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Clone patrol – sniffer-dogs report for duty in South Korea

Cloned sniffer dogs at Seoul's Incheon International Airport on July 17

South Korea’s customs service says it has deployed the "world’s first cloned sniffer dogs" to check for drugs at its main airport and border crossings.

Six puppies cloned from a Canadian-born sniffer dog in late 2007 have reported for duty after completing a 16-month training programme.

The clones are all called Toppy, a combination of "tomorrow" and "puppy".

The customs agency says clones help to lower crime-fighting costs as it is difficult to find good sniffer dogs.

Only about 30% of naturally-born sniffer dogs make the grade, but South Korean scientists say that could rise to 90% using the cloning method.

‘Better performance’

"They showed better performance than naturally-born sniffer dogs"

Park Jeong-Heon
Customs spokesman

The new recruits are part of a litter of seven puppies who were cloned from a "superb" drug-sniffing Canadian Labrador retriever called Chase in 2007, officials said.

One dropped out of the training due to an injury.

"They are the world’s first cloned sniffer dogs deployed at work," Park Jeong-Heon, a customs spokesman at Seoul’s Incheon International Airport, told AFP news agency.

"They showed better performances in detecting illegal drugs during the training than other naturally-born sniffer dogs that we have."

The cloning work was conducted by a team of scientists at Seoul National University, who created the world’s first cloned dog – an Afghan Hound named Snuppy.

The state-funded project cost about 300m won ($239,000; £146,000).</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

S Korean ex-leader on respirator

Kim Dae-jung attended the funeral of former President Roh Moo-hyun in a wheelchair - 29 May 2009

Former South Korean President Kim Dae-jung is in an intensive care unit in a Seoul hospital being treated for pneumonia, medical officials have said.

Mr Kim, 85, was put on a respirator after complications arose, but is not in a critical condition, hospital official Park Chang-il said.

He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2000 for brokering the first summit of leaders from divided Korea.

He served as South Korean president from 1998-2003.

"He became short of breath on Wednesday night and was put on a respirator around 0300 this morning," an official at Yonsei Severance Hospital was quoted as saying by Yonhap news agency.

"His condition has improved since. He is conscious, and his pulse, breathing and body temperature are normal."

Mr Kim was taken to the hospital on Monday with a fever and cold symptoms.

He dedicated his career to promoting democracy and human rights during the decades of authoritarian rule in South Korea.

His Sunshine Policy improved ties with the North during his presidency, but successors have taken a tougher line with Pyongyang and North-South relations have since soured.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Cyberstrikes could have originated in Britain

A recent wave of cyber attacks that crippled thousands of computers and websites in the United States and South Korea could have originated from inside Britain, experts have warned.

According to security researchers in Vietnam, the source of last week’s string of attacks by the Mydoom virus – which overwhelmed systems belonging to the US Treasury and the office of the South Korean president Lee Myung-Bak – can be traced to the UK.

“We have analysed the malware pattern that we received” said Nguyen Minh Duc, a director of Vietnamese security company BKIS, in a post on the company’s blog. “We found a master server located in the UK.”

Investigators said they had discovered new details on how the strikes took place by investigating and tracing back the attacks.

According to BKIS, infected computers had tried to contact one of eight so-called command and control servers every three minutes. These machines then gave instructions to the hacked PC – generally ordering them to direct traffic straight at victim websites, in attempt to overload them and force them to crash.

But these eight servers were themselves being controlled by a single source, which evidence indicated was located somewhere in Britain.

“Having located the attacking source in UK, we believe that it is completely possible to find out the hacker,” wrote Nguyen. “This of course depends on the US and South Korean governments.”

The findings contradict some earlier reports that the surge in attacks may have been coordinated from North Korea, a theory largely driven by intelligence reports presented to the authorities in Seoul.

Despite the news, government officials in South Korea are still trying to ascertain whether the strikes actually originated in the UK – or whether Britain was simply being used to screen the true location of those behind the attacks.

