North Korea’s military has been paraded in front of its leader Kim Jong-il and the son expected to succeed him. Kim Jong-un joined his father on a balcony overlooking the square named after his grandfather and founder of North Korea, Kim Il-sung.
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Face-off
The suspension of inter-Korean trade leaves the North even more dependent on China
ONE of the odd features of the dispute between North and South Korea since the torpedoing of the Cheonan by North Korea in March, is that the non-military responses available to the South and its allies are rather puny. Only a few hawkish South Koreans think a military response is desirable. Hillary Clinton, America’s secretary of state, said that “the international community has a responsibility and a duty to respond” when she arrived in Seoul at the end of her Asian tour. For the international community, read China, which is reluctant to censure Kim Jong Il. The North’s shortfall in everything from food to energy has been met by a mixture of trade with its southern neighbour and presents from China. The suspension of inter-Korean trade now leaves the poor North more dependent than ever on Beijing.
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Dear Leader,
South Korea sends a firm but measured message to the North
SEOUL
LEE MYUNG-BAK, South Korea’s president, has shown impressive restraint since the Cheonan, a South Korean warship, was sunk on March 26th. Now that the investigation into its cause has reached a conclusion however, he faces a dilemma. The 46 sailors who went down with their ship and the North Korean insignia found in the spent torpedo’s propulsion system demand a bold response. Yet Kim Jong Il, North Korea’s leader, is so unpredictable that it is hard to know where that might lead. …
The week ahead
South Korea sets out its response to the sinking of the Cheonan
•President Lee Myung-bak of South Korea is expected to refer North Korea to the UN Security Council for its part in the sinking of the Cheonan, a South Korean warship. 46 sailors died in the incident, which took place in March. South Korea may also ban ships from the North from its waters. It needs to balance a desire for redress against the unpredictability of Kim Jong Il, North Korea’s leader. Mr Kim has already threatened war if further sanctions are imposed on North Korea.
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North Korea’s Kim pledges to remove nuclear weapons
North Korea’s leader pledged again to remove nuclear weapons from the peninsula, a news report said on Tuesday, and also sent his top nuclear envoy to Beijing in a move that could bode well for stalled disarmament talks. While Kim Jong-il has made, and broken, similar pledges before,
South Korea knocks down rumour North leader dead
South Korea’s Unification Ministry dismissed rumours on Tuesday that North Korean leader Kim Jong-il had been attacked and killed, which prompted financial markets to slide briefly in what one analyst said was a reflection of fragile sentiment. “That’s the first I’ve heard of this,” ministry
Putting a squeeze on
China’s prime minister, Wen Jiabao, persuades Kim Jong Il to return to nuclear-arms talks
NORTH KOREA’S ailing dictator, Kim Jong Il, rarely ventures to the airport to greet visiting foreign dignitaries. But China’s prime minister, Wen Jiabao, who departed from North Korea on Tuesday October 6th after a three-day visit, is no run-of-the-mill VIP. China has been North Korea’s staunchest ally through war and uneasy peace. Fraternal protocol demanded that Mr Kim greet Mr Wen on the tarmac not only with a vigorous handshake but also a prolonged hug.
Officially Mr Wen was in Pyongyang to celebrate the 60th year of diplomatic relations between China and North Korea. But since 1978 the two countries have pursued very different economic policies. China’s markets are open to the world; North Korea remains in isolation and its economy is in terrible shape. As winter looms many North Koreans cannot feed or warm themselves. United Nations sanctions and a maritime blockade have squeezed the impoverished country further by cutting off North Korea’s most profitable export, weapons. …
North and South Korea hold talks
The first meeting between North and South Korean officials in nearly two years has taken place unexpectedly in the South Korean capital Seoul. A spy chief said to be close to the North’s leader Kim Jong-il met Seoul’s Unification Minister Hyun In-taek.
Eye in the sky
By Adrian Brown
BBC News
North Korea is one of the most secretive states in the world. Its citizens cannot travel abroad and have little, if any contact with those who visit their country. The few tourists that do make it are carefully herded to a handful of destinations and rarely get off the beaten track.
Yet, thanks to satellite imagery and the internet, North Korea’s secretive world is being gradually unveiled. Here are a series of remarkable photographs showing aspects of North Korea’s hidden world that rarely get seen by outsiders, as well as some unusual views of more familiar sights.
North Korea’s elite family compounds


