hacklink hack forum hacklink film izle hacklink marsbahisizmir escortsahabetpornJojobetcasibompadişahbet

Tag: Korea

  • Pottery painting, bracelet-making and a trip to Japan and Korea

    Pottery painting, bracelet-making and a trip to Japan and Korea

    Attending: A brand new ‘Paint Your Own Pottery’ studio has opened in Cork City so of course, I had to go and try it out. Modelled very similar to Cré Pottery Studio in Skibbereen, Potteria has an extensive range of models, figures, and kitchenware ready for painting. Prices start from €14 to €60, depending on what you pick to paint, and the price includes the studio time, materials, and firing. Unlike Cré, Potteria doesn’t have a cafe in-store so you are encouraged to bring your own snacks and drinks while you paint. We opted for some wine while we saw others take sweet treats from baking tins and pop champagne bottles. A great addition to the city. I’ll for sure be back again.

    Drinking: This month I spent a week in the Algarve – Portimão, Ferragudo, and Alvor – and while there, we stumbled upon a wine festival, and the notion of green wine. Vinho Verde comes from a small region in the Minho province in Northern Portugal. Although the name means “green wine,” it translates as “young wine” and it’s usually consumed soon after bottling. This means it can be red, white or rosé. It’s light, refreshing and typically has a low alcoholic volume. It was the perfect pairing to my sun holiday.

    Gigging: 10+ years of living in Cork, and this month marked my first gig in the famous Coughlan’s (pronounced Caw-lins not Cock-Iins for my fellow non-Corkonians). I’ve got tickets to a few gigs over the years but something always got in the way of me going – sickness, cancellations, covid, etc. Well, I can gladly say it was worth the wait. Although the room was smaller than I had imagined, the ambience, framed by the iconic poster stage backdrop, makes it the perfect intimate venue. Looking around at photos and images on the wall, I learned that it was steeped in more history than I was aware of. Everyone from Lisa Hannigan to Eddi Reader has played the venue and I can see why. The cherry on top of the cake? The Guinness is … chefs kiss.

    Nicole Glennon, Weekend Assistant Editor

    Nobody Wants This
    Nobody Wants This

    Watching: Netflix’s Nobody Wants This is the most delightful show I’ve binged in a while. If you haven’t watched it yet, this 10-episode rom-com about a permanently single sex podcaster and a rabbi just out of a long-time relationship who – you guessed it – fall in love despite seeming completely incompatible, is just the ticket for a cosy night in. Give me season two immediately.

    Listening: I really enjoyed Wondery’s latest series, ‘The Kill List’ this month. In the spring of 2020, when most of us were bingeing Tiger King and making banana bread, UK-based tech journalist Carl Miller found himself in a rather unenviable position. An IT expert/hacker approached him after coming across a site on the dark web which claimed to be a hitman-for-hire marketplace. The hacker, Chris Monteiro, had uncovered a ‘kill list’ complete with details of the intended targets and how they should die. Of course, they go to the police, but unsatisfied with the outcome, Miller decides to take matters into his own hands and sets out to try and warn victims in advance. On the musical front, I’ve had two new Irish albums on rotation this past month; Orla Gartland’s ‘Everybody Needs A Hero’ and HousePlants’ ‘Half Known Thing’. I’ve already got my ticket to see Gartland in the Olympia in April, and will be hoping to catch HousePlants on one of their nationwide dates next year too.

    Skincare: For the last few months, I’ve been getting salicylic acid peels every six weeks or so to keep my acne-prone skin at bay, and I can’t believe what they’ve done for my skin. For the first time in my life, I’ve been getting unsolicited comments on how great my skin is looking. The peels, Obagi Blue Peel Radiance, aren’t the most relaxing experience, but they are well-worth the discomfort and cost for me. I couldn’t recommend them more for anyone prone to congestion and breakouts. I go to South William Clinic where they cost about €125 a pop, with discounts available when purchased as a course.

