Tag: North Korea

Unification Ministry to Start Program to Counter “Fake News” About North Korea

As always when it comes to fake news, what is important is who is the one defining what North Korea related fake news is?:

Image: NK News | North Koreans reading a party-run newspaper in Pyongyang (Sept. 19, 2018)

South Korea’s Ministry of Unification (MOU) has set aside funding to start systematically monitoring “fake news” related to North Korea next year, though it is unclear whether the government plans to levy penalties for reports deemed false.

The ministry has earmarked $170,000 (200 million won) for the project to counter fake news in its budget for the fiscal year 2022. Announced on Friday, the budget’s total amount reaches $1.27 billion (1.5 trillion won), a 1.86% increase from 2021.

“There are frequent occasions when misinformation or manipulated information related to North Korea gets spread mainly through new media,” unification ministry spokesperson Lee Jong-joo said in a regular briefing on Monday, referring primarily to online platforms.

“Hence, the purpose [of this project],” she said, “comes from the need for more systematic monitoring, considering how such incidents cause various bad influences such as distorting the environment for pursuing policies.”

NK News

You can read more at the link.

Tweet of the Day: North Korea Squid Game Doll?

Tweet of the Day: Why Did the Defector Cross the DMZ?

https://twitter.com/freekorea_us/status/1478048625313861633

Tweet of the Day: Lee Seok-ki Trivia

https://twitter.com/freekorea_us/status/1474431552830455808

Tweet of the Day: North Korean Spy Released on Parole

https://twitter.com/dongyonews/status/1473996694690086917

Kim Yo-jong Believed to Have Become a Member of the Worker’s Party’s Political Bureau

Kim Yo-jong is back in the news again with another alleged promotion within the Worker’s Party:

In this photo captured from North Korea’s Korean Central Broadcasting Station, Kim Yo-jong (2nd from L), the powerful sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, attends a memorial event marking the 10th anniversary of the death of her father, Kim Jong-il, held in Pyongyang on Dec. 17, 2021.

 Kim Yo-jong, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un’s powerful sister, is believed to have been promoted to a higher official position, according to a North Korean media report Saturday.

In the report on a memorial event for late former leader Kim Jong-il held a day earlier, the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) listed Kim Yo-jong alongside members of the Political Bureau of the Central Committee of the Workers’ Party as having attended the ceremony.

Kim was listed between eight sitting members of the Political Bureau and other alternate members, suggesting she may have been named a member or an alternate member of the organ.

Yonhap

You can read more at the link.

Picture of the Day: Military Meeting in North Korea

Military meeting in N. Korea
Military meeting in N. Korea
This photo, released by the Korean Central News Agency on Dec. 7, 2021, shows a meeting of the North Korean Army’s educationists, presided over by North Korean leader Kim Jong-un at the April 25 House of Culture in Pyongyang on Dec. 4 and 5. Kim stressed the need to prepare them “to be true soldiers immensely loyal to the idea and leadership of the Workers’ Party,” according to the agency. (Yonhap)

Tweet of the Day: Sanctions Working?

https://twitter.com/freekorea_us/status/1464637947458867210

Tweet of the Day: 10th Anniversary of Yeonpyeong-do Island Shelling

https://twitter.com/dongyonews/status/1462979294976569347

How Kim Jong-un Has Maintained Power After A Decade of Ruling North Korea

Next month Kim Jong-un will have ruled North Korea for 10 years. Yonhap has a look back at how he has increased his grip on power in North Korea:

In this 2010 file photo released by the Korean Central News Agency, then North Korean leader Kim Jong-il (R) and his son Kim Jong-un (L) clap during a grand evening gala to mark the 65th anniversary of the ruling Workers’ Party’s founding at the Kim Il-sung Square in Pyongyang. (For Use Only in the Republic of Korea.

One of the first things Kim did upon taking the throne was to restore the party system to keep the military — which had developed immense power under his father’s military-first policy — in check and give authority to the relatively young leader’s decision-making process.

In 2016, North Korea held a four-day party congress, the first of its kind in 36 years, and announced the “byongjin” policy of simultaneously pursuing nuclear weapons and economic development.

In January this year, the North held another party congress and endorsed Kim as the “general secretary,” a title previously held by his father.

Having secured a political system to back his reign, Kim had no hesitation in eliminating those who were considered obstacles to his absolute power.

One of the most high-profile incidents that contributed to Kim’s reputation on the global stage was the 2013 execution of his once-powerful uncle Jang Song-thaek on charges of treason.

In 2017, Kim’s estranged half brother, Kim Jong-nam, was poisoned to death at a Kuala Lumpur airport, an assassination also blamed on Pyongyang.

Despite the brutality, Kim used tightly-controlled state propaganda outlets to position himself as a leader devoted to improving the lives of ordinary people across the nation while seeking to makeover the North’s image into that of a “normal state.”

Kim has put his wife, Ri Sol-ju, in the public eye, unlike his father, and released images of him drinking beer and smoking with party officials.

On the diplomatic front, Kim held a historic first summit with then U.S. President Donald Trump and met with South Korean President Moon Jae-in three times in 2018.

Though the nuclear talks and inter-Korean exchanges are both at a standstill, such a meeting with a U.S. leader was touted as a major achievement of the young leader inside North Korea.

“After achieving a certain level of diplomatic accomplishments, Kim no longer had to depend on the shadows of Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-il to legitimize his leadership,” Cheong Seong-chang, the director of the Center for North Korean Studies at the Sejong Institute, said. “He made that clear in the 2019 constitution revision by redacting all phrases related to his father’s military-first policy.”

Yonhap

You can read more at the link, but it is pretty clear that Kim Jong-un was able to increase his grip on power by neutering military leaders that could rival him and then killing anyone, even family members that could replace him.