This image shows an elite residential compound to the north of the capital Pyongyang. North Korea’s founder, Kim Il-sung, lived there and it is believed that his son, Kim Jong-il – the country’s current leader – has a residency there. As well as the large houses and well-tended gardens, there is a swimming pool in the upper left hand corner, complete with water slide.
Out of shot, it is also possible to see that the compound has its own dedicated train line that seems to run into a tunnel underneath the area. Long time North Korea watcher, Dr Hazel Smith, says it’s difficult to know where Kim Jong-il lives as public appearances aside, his activities are shrouded in secrecy. "These look similar to some of the diplomatic compounds I’ve seen which also have swimming pools. The party people live in the city proper, whereas this is clearly outside the city as there are so many trees," she said.

Curtis Melvin, an American economist who has compiled a catalogue of detailed satellite images of North Korea, says sources within the country confirmed this location as being used by Kim Jong-il. "There are houses like this everywhere. At one point, there was a residence in every province. There are lots on the coast. Most of the nice roads in the country are built up to the gates of these compounds," he says.
Life for most of North Korean’s 23 million people is harsh. North Korea’s economy went into steep decline during the 1990s after the collapse of communism elsewhere. Though the economy has recovered to an extent thanks to greater co-operation with South Korea and some small scale market reforms, living standards and output remain far below the levels of the 1990s. Another factor that holds back the economy is the significant share of GDP that is spent on the military.
Taedongang brewery


This unprepossessing building houses the Taedongang brewery on the outskirts of the North Korean capital. It was once the Ushers Brewery in Trowbridge in the UK. It was bought from the owners in 2000 and dismantled onsite in a matter of weeks by a team of North Koreans and British engineers. It was shipped over to North Korea and was up and running 18 months later. But rather than traditional ale, it now brews a series of lagers.
"The North Koreans, like the Japanese, like their beer," says Dr Smith who is Professor of Resilience and Security at Cranfield University. But as sanctions have taken their toll, the key ingredients for brewing are not always available. "The chaff from the harvest is used in brewing. Nothing is wasted," says Dr Smith.

Melvin says he located the brewery "after a tourist sent in a picture of the entry gate which is a very unusual shape. From the air it looks like a large M which I matched to a photograph from an official publication."
He says the lager he tried when he was last in Pyongyang "had a full flavour" but others are less palatable. "Ryesong beer is pretty awful, leaving a distinct metallic taste," he says, adding: "In the capital, they drink a lot of beer but outside in the countryside, they prefer their traditional spirit drinks."
North Korean television recently broadcast an advert for Taedong River Beer. Dubbed, the "Pride of Pyongyang" the advert showed young women in traditional Korean dress serving trays of beer to men in western suits. Kim Jong-il visited the brewery in 2002 where he "(watched) good quality beer (come) out in an uninterrupted flow for a long while," according to North Korea’s state news agency.
Ostrich farm


This is an aerial view of an ostrich farm near Pyongyang. It’s on the official tourist trail but it’s not clear if this is a one-off or part of a network of such farms.
"Everybody knows about the ostrich farm," says Hazel Smith. "North Korea bought into propaganda that you could make money out of ostriches. I never saw anything in the way of ostrich meat when I was there," she says, adding: "The government never boasted about it and so I suspect it hasn’t done that well."
Curtis Melvin says he tracked down the location after seeing a picture of the farm in an official North Korean publication. He says North Korea got into ostrich farming during the famine in the 1990s when between 500,000 and two million North Koreans are thought to have died from starvation.
North Korea continues to suffer widespread food shortages due to economic problems, limited arable land and lack of agricultural machinery and energy shortages. The UN World Food Programme estimates that almost nine million people are in need of food aid.
Juche Tower