“We don’t know that the attackers were actually based in Britain, or mainly hacked a British IP address and used it for delivery,” an official from the Korean Communications Commission told the Korea Times.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Lost in translation

By John Sudworth
BBC News, Seoul

The Pyongyang Times of North Korea

South Korea has even begun to keep count.

A government official recently claimed that North Korea’s official state media has insulted the South Korean president more than 1,700 times this year alone.

That is an average of 10 insults a day.

He is variously called "a lackey", "a stooge", "a dictator" and the leader of "a gang of traitors".

The official admitted that the jibes were sometimes "downright silly".

But the language chosen by North Korea to attack its opponents can border on the terrifying.

Last year, for example, it threatened to reduce South Korea "to ashes" and, more recently, warned of a "fire shower" of nuclear retaliation.

So, just how much attention should we be paying to this kind of rhetoric

Is it mere bluster, or is there a real risk that the bombastic outbursts will be translated into action

‘Wolf in sheep’s clothing’

Michael Harrold has an unusual claim to fame.

In 1987 he became the first British citizen to be employed by the North Korean government in Pyongyang.

SELECTION OF N KOREAN QUOTES

  • The American Yankee is a wolf in sheep’s clothing
  • About the US:Even piles of manure in the fields are fuming out smoke of hatred
  • [S Korean leader Lee Myung-bak] is a political charlatan, an absent-minded traitor and a US sycophant
  • US imperialists are the greatest threat to humanity [in the 20th Century]
  • We will tear the limbs from the United States, which is an empire of evil
  • The situation is inching close to the brink of war due to the brigandish moves of the US

His mission was to offer advice on the correct use of English for the translations of North Korean propaganda.

At the start of his seven-year posting, having arrived in a strange and bewildering city, he remembers buying himself a Korean phrase book.

"The second from last chapter was called ‘useful phrases’," he tells me.

It included such choice essentials as: "The American Yankee is a wolf in sheep’s clothing", and "the US imperialists are the greatest threat to humanity in the 20th Century".

Unlikely to trip off a beginner’s tongue perhaps, but the run-of-the-mill phrase book was his first lesson in how all pervasive this kind of language is inside the reclusive country.

External enemy

So does the average North Korean go about his daily life peppering his speech with such casual insults Is North Korea really one of the angriest places on the planet

"At times when the relationship with the outside world is more peaceful they use softer language. But when relations get worse, that’s when it gets much tougher"

Prof Paik Hak-soon

Professor Paik Hak-soon of the Sejong Institute

Joo Sung-ha, who defected from North Korea seven years ago, thinks it might be.

He is now a journalist working on the foreign desk of the Dong-A Ilbo, a South Korean broadsheet, with regular cause to analyse the propaganda coming out of Pyongyang.

"It is a unique aspect of socialist societies in general," he tells me.

"People learn to use this kind of strong language, even in everyday life. It is instilled into society."

The state-run newspapers are certainly full of it, a constant hard-blowing of warnings and threats aimed at an external enemy kept constantly in the forefront of people’s minds.

But if the rhetoric is designed to rally citizens to the leadership’s cause, it may have limited effect, according to Mr Joo.

"People are too used to it. They learn to read between the lines for the real meaning, and the often repeated words like ‘war’ don’t even register."

‘Nuclear maniac’

They register in South Korea though.

So much so that North Korean propaganda is still illegal here, banned under the country’s national security laws.

To read a North Korean newspaper you need special permission to access one of the secure collections, like the one held at the Sejong Institute, a private think-tank, located just outside Seoul.

Professor Paik Hak-soon shows me round, and pulling a large volume of the Pyongyang Times off the shelves, it falls open at an edition from March 1988.

North Korean missile launch - photo released April 2009

Little has changed, it seems.

Right there in the first paragraph is the talk of the "US imperialists" and the South Korean "military fascist clique".

The individual words might not tell you much, but according to Professor Paik, it is worth trying to follow the trend, the rising and falling tone of North Korean rhetoric.

"There are ups and downs," he says. "At times when the relationship with the outside world is more peaceful, they use softer language. But when relations get worse, that’s when it gets much tougher."