    Mike McGrath Bryan, Features Writer 

    Listening: Seán Ronayne – Hope. Having won the hearts of the nation with his wholesale love of Ireland’s native birds, and concern for their documentation amid ongoing biodiversity turbulence via the Irish Wildlife Sounds project, Corkman Seán Ronayne has turned his pursuit of recording audio of Ireland’s wild landscapes into the practice of curating albums of natural soundscapes. While his debut collection focused on the urgency of the matter, including the call of the last pair of Irish Ring Ouzel, his follow-up, entitled ‘Hope’, was released quite literally as his infant daughter entered the world earlier this month, cataloguing the wild ambiences of Ireland and Catalunya as a nod to her mixed heritage. “Despite all of the challenges today’s natural world faces,” he pledges in the liner notes, “I still hope for a better, nature-filled future for my daughter, and I’ll do my very best to make that happen for as long as I live.”

    Watching: The Queen of Villains (Netflix). The only real sport in the world, professional wrestling, continues to be the focus of dramatic adaptations – this time, it’s the turn of Japan’s eighties grappling scene to be spotlighted. Mild-mannered Kaoru Matsumoto, portrayed loveably here by actor and comedian Yuriyan Retriever, overcomes a troubled upbringing and finds her place cheering on the pop-idol heroes and rule-breaking villains of All Japan Women’s Pro Wrestling. But when she crosses the barrier and narrowly passes auditions to become a trainee wrestler herself, her life becomes a tangle of physical grind, menial promotions work and complex feelings for her peers – until she taps into her latent anger and frustration to unleash a bloodthirsty brawler of her own creation… Violent in places, and reflecting unkindly on the misogyny of the age, but ultimately a good-hearted young-adult drama on adolescence, representation and the self, that somehow outdoes the energy and emotion of its source and setting.

    (Hopefully) reading: Loads of new Irish-interest books. My to-read list has, much to my beloved partner’s chagrin, become a library, especially of the kind of Irish-interest material that doesn’t tend to hang around shop shelves after its initial print run. Alas, the good publishing houses of Ireland will grant neither of us relief this Winter. Brinsley McNamara’s ‘Weird Ireland’ makes a book of the premise of his warts-and-all Instagram documentation of Ireland’s various quirks, hidden landmarks and nearly-forgotten traditions; master calligrapher Timothy O’Neill has gifted the Irish people with ‘The Irish Art of Calligraphy’, a step-by-step guide to trying one’s hand at traditional Irish fonts and scripting; while Irish historian Diarmaid Ferriter’s multiple-book odyssey through the country’s story and people gets as far as 2020 with ‘The Revelation of Ireland’. At a time when Ireland and her people are gaining a new confidence and cool on the world stage, these books will each offer a different perspective on aspects of who we are, and what’s brought us to the present moment.

    Rebecca Daly, Features Writer

    Travelling: I spent two weeks of October on annual leave, travelling around Japan and to South Korea. We flew into Tokyo and spent a few days there, before moving on to Kyoto, where we took a trip to Nara to feed the wild deer and Arashiyama Monkey Park. We then spent the rest of our time in Japan in the city of Osaka. We flew to Seoul for the last few days of the trip and visited the demilitarized zone between the North and South of Korea. We got to see North Korea, which was an insane experience, but couldn’t take any photos as there had been an incident near the border in the days before. The trip was absolutely amazing from start to finish. It was so cool to see the different cities and I’ve been quite inspired by the different styles and fashion we saw. I also stocked up plenty of K- and J-beauty products which I can’t wait to test out.

    Relaxing: Before my travels east, I went on a press trip to Amsterdam for the launch of Rituals’ new collection, Alchemy. Amsterdam is one of my favourite cities and it is such a vibe at this time of the year – the brown colours of the buildings combined with a canal cruise during a rainy evening had me feeling very autumnal. We visited Rituals HQ for a preview of the new collection and a gorgeous meal. The next day, we received some treatments at House of Rituals, which had me feeling very zen for the flight home. We stayed in the Pulitzer hotel, which respected the design of buildings in the Dutch capital so well while still being modern and stylish.