This is the Juche Tower, in central Pyongyang. It’s 170 meters high and is one of the key landmarks in the capital. Just in front of the tower is a 30-meter-high classic communist statue featuring a peasant carrying a sickle, a worker with a hammer in his hand, and a third character, a "working intellectual" who is carrying a writing brush.
"It’s a very nice area," says Dr Smith. "There’s a light at the top of the tower which goes out at 10pm, when everyone goes to bed because they get up early and of course they need to save electricity. Lots of people go there on Saturday and Sunday. It’s close to the river where people fish and people will go there to spend the afternoon."
Kim Jong-il is officially credited with designing the tower though the exact extent of his involvement is disputed. It is named after his father’s own particular brand of political philosophy whose key tenets are self-reliance, isolationism, Korean traditionalism and Marxism-Leninism.
The tower is lined up directly with the statue of Kim Il-sung on Mansu Hill on the opposite side of the river. "The view is incredible," says Curtis Melvin who was also able to watch preparations for the traditional October parade during a 2005 visit. On that visit he describes how he had his picture taken in front of a couple of huge images of Kim Jong-il and his father, but was eventually chased away "by one of the men in charge of the training".
Kim Il-sung statue


This is a monument to North Korea’s founder, Kim Il-sung, a massive 20-meter-high bronze statue. It stands on Mansu Hill in the capital and is a major tourist destination. When North Koreas visit the statue they bow before it and leave flowers as a mark of respect.
Flanking the statue, which is visible atop its white square plinth, are two giant stone replica flags. One is the North Korean flag, the other is that of the Workers Party of Korea. Arranged around the base of these structures – which in this picture are casting huge shadows – are some 200 almost life size bronze statues of various military and civilian figures striking heroic poses. Behind the statue is the Korean Revolution Museum.
Erected in April 1972 to celebrate Kim Il-sung’s 60th birthday, it was originally coated in gold but this was later removed apparently at the insistence of China, North Korea’s chief benefactor. Similar, less grandiose, structures are located in over 70 major cities elsewhere in North Korea.
There is apparently just one statue of his son, Kim Jong-il. Lamps are supposed to shine on the statue from 10pm until 4am each day. It’s also reported that dedicated bunkers have been built to house the statues in the case of war.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Euna Lee Laura Ling Return Home From North Korea
Former President Bill Clinton accompanied Laura Ling and Euna Lee as they arrived back in the United States Wednesday, less than 24 hours after the journalists were pardoned and released from a North Korean prison by leader Kim Jong Il.
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Moments after their jet landed [...]
Pictures from an exhibition
Bill Clinton’s private diplomacy in North Korea
THE pictures may yet turn out to be the most significant aspect of Bill Clinton’s surprise trip to North Korea this week. Images of the American former president in Pyongyang, stern-faced and stiff on a stool beside the North Korean leader, Kim Jong Il, appeared on newspapers, television screens and news websites all over the world. The White House declared the trip a “private” one earlier in the week, although North Korea’s officials strained to suggest otherwise. Whatever its intended diplomatic weight, however, North Korea’s leader, who has craved bilateral talks with the United States over his nuclear programme, may claim a propaganda coup, after drawing an important American to pose at his side.
