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Posts Tagged ‘President Lee Myung-bak’

Manmohan Singh meets South Korean President in Hanoi

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh met South Korean President Lee Myung-bak ahead of the eighth India-ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) Summit, and the fifth East Asia Summit in Hanoi here on Friday. The meeting lasted for about 30 minutes and took place at the Daewoo Hotel here. The issue related to the 12-billion-dollar POSCO steel [...]

The week ahead

Relations with North Korea will loom large over regional elections in South Korea

• SOUTH KOREANS will get the opportunity to judge the government’s handling of fraught relations with its northern neighbour on Wednesday June 2nd. Mayoral elections in the country’s largest cities and elections for provincial governors will prove a test of the policies of President Lee Myung-bak and a measure of his popularity. Tensions are high after North Korea severed ties with the South and threatened military action over accusations that it was responsible for sinking a South Korean naval vessel. North Korea accuses Mr Lee of fabricating the incident to bolster his party’s support in the elections.

• CLIMATE experts from around the world are set to meet in Bonn for a two-week summit starting on Monday May 31st. The German city is the latest venue for difficult talks on a new international climate treaty to replace the Kyoto protocol in 2012. A UN climate conference in Copenhagen in December failed to produce anything beyond a non-binding political declaration. Hopes are low of significant progress that might end with a legally binding deal at the next important climate meeting in Cancun in November. Divisions remain between rich and developing countries over who should bear the costs and the biggest burden of reducing emissions. …

China’s PM sees “urgent” need to avoid conflict

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao says there is an “urgent” need to avoid conflict between the Koreas following the sinking of a South Korean warship.
But Wen, speaking Sunday after a two-day summit with South Korean President Lee Myung-bak and Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama, gave no indication that China is ready to join them in blaming North Korea for the tragedy.

N. Korea “will pay price” for sinking ship

South Korea’s President Lee Myung-bak says North Korea will pay the price for sinking a South Korean naval ship in March. Lee told a nationwide television audience Monday that his government will appeal to the United Nations Security Council for sanctions against the North.

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.

Playing for time

If North Korea did deliberately destroy a South Korean warship, what next?

IT WAS a dignified address. Before wiping tears from his eyes with a folded handkerchief, President Lee Myung-bak (above) read out the names of 46 sailors who died last month when their ship, the Cheonan, exploded in South Korean waters. He carefully avoided pinning the blame on anyone, but on April 22nd, Yonhap, South Korea’s news agency, reported that the government’s military-intelligence agency, using intelligence gathered jointly with America, had concluded the regime in North Korea had deliberately attacked and destroyed the 1,200-tonne warship.

Even if tangible evidence of North Korean involvement emerges, the president’s caution on April 19th will nevertheless be understandable. Hot-blooded retaliation against a nuclear-armed despot would be fraught with danger for the peninsula, and for relations between America and China, the main backers of south and north respectively. …

President Pratibha Patil hosts “At Home” on 61st Republic Day

President Pratibha Devisingh Patil hosted the customary “At Home” on the occasion of 61st Republic Day on Tuesday evening in the sprawling lawns of Rashtrapati Bhavan here.
South Korean President Lee Myung-bak and his wife Kim Yoon attended the function.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and his wife Gursharan Kaur, Defence Minister A.K.Antony, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee, Minister [...]

Parade to mark 60 proud years of India as republic

As India celebrates 60 years of its founding as a republic Tuesday, the world’s largest democracy will yet again mark a proud moment in time by showcasing its military might and splendid cultural diversity on the magnificent Rajpath boulevard in the heart of the capital.
The Republic Day parade – an over one-hour event that begins [...]

International talks underway on Iran sanctions: Obama

US President Barack Obama said Thursday the United States has begun talking with allies about fresh punishment against Iran for defying efforts to halt its nuclear weapons pursuits.
Obama’’s tough talk came as Iran indicated it would not ship its low-enriched uranium to Russia for processing, the centerpiece of deal aimed at a peaceful resolution of [...]

Nuke talks: Obama says will send envoy to N.Korea

Having arrived from Chinese capital Beijing, US President Barack Obama said here on Thursday that he will send a special envoy to North Korea next month to continue talks on ending Pyongyang’’s nuclear ambitions in exchange for massive aid.
Speaking at a joint news conference with South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, Obama also said discussions are [...]

Obama heads to Asia, breaks foreign travel record

US President Barack has travelled to more countries in his first year in office than any of his predecessors and now, will undertake a nine-day tour of Asia.
Since taking office, he has made seven foreign trips and visited 16 countries, three of them twice.
The Asia trip will take him to Japan, Singapore, China and South [...]

North Korea Army, Lab 110, Suspected Over Cyber Attacks

SEOUL, South Korea — A North Korean army lab of hackers was ordered to “destroy” South Korean communications networks _ evidence the isolated regime was behind cyberattacks that paralyzed South Korean and American Web sites _ news report…

North Korea launched cyber attacks, says south

Intelligence service claims document shows hackers across border waged internet war on Seoul and the US

South Korea has obtained intelligence that North Korea ordered a military institute of computer hackers known as Lab 110 to “destroy” its neighbour’s communications networks last month, news reports said.

The National Intelligence Service told parliament of its finding on Friday, the JoongAng Ilbo newspaper reported, citing evidence the north was behind cyber attacks that paralysed major South Korean and US websites in recent days.

The newspaper, citing unidentified members of the parliament’s intelligence committee, said Lab 110, which is affiliated with the north’s defence ministry, received an order to “destroy the South Korean puppet communications networks in an instant”.

The JoongAng Ilbo said Lab 110 specialised in hacking and spreading malicious programmes.

The NIS – South Korea’s main spy agency – said it could not confirm the report. Calls by Associated Press to several key intelligence committee members went unanswered.

South Korea’s Yonhap news agency carried a similar report, saying the NIS obtained a North Korean document issuing the order on 7 June. The report, quoting an unidentified senior ruling party official, said the North Korean institute was affiliated with the people’s army.

The state-run Korea Communications Commission said it had identified and blocked five internet protocol (IP) addresses in five countries used to distribute computer viruses that caused the wave of website outages, which began in the US on 4 July.

The addresses point to computers distributing the virus that triggered the “denial of service” attacks in which many computers try to connect to a single site at the same time, overwhelming the server. They were in Austria, Georgia, Germany, South Korea and the US, a commission official said on condition of anonymity.

The attacks targeted high-profile websites, including those of the White House and South Korea’s presidential Blue House.

Though fingers were immediately pointed at the north, the IP addresses themselves provide little in the way of clarity. It is likely the hackers used the addresses to conceal their identities – for instance, by accessing the computers from a remote location. IP addresses can also be faked or masked, hiding a computer’s true location.

South Korean media reported in May that a North Korean internet warfare unit was trying to hack into American and South Korean military networks to gather confidential information and disrupt service. The Chosun Ilbo newspaper reported that the north had between 500 and 1,000 hackers.

Members of the parliamentary intelligence committee have said in recent days that the NIS also suspects North Korea because of a threat it made in state media last month where it boasted of being “fully ready for any form of hi-tech war”.

The fact that some of the attacked sites – such as that of the ruling party and the office of President Lee Myung-bak – have links to the South Korean government’s hardline policies toward the north were further cited.

The north has drawn repeated international rebukes in recent months for threats and actions seen as provocative by the international community. Those include a nuclear test in May and short-range ballistic missile launches on 4 July.

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