    Reminiscing: I was woken up at 9am Korean time to my phone absolutely hopping with notifications and even SMS messages from Ireland about the news of Liam Payne’s death. I was a huge One Direction fan when I was about 11/12 and gradually grew out of them as they started getting huge in America and the world over. I got back into listening to them in recent years (when I finally got old enough to forget the real cringey moments of being a young fan). My TikTok has since been flooded with videos and compilations of the band in their heyday and it’s been nice to reminisce, even if it is under tragic circumstances. A headline in the UK Independent – “Liam Payne drew the short straw in One Direction – now we’ll never know the real him” – really resonated with me, and it’s hard to not think how much he must have been struggling in the last few years of his life in those viral videos of him that were mocked countless times. I’m certain it won’t be the last tragic case of its sort, and it won’t be the last time the internet is flooded with “be kind” messages in the wake of it.

    Caroline Delaney, Outdoors Editor

    Dining:  Salt, Victoria Road always reminds me of one of those paintings of French cafés when I pass it so I love a chance to pop in for a treat. The food is super tasty and innovative and it’s got a great cosy atmosphere and a lovely outdoor area with twinkly lights galore. I still don’t know how it all fits into what used to be a tiny little bookmakers years ago — and it somehow also looks like it was always here.

    Staying: I’ve wanted to see the G Hotel in Galway for a while and a year of ‘big’ birthdays is a great excuse, I reckon. And it really is quite impressive… moody corridors with decadent Twin Peaks vibes and fabulous lounges all decorated in different styles. You know it’s a wild weekend when you photograph your favourite wallpaper there to image search it and put it on a wishlist. (It seems to be €521 per roll, since you ask).

    Pleased to see: Biodegradable clips on packages of bagels. Yes, it’s small but every little helps. I gave Fitzgerald Bakery a shout about them and they said: “Yes, they are just fully recyclable, so an environmental move. It’s not on all our bagels yet, but it will be rolled out as the older plastic clip stocks are depleted.” More of this please.

    Denise O’Donoghue, Digital Features Editor

    Visiting: I went to London for a few days. Even though I’ve lost track of how many times I’ve been there it’s a city that still surprises me. We caught a few shows (Hadestown and Cabaret were first-time watches and Phantom is an old favourite we revisited again) and explored a few new areas of the city. Richmond is a gorgeous spot and a must for Ted Lasso fans (did you know the official merch shop there is owned by Irish people?) and TikTok convinced me to make my own charm bracelet in Parsons Green and it was well worth the Tube journey.

    Watching: I felt spoiled with good TV last month. Agatha All Along was the perfect spooky-ish watch (Patti LuPone needs to be in everything), Only Murders in the Building was a fun romp, and a rewatch of the extended editions of the Lord of the Rings is always a good call — I love Tolkien’s word so much a trip to New Zealand will always be on my bucket list.

    Eating: My boyfriend experimented with a new recipe he found on TikTok and lasagne soup is now a regular meal in our house. Essentially a deconstructed lasagne, it’s comfort food at its finest (thanks Greg!).

    Source link

  • South Korea fines Meta $15 million for illegally collecting information on Facebook users

    South Korea fines Meta $15 million for illegally collecting information on Facebook users

    SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea’s privacy watchdog on Tuesday fined social media company Meta 21.6 billion won ($15 million) for illegally collecting sensitive personal information from Facebook users, including data about their political views and sexual orientation, and sharing it with thousands of advertisers.

    It was the latest in a series of penalties against Meta by South Korean authorities in recent years as they increase their scrutiny of how the company, which also owns Instagram and WhatsApp, handles private information.

    Following a four-year investigation, South Korea’s Personal Information Protection Commission concluded that Meta unlawfully collected sensitive information about around 980,000 Facebook users, including their religion, political views and whether they were in same-sex unions, from July 2018 to March 2022.

    It said the company shared the data with around 4,000 advertisers.