The immediate goal for Mr Clinton was to oversee the release of two young American journalists, Euna Lee and Laura Ling, who were arrested on the Chinese-North Korean border in March while reporting on a story about North Korean women forced by poverty into China. The two women had been sentenced to 12 years’ hard labour for allegedly entering North Korea illegally and committing “hostile acts”. Now pardoned, they left the country with Mr Clinton. …
North Korea Releases Imprisoned Journalists After Visit From Bill Clinton
Great news, former President Bill Clinton’s surprise visit to North Korea has proven successful in freeing two journalists detained in the communist country.
ABC News has learned that Kim Jong Il pardoned Laura Ling and Euna Lee and ordered their release from a local prison on Tuesday. Laura and Euna were arrested earlier this year [...]
North Korea ready for nuclear talks with US
Pyongyang seeks to end standoff with US and address foreign tensions over missile launches
North Korea said today it was open to talks about the rising tension over its nuclear weapons programme, a marked shift in tactics after months of ratcheting up foreign anxieties with nuclear test and missile launches.
The statement appeared to be a call for direct talks with the United States, a longstanding goal of the regime. It comes days after the North Korean leadership traded jibes with the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, at a regional summit in Thailand. It said she was “by no means intelligent” and looked like a schoolgirl or a pensioner going shopping, after she compared it to a group of “small children”.
In today’s announcement the foreign ministry in Pyongyang made clear its continued opposition to the six-party nuclear talks, which it said sought only to “disarm and incapacitate” the nation.
The statement from a foreign ministry spokesman, carried by state media, said that siding with those who sought their resumption “will not help to ease tension”. But it said: “There is a specific and reserved form of dialogue that can address the current situation.”
Analysts say North Korea has used its weapons tests to improve its technology, advertise it to potential customers and bolster support for the regime after the illness of the leader, Kim Jong-il. But they also believe it is attempting to grab the attention of the US and push it into direct negotiations.
The US has said it would hold direct talks with Pyongyang within the six-nation process if it returned to the negotiating table and took irreversible steps towards denuclearisation. North Korea quit the aid-for-disarmament discussions in April.
The talks stalled last winter as North Korea wrangled with the US over how to implement agreed measures and verify its activities.
But Washington will not want to be seen to reward North Korea’s military tests, and Clinton told NBC yesterday the multinational negotiations were the appropriate way to engage with the state.
The other nations involved in the discussions – China, Japan, South Korea and Russia – would be reluctant to see bilateral talks. Beijing is concerned that a direct relationship between Pyongyang and Washington would damage its own long-term interests.
On Friday, North Korea’s ambassador to the United Nations, Sin Son Ho, said the country was “not against a dialogue”, according to Japan’s Kyodo news agency.
North Korea’s main Rodong Sinmun newspaper said the country’s envoy told an Asian security conference last week the nuclear standoff was a matter between Pyongyang and Washington.
In yesterday’s interview, Clinton repeated her warning that North Korea does not have any friends left after the UN security council’s toughening of sanctions last month.
She praised China, the North’s main ally, for being “extremely positive and productive” in pressuring Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear programme.
“We’ve been extremely gratified by their forward-leaning commitment to sanctions and the private messages that they have conveyed to the North Koreans,” Clinton said.
N Korea ‘executes Christians’
By Andre Vornic
BBC News

