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NUKEWARS
Bush blasts N.Korea's Kim for wasting resources
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) June 22, 2010


Plane bomber believes N.Korea's Kim ordered ship sinking
Seoul (AFP) June 23, 2010 - A former North Korean agent -- who claimed she got orders from Kim Jong-Il to bomb a South Korean airliner in 1987 -- says she believes Kim also ordered the sinking of a South Korean warship in March. Kim Hyun-Hee, who was sentenced to death but later pardoned for her role in blowing up the plane with the loss of 115 lives, was quoted by the Monthly Chosun, a magazine published by Chosun Ilbo newspaper. "No big incidents like this can happen without informing Kim Jong-Il," the ex-agent, who now lives under guard in South Korea, was quoted as saying. "Although the planning and preparation would have been done by the military, final confirmation must come from Kim."

Kim Jong-Il formally took over as the North's leader after his father Kim Il-Sung died in 1994, but he had been groomed for the role since the 1980s. Cross-border tensions have risen sharply since the South -- citing the findings of a multinational investigation -- accused its neighbour of torpedoing the warship in March with the loss of 46 lives. The North, which denies involvement, has threatened military retaliation if the UN Security Council censures it as Seoul wants. Former agent Kim said people who refuse to accept the investigation results are "afraid of the truth that North Korea did it, and they just don't like it". She said the North still denies involvement in the bombing of the Korean Air flight in 1987.

"It thinks constantly denying something will make it go away. The Cheonan (warship) sinking made me realise that North Korean strategy hasn't changed." The ex-agent said the North detonated the plane bomb when the flight was over the ocean to destroy the evidence. "Trying to drop the plane into the deep sea to erase all the traces, and trying to destroy all the evidence by attacking a submarine with a torpedo... it's all the same." The South, she said, "should take a hardline policy against terrorists to prevent these things from happening again". The plane was en route from Baghdad to Seoul via Bangkok when it blew up over the Andaman Sea.

Two North Korean agents had boarded in Baghdad and got off during a stopover in the Gulf after leaving a time bomb in an overhead compartment. They were arrested when they tried to leave Bahrain using fake Japanese passports. Both immediately swallowed cyanide capsules. The man died almost instantly but Kim survived. She was brought to Seoul, where she confessed and alleged that Kim Jong-Il had personally overseen her mission. After her reprieve, Kim published a book entitled "Tears of My Soul" describing her training at a North Korean spy school. She donated the proceeds to families of victims of the bombing. She married one of her security guards and is now in her late 40s.

Former US President George W Bush on Tuesday accused North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il of wasting his country's precious resources on personal luxuries and nuclear weapons programmes.

North Koreans have been suffering since the Korean War ended, Bush told a prayer meeting to mark the 60th anniversary of the war's outbreak.

"While South Korea prospers, the people of North Korea have suffered profoundly," he said, adding communism had resulted in "dire poverty, mass starvation and brutal suppression".

"In recent years the suffering has been compounded by the leader who wasted North Korea's precious few resources on personal luxuries and nuclear weapons programmes."

Organisers said the event at Sangam World Cup Stadium in Seoul drew about 60,000 people. A giant South Korean flag was placed on the ground, with the stage decorated with slogans such as "Over division to peace".

Bush described North Korea as part of an "axis of evil" in his 2002 State of the Union address and suspended negotiations with it.

He re-engaged with the North during his second term in office and approved a six-nation agreement under which Pyongyang would give up nuclear weapons in return for diplomatic and security incentives, but the accord has since broken down.

Bush, a devout Christian, described the 1950-53 conflict as an unforgotten war, saying "an act of unprovoked aggression" had led to an unnatural division in Northeast Asia.

"It will never be forgotten by those who served and by those who were saved, and it must not be forgotten by the world," he said.

The presence of US troops in South Korea showed Washington's strong commitment to defending its ally, he said, adding the South's prosperity is "a shining example of the power of freedom and faith".

But some local Christian organisations, including the Christian Alliance for Church Reform, criticised Bush's presence at a time when cross-border tensions are high.

"It is just nonsense to bring to the Korean War prayer meeting the former US President Bush, who started the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and have him give testimony," they said in a joint statement.

They also insisted the prayer meeting should serve as a means to oppose war, demand arms reduction and promote reconciliation.

Bush has visited South Korea twice since leaving office to speak to forums, in August and October 2009.

More N.Korean workers at industrial park despite tensions
Seoul (AFP) June 23, 2010 - The number of North Korean workers at a South Korean-funded industrial estate north of the border has been growing despite tensions over the sinking of a South Korean warship, data showed Wednesday.

The number stood at 44,000 in June, about 2,000 more than in March when the ship sank, Seoul's unification ministry said in a report to parliament.

The figures appear to show that the impoverished North wants to preserve the estate at Kaesong -- a valuable source of hard currency -- despite the deep freeze in cross-border ties.

The ministry said the North supplied the estate with an average of 100 fresh workers per month from January through March and with 800 to 900 new employees per month beginning in April.

Tension has risen sharply since the South accused the North of torpedoing the 1,200-tonne corvette Cheonan with the loss of 46 sailors near the disputed border on March 26.

The South has announced reprisals, including cutting off most trade, but the Kaesong estate was excluded.

The estate opened in 2004 as a symbol of reconciliation. North Korean workers produce labour-intensive goods such as kitchenware and clothing for 121 South Korean businesses.

Wages are paid in dollars direct to state bodies, which return a portion to the workers. The North earned about 40 million dollars from the wages last year.

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NUKEWARS
Radioactive gas detected after N.Korea nuclear claim
Seoul (AFP) June 21, 2010
South Korea detected a high level of xenon gas - a by-product of atomic tests - two days after the North claimed last month to have staged a successful nuclear experiment, officials said Monday. North Korea announced on May 12 it had conducted a nuclear fusion reaction, prompting scepticism in the South at the time because of the technical difficulty inherent in the process. Xenon is p ... read more


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