaping North Korea once again after being lured and abducted by the North Korean spies, were arrested by the Chinese police in Yanji.

Kwang-ho and Ko Kyung-hee were seen in a press conference held at the People’s Palace in Pyongyang on Jan. 24 this year, after being forced to testify that they returned to the homeland after having sickening experience in South Korea.

However, in stark contrast to the seemingly heroic welcome they received by the generous leader Kim Jong-un presented in the press conference, Kwang-ho and Ko were removed from Pyongyang and lived in a provincial town under constant monitoring. When they talked about pork belly slices and Korean ginseng chicken soup they had in South Korea, they were detained by the state security authority and subsequently released.   

Kwang-ho, his wife, and their one-year daughter, who could not bear living in stifling North Korean society, successfully escaped North Korea again. They took the wife’s younger sister and her husband, who had never escaped before. However, while they were hiding in China, they were arrested by the Chinese police on July 14. According to Ha Tae-kyung, a lawmaker for the ruling Saenuri Party, and Kim Yong-hwa, head of the North Korea Refugees Human Rights Association of Korea, on July 16, they are currently being jailed in China.

When this news spread across South Korea and the world, Kwang-ho’s younger brother Joo-cheol living in the U.K. started campaigning for saving his brother and his family.
Joo-cheol, who settled in the U.K. in 2007, had heard of his brother’s escape from North Korea, but has never seen him since his own escape. He said he heard about his brother through news occasionally.  
Joo-cheol confessed that when he first saw his brother in the press conference televised by the North Korean Central News Agency, he was nervous about what other people would think of himself. “But I was relieved after it was revealed that my brother’s re-defection to North Korea was involuntary and was a result of North Korean authority’s abduction, and that he was forced to glorify the regime during the press conference,” said Joo-cheol.

He urged the international community to save his brother as only death will await him upon repatriation, especially since he was used as a means of propaganda for the Kim Jong-un regime on TV.  

Yong-hwa, who was the first to deliver the news of Kwang-ho’s arrest in China through a press conference, said that he had several telephone calls with Kwang-ho when he successfully left North Korea for second time and was hiding in China. Yong-hwa said, “Kwang-ho told me over the telephone that appearing in the televised press conference early this year was the only way he could save his family in North Korea, and he was forced to memorize everything he said on TV for two months by the state security department.”


A South Korean government official said that the South Korean government has requested the Chinese government to have an interview with Kwang-ho and his family in order to protect North Korean escapees, who are legally South Korean citizens. After finding out accurate information on how Kwang-ho’s family went to North Korea, escaped again, and got arrested, the South Korean government will try to offer them protection more proactively.  

In fact, during the summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping last month, South Korean President Park Geun-hye requested that China takes more interest in human rights of North Korean escapees. It remains to see whether the summit would have positive impact in releasing Kwang-ho.

The North Korean Residents Society in Europe, which is based in the U.K., said they will launch a worldwide campaign for their safe journey to South Korea as Kwang-ho and his family will undoubtedly face the most atrocious kind of punishment if they are sent back to North Korea.

FreeNK Newpaper – News Team


[Editorial] Truce 60 years on

Can we believe North Korea's assertion for Peace Treaty?
I don't think so...


U.S. troops killed by the North Korean soldiers during Korean War



Editorial from The Korea Herald(2013.7.26)



Saturday marks the 60th anniversary of the armistice that put an end to the three-year Korean War. But the cease-fire has been a precarious one, with armed conflict intermittently flaring up across the border between South and North Korea. With the armistice agreement not replaced with a peace treaty yet, the two sides still remain deadly adversaries.

This has to change. Peace must be made permanent on the Korean Peninsula. With the Oriental calendar coming full circle every 60 years, the anniversary is an auspicious occasion for South and North Korea to make a fresh start to free the Korean people from the fear of another fratricidal war. To Koreans, whether in the South or in the North, the 60th anniversary means the completion of one life cycle and the start of another.

A most plausible scenario for peace on the Korean Peninsula is for North Korea to abandon its desire to arm itself with nuclear weapons in exchange for economic aid from abroad, mostly from South Korea. The next step would be to replace the armistice agreement with a peace treaty.

North Korea agreed to pursue the proposed peace process when it decided to participate in the six-party talks on its nuclear program in 2003. But the North, which deserted the multilateral nuclear talks within several years, has since conducted nuclear tests on three occasions.

The offer of massive aid is still on the table, with President Park Geun-hye committing herself to keeping a promise to reward the North if it decides to dismantle its nuclear program. She says South Korea is ready to promote coprosperity with the North and pursue a peaceful reunification.

The armistice anniversary is also a proper occasion to renew its thanks to the United States and 15 other nations that contributed to the U.S.-led U.N. forces, which helped South Korea fight back the invading North Korean and Chinese troops. Had it not been for their help, it would not have been possible for South Korea to rise from the ashes of war. After the war, it continued to receive aid from the United States and other countries.

Thanks to their support, South Korea, once one of the poorest aid recipients in the world, has turned itself into a well-to-do industrialized nation over the past 60 years. Its volume of external trade ranks eighth in the world, and its gross domestic product 15th ― no small achievement for a natural resources-poor country.

North Korea is no match for South Korea. It is listed by the United Nations as the poorest country among the 57 Asian-Pacific countries. Feeding the starving people, not the development of nuclear weapons, should be the priority issue of concern to the North Korean leadership.

For South Korea, it is now time to pay back. The South, which spent $1.55 billion in official development aid last year, an amount equal to 0.14 percent of its gross national income, will have to strive to meet the U.N.-set goal of 0.7 percent of GNI before long. It also needs to help promote world peace by contributing troops to U.N. peacekeeping forces.

2013년 7월 18일 목요일






This is the documentary "one last cry" and it's about Asian comfort women during World War II made by Arirang TV. Korean comfort women hold 'Wednesday demonstration' on every Wednesday at noon in front of Japanese Embassy in Seoul, demanding Japanese government resolve the sex slaves problems established under the Japanese Imperialism.

However, Abe Shinzo, the PM of Japan provokes fury by saying that so-called wartime 'comfort women' were NOT FORCED. It is so heartbreaking to hear and I firmly believe that Japanese government and people should have rational, frank perspective on history that suits its/their dignity.


"The value of history is, indeed, not scientific but moral, by liberalizing the mind, by deepening the sympathies by fortifying the will. "
                                                                                 -Carl Becker

Japanese War Crime

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OMG!! Isn't this video disgusting? I felt so sick while watching it.
Japanese war crime occurred in many Asian countries during World War II.
Despite of all these evidences of Japan's atrocities, Japanese government denies or justifies Japan's invasion of Korea and China. This kind of rightward shift or nationalism is shameless and irrational.

Japanese government must stop the history distortion and face the true history.


"Those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it"
                                                                            - George Santayana