Human rights groups in South Korea say North Korea has stepped up executions of Christians, some of them in public.
The communist country, the world’s most closed society, views religion as a major threat.
Only the founder of the country, Kim Il-sung, and his son, Kim Jong-il, may be worshipped, in mass public displays of fervour.
Despite the persecutions, it is thought up to 30,000 North Koreans may practise Christianity secretly in their homes.
A report by a number of South Korean groups highlights one particular case of a woman allegedly executed in public last month, in a northern town close to the Chinese border.
She was accused of distributing Bibles, spying for South Korea and the United States and helping to organise dissidents.
Her parents, husband, and children were sent to a prison camp.
Such reports are hard to verify, but North Korea is known to be intolerant of religion – it views any form of alternative social organisation as a competitor for its own, religion-like ideology.
The US government says just owning a Bible in North Korea may be a cause for torture and disappearance.
Pyongyang’s position appears to have hardened on everything from human rights to defence policy and international relations in the last year or so.
It is thought this may be a way to shore up the government through Mr Kim’s illness and the process of anointing his youngest son, Kim Jong-un, as North Korea’s next leader.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Burma-N Korea ties ‘of concern’

Indonesia’s foreign minister has said Burma’s elections cannot be free and fair unless detained opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi is free.
Hasan Wirayuda was speaking as regional foreign ministers gathered in Thailand for an Association of South East Asian Nations (Asean) Regional Forum.
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is on her way to the security forum.
Asean has a policy of non-interference in members’ affairs, but Burma has provoked widespread censure.
Indonesia has led Asean concerns about Burma, telling correspondents that the group has become frustrated at the lack of progress on democratic reforms.
Mr Wirayuda said the recent trial of Ms Suu Kyi had dashed hopes of a meaningful election scheduled for next year.
A new human rights body created by Asean, lambasted by regional activists as lacking any enforcement power, was almost scuttled over the weekend when an increasingly assertive Indonesia sought to strengthen its provisions.
Inclusive
"We have been saying to them [Burma] directly that the process must be inclusive for all groups in society … including Aung San Suu Kyi," Mr Wirayuda told The Associated Press in a reference to Burma’s planned poll.
"We should see whether from now until 2010 they develop a credible process leading to truly democratic elections acceptable to the international community," he said.

He said the "big test" will be whether the regime’s promised elections next year are truly "multiparty, meaning inclusive in nature, but also whether the process is a democratic one."
He said Asean has been "able to develop a more open, frank discussion" with Burma, while admitting it was hard to see if all the talk made any difference inside the country.
He was speaking after United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon made a fruitless trip to Burma, during which he was not allowed to visit Ms Suu Kyi.
Clinton in Thailand
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said six months ago that the US was reviewing its policy towards Burma as sanctions did not appear to be successful in forcing change.
However, on this, her first trip to an Asean meeting, analysts have noted that there has been no hint of a new policy.
Instead, the talks are expected to focus on finding ways to push North Korea back to the negotiating table.
Six-party talks aimed at ending the North’s nuclear programmes stalled last year, and since then the North has set off nuclear and missile tests amid questions over the leadership as Kim Jong-il’s health has worsened.
Asean leaders have expressed satisfaction that a figure as senior as Mrs Clinton is at last gracing the regional forum with her presence. In recent years, more junior officers have been sent, leaving the delegate from China, a growing influence in the region, to be the key figure at the talks.
Mrs Clinton will meet Thai Prime Minister Abhisist Vejjajiva and the Thai foreign minister in Bangkok before joining the forum in Phuket.
Another challenge at the regional talks will be for Thailand – it has had to cancel regional summits twice since December due to domestic political turmoil. </p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
N Korean leader Kim ‘has cancer’

Nuclear negotiators from China and South Korea have opened talks in the South Korean capital, Seoul, about how to handle the threat from the North.
The officials said their goal was to have frank and in-depth discussions.
The talks take place amid new rumours about the ill health of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il, with unconfirmed reports he has pancreatic cancer.
The United Nations stepped up sanctions against the North after its nuclear and missile tests of May.
"What is important is that the two sides have frank and in-depth consultations," Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Wu Dawei was reported as saying by South Korea’s Yonhap news agency.
He was meeting Wi Sung-lac, the South Korean special representative for Korean Peninsula peace and security affairs.
Mr Wu, who chairs the international talks on the North’s nuclear programme, arrived in Seoul on Sunday. He had already visited Russia, the United States, and Japan which, with the two Koreas and China, make up the six-party negotiations.
These talks faltered last year when North Korea and the US could not agree on verification procedures to asses the full extent of the North’s programmes.
Health speculation
This second meeting in a month between Mr Wu and Mr Wi comes amid heightened speculation about the health of the North’s Mr Kim.
A South Korean television news report said Mr Kim had life-threatening pancreatic cancer, diagnosed around the same time as he was thought to have a stroke last August.
The report was based on unnamed South Korean and Chinese intelligence sources and has not been confirmed.
Mr Kim, now 67 years old, was seen on 8 July, attending a memorial to mark the 15th anniversary of his father’s death.
He appeared gaunt and thin, with a slight limp, prompting more questions about his health.
It has been widely reported that Mr Kim’s third son, Kim Jong-un, is being groomed as his heir, although the regime has made no announcement.
</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Kim Jong-Il Has ‘Serious’ Pancreas Disorder: Report
TOKYO (AFP) — North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il is suffering from a “serious disorder” of the pancreas, a Japanese television network reported Friday, quoting a South Korean intelligence official.
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