    South Korea’s privacy law provides strict protection for information related to personal beliefs, political views and sexual behavior, and bars companies from processing or using such data without the specific consent of the person involved.

    The commission said Meta amassed sensitive information by analyzing the pages the Facebook users liked or the advertisements they clicked on.

    The company categorized ads to identify users interested in themes such as specific religions, same-sex and transgender issues, and issues related to North Korean escapees, said Lee Eun Jung, a director at the commission who led the investigation on Meta.

    “While Meta collected this sensitive information and used it for individualized services, they made only vague mentions of this use in their data policy and did not obtain specific consent,” Lee said.

    Lee also said Meta put the privacy of Facebook users at risk by failing to implement basic security measures such as removing or blocking inactive pages. As a result, hackers were able to use inactive pages to forge identities and request password resets for the accounts of other Facebook users. Meta approved these requests without proper verification, which resulted in data breaches affecting at least 10 South Korean Facebook users, Lee said.

    In September, European regulators hit Meta with over $100 million in fines for a 2019 security lapse in which user passwords were temporarily exposed in an un-encrypted form.

    Meta’s South Korean office said it would “carefully review” the commission’s decision, but didn’t immediately provide more comment.

    In 2022, the commission fined Google and Meta a combined 100 billion won ($72 million) for tracking consumers’ online behavior without their consent and using their data for targeted advertisements, in the biggest penalties ever imposed in South Korea for privacy law violations.

    The commission said then that the two companies didn’t clearly inform users or obtain their consent to collect data about them as they used other websites or services outside their own platforms. It ordered the companies to provide an “easy and clear” consent process to give people more control over whether to share information about what they do online.

    The commission also hit Meta with a 6.7 billion won ($4.8 million) fine in 2020 for providing personal information about itsx users to third parties without consent.

    Source link

  • In South Korea, deepfake porn wrecks women’s lives and deepens gender conflict

    In South Korea, deepfake porn wrecks women’s lives and deepens gender conflict

    SEOUL, South Korea — Three years after the 30-year-old South Korean woman received a barrage of online fake images that depicted her nude, she is still being treated for trauma. She struggles to talk with men. Using a mobile phone brings back the nightmare.

    “It completely trampled me, even though it wasn’t a direct physical attack on my body,” she said in a phone interview with The Associated Press. She didn’t want her name revealed because of privacy concerns.

    Many other South Korean women recently have come forward to share similar stories as South Korea grapples with a deluge of non-consensual, explicit deepfake videos and images that have become much more accessible and easier to create.

    It was not until last week that parliament revised a law to make watching or possessing deepfake porn content illegal.

    Most suspected perpetrators in South Korea are teenage boys. Observers say the boys target female friends, relatives and acquaintances -– also mostly minors —- as a prank, out of curiosity or misogyny. The attacks raise serious questions about school programs but also threaten to worsen an already troubled divide between men and women.

    Deepfake porn in South Korea gained attention after unconfirmed lists of schools that had victims spread online in August. Many girls and women have hastily removed photos and videos from their Instagram, Facebook and other social media accounts. Thousands of young women have staged protests demanding stronger steps against deepfake porn. Politicians, academics and activists have held forums.

    “Teenage (girls) must be feeling uneasy about whether their male classmates are okay. Their mutual trust has been completely shattered,” said Shin Kyung-ah, a sociology professor at South Korea’s Hallym University.

    The school lists have not been formally verified, but officials including President Yoon Suk Yeol have confirmed a surge of explicit deepfake content on social media. Police have launched a seven-month crackdown.

    Recent attention to the problem has coincided with France’s arrest in August of Pavel Durov, the founder of the messaging app Telegram, over allegations that his platform was used for illicit activities including the distribution of child sexual abuse. The South Korean government said Monday that Telegram has pledged to enforce a zero-tolerance policy on illegal deepfake content.

    Police say they’ve detained 387 people over alleged deepfake crimes this year, more than 80% of them teenagers. Separately, the Education Ministry says about 800 students have informed authorities about intimate deepfake content involving them this year.

