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China confronts North Korea over shootings

S.Korea to ship aid to N.Korea despite tensions
Seoul (AFP) June 9, 2010 - South Korea Wednesday approved two aid shipments of baby formula to North Korea despite rising tensions over the sinking of one of Seoul's warships. The unification ministry, which must authorise all cross-border exchanges, said the shipments from private groups of milk and other items totalling 320,000 dollars would be sent late this month. The South cut off most trade with the North after accusing its neighbour of firing a torpedo to sink the ship in March with the loss of 46 lives. It exempted humanitarian aid. The impoverished North suffers severe food shortages. The UN Children's Fund says one in three of its children is stunted by malnutrition.

Seoul announced its reprisals after investigators from five countries said they found overwhelming evidence that a North Korean submarine had torpedoed the corvette near the disputed Yellow Sea border. The North denies involvement and says reprisals could spark war. South Korea has also referred the case to the 15-member United Nations Security Council, saying it must act to censure an act of aggression. The foreign ministry said Wednesday the investigators would brief council members about their findings at a date to be fixed, at the request of current chairman Mexico. Of the five permanent veto-wielding council members, China and Russia have so far failed publicly to back moves for UN censure. Vice Foreign Minister Chun Yung-Woo was due back Wednesday evening from a visit to Beijing to seek its support. China has not publicly condemned its ally the North and has appealed only for restraint.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (UPI) Jun 9, 2010
China's relations with its ally Pyongyang have been further strained after a North Korean border guard shot four Chinese civilians, killing three of them.

Beijing has lodged a formal diplomatic complaint with North Korea over the shootings that also wounded a fourth Chinese civilian, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said.

He gave few details to journalists at a regular briefing, saying only that the four were in North Korean territory last week and near the Chinese border town of Dandong. Neither side has said what the men were doing in North Korea.

But the men had been shot "on suspicion of crossing the border for trade activities," Qin said. "China attaches great importance to that and has immediately raised a solemn representation with the DPRK."

The nearly 900 miles of border are a known crossing for black market Chinese traders moving in and out of North Korea selling their wares, allegedly including illegal drugs.

Dandong, with a population of around 800,000, is across the river from Sin?iju city in North Korea. The two cities are connected by the China-Korea Friendship Bridge and there is a museum in Dandong dedicated to the "War to Resist U.S. Aggression and Aid Korea."

Chinese aid has for many years officially supported the economy of the struggling hard-line Communist state on its eastern border with food, fuel and manufactured goods.

What makes the shootings especially sensitive for Beijing is they come as North Korea faces more economic sanctions from the international community over its alleged sinking of the South Korean naval ship Cheonan.

An independent international investigation team concluded late last month that it was a North Korean torpedo that sank the 1,200-ton ship in the Yellow Sea on March 26, killing 46 sailors.

North Korea has consistently denied it had anything to do with the sinking and China has stood by North Korea, calling for international restraint.

But China also suggested to the North Korean leadership in Pyongyang that it do more than just reel off propaganda condemning South Korea and its allies, especially the United States. More hard evidence is needed to show the innocence of North Korea.

The border with North Korea has been the scene of several diplomatic incidents in recent years.

U.S. citizens Laura Ling, 32, and Euna Lee, 36, reporters for former U.S. Vice President Al Gore's Current TV, were detained by North Korea along the border with China in March 2009. They were accused of illegally entering the country from China and engaging in "hostile acts."

Both were tried and sentenced in North Korea to 12 years hard labor in June last year but freed in August after a mission by former President Bill Clinton.

In December 2009, religious activist Robert Park, 28, was arrested by North Korea after walking across the frozen Tumen River. Park, a U.S. citizen of Korean ancestry from Tucson, claimed at the time he had had a vision from God that he could help highlight religious persecution in North Korea.

He was released in February after confessing his "mistake" to North Korean officials and said freedom of religion was guaranteed in North Korea.



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NUKEWARS
North Korea reshuffles leadership
Pyongyang, North Korea (UPI) Jun 8, 2010
North Korea moved closer to a hereditary succession by making a brother-in-law of aging leader Kim Jong Il a vice chairman of the powerful National Defense Commission. The country's 687-seat parliament meeting in an extraordinary session promoted Jang Song Thaek, 63, to a leadership position of the country's top military body, the state-run media Korean Central News Agency said. ... read more







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