North Korean propaganda, the theory goes, can be used like a barometer, giving clues about the current thinking of the leadership in Pyongyang.

President George W Bush was "a gangster" and "a nuclear maniac", but despite the abuse heaped on current US policy, no personal insult has yet been levelled at President Barack Obama.

If and when it comes, it might tell us something about North Korea’s assessment of the prospects for dialogue and engagement with his administration.

‘Piles of manure’

At times of extreme hostility the language turns flamboyant, even poetic.

America sank so low in 2003, according to state radio, that even the "piles of manure in the fields" were "fuming out the smoke of hatred."

It is strong stuff, no doubt, but sometimes the outside world can be tempted to analyse too deeply.

Michael Harrold

Michael Harrold has written a book about his seven years in Pyongyang, entitled Comrades and Strangers: Behind the Closed Doors of North Korea.

"One very senior translator once asked me whether using the title Great Leader every time we referred to Kim Il-sung was perhaps too repetitive and limited its impact, and I agreed," he tells me.

So, for a time, the term was occasionally dropped from North Korea’s English language news reports, much to the excitement of foreign journalists.

Speculation began to run rife, Mr Harrold recalls, that the leader was losing his grip on power.

"I think they were somewhat disappointed when I told them it was simply a translation issue," he says.

Brigandish

The anecdote helps explain why North Korea’s statements sometimes read so strangely.

Mr Harrold was employed as a proof-reader, but the English translation itself is always done in-house by North Korean nationals.

Joo Sung-ha, North Korean defector, now journalist in Seoul

And it is the English language news reports from the country’s state-run news agency that make up the bulk of what appears in the foreign press.

Joo Sung-ha, the defector turned South Korean journalist, says there is an easy explanation for North Korea’s use of seemingly antiquated words like "brigandish" to refer to its opponents.

"They’re using old dictionaries," he says.

"Many were published in the 1960s with meanings that have now fallen out of use, and there are very few first-language English speakers available to make the necessary corrections."

So, while North Korea’s rhetoric is certainly worthy of analysis, perhaps we shouldn’t be too alarmed by every outburst.

To be fair, even its most inflammatory statements are not always what they seem.

That "fire shower" of nuclear attack made a great headline for journalists, but many gave less emphasis to an important proviso: as so often with North Korea, the warning was conditional, to be acted upon only if someone else started the fight.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

LG App Store Will Focus on Asian Markets

LG Electronics is launching an online store for mobile phone applications with an initial focus on Asia and aspirations for a more global reach by year-end.
– SEOUL (Reuters) – LG Electronics, the world’s No. 3 handset
maker, is launching an online store for mobile phone applications
Tuesday with an initial focus on Asia and aspirations for a more global
reach by year-end.
Phone makers and mobile firms worldwide are in a race to match the
success of …


N Korean leader Kim ‘has cancer’

North Korean missile launch - photo released April 2009

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 Pancreatic Cancer: Report

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korean leader Kim Jong Il has life-threatening pancreatic cancer, a news report said Monday, days after new images of him looking gaunt spurred speculation that his health might be worsening following a reporte…

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.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


A cyber-warfare mystery: Ghost in the machine

When is a cyber-attack a real one?

AMERICA and other countries still have to fine-tune their cyber-defences to distinguish mere nuisances from real menaces. That, rather than any revelations about fiendish North Korean cyber-warfare, seems to be the upshot of the latest reported cyber-attack on South Korean and American websites.

Initially, it was reported that this was the first series of attacks to hit government websites in several countries simultaneously. Officials in both Seoul and Washington, DC, said they were suffering “distributed denial of service” overload (known as DDOS in geekspeak). In these a computer is overwhelmed with bogus requests for a response sent from infected computers. American targets included sites at the Treasury, the Secret Service, and the Transportation Department; the South Korean list included the Defence Ministry, the National Assembly, the presidential Blue House and some banks. The timing felt eerie: attacks began on July 4th, Independence Day. …