    Experts say the true scale of deepfake porn in the country is far bigger.

    The U.S. cybersecurity firm Security Hero called South Korea “the country most targeted by deepfake pornography” last year. In a report, it said South Korean singers and actresses constitute more than half of the people featured in deepfake pornography worldwide.

    The prevalence of deepfake porn in South Korea reflects various factors including heavy use of smart phones; an absence of comprehensive sex and human rights education in schools and inadequate social media regulations for minors as well as a “misogynic culture” and social norms that “sexually objectify women,” according to Hong Nam-hee, a research professor at the Institute for Urban Humanities at the University of Seoul.

    Victims speak of intense suffering.

    In parliament, lawmaker Kim Nam Hee read a letter by an unidentified victim who she said tried to kill herself because she didn’t want to suffer any longer from the explicit deepfake videos someone had made of her. Addressing a forum, former opposition party leader Park Ji-hyun read a letter from another victim who said she fainted and was taken to an emergency room after receiving sexually abusive deepfake images and being told by her perpetrators that they were stalking her.

    The 30-year-old woman interviewed by The AP said that her doctoral studies in the United States were disrupted for a year. She is receiving treatment after being diagnosed with panic disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder in 2022.

    Police said they’ve detained five men for allegedly producing and spreading fake explicit contents of about 20 women, including her. The victims are all graduates from Seoul National University, the country’s top school. Two of the men, including one who allegedly sent her fake nude images in 2021, attended the same university, but she said has no meaningful memory of them.

    The woman said the images she received on Telegram used photos she had posted on the local messaging app Kakao Talk, combined with nude photos of strangers. There were also videos showing men masturbating and messages describing her as a promiscuous woman or prostitute. One photo shows a screen shot of a Telegram chatroom with 42 people where her fake images were posted.

    The fake images were very crudely made but the woman felt deeply humiliated and shocked because dozens of people — some of whom she likely knows – were sexually harassing her with those photos.

    Building trust with men is stressful, she said, because she worries that “normal-looking people could do such things behind my back.”

    Using a smart phone sometimes revives memories of the fake images.

    “These days, people spend more time on their mobile phones than talking face to face with others. So we can’t really easily escape the traumatic experience of digital crimes if those happen on our phones,” she said. “I was very sociable and really liked to meet new people, but my personality has totally changed since that incident. That made my life really difficult and I’m sad.”

    Critics say authorities haven’t done enough to counter deepfake porn despite an epidemic of online sex crimes in recent years, such as spy cam videos of women in public toilets and other places. In 2020, members of a criminal ring were arrested and convicted of blackmailing dozens of women into filming sexually explicit videos for them to sell.

    “The number of male juveniles consuming deepfake porn for fun has increased because authorities have overlooked the voices of women” demanding stronger punishment for digital sex crimes, the monitoring group ReSET said in comments sent to AP.

    South Korea has no official records on the extent of deepfake online porn. But Reset said a recent random search of an online chatroom found more than 4,000 sexually exploitive images, videos and other items.

    Reviews of district court rulings showed less than a third of the 87 people indicted by prosecutors for deepfake crimes since 2021 were sent to prison. Nearly 60% avoided jail by receiving suspended terms, fines or not-guilty verdicts, according to lawmaker Kim’s office. Judges tended to lighten sentences when those convicted repented for their crimes or were first time offenders.

    The deepfake problem has gained urgency given South Korea’s serious rifts over gender roles, workplace discrimination, mandatory military service for men and social burdens on men and women.

    Kim Chae-won, a 25-year-old office worker, said some of her male friends shunned her after she asked them what they thought about digital sex violence targeting women.

    “I feel scared of living as a woman in South Korea,” said Kim Haeun, a 17-year-old high school student who recently removed all her photos on Instagram. She said she feels awkward when talking with male friends and tries to distance herself from boys she doesn’t know well.

    “Most sex crimes target women. And when they happen, I think we are often helpless,” she said.

    Source link

  • Hidden from the world, North Korea have nurtured football’s latest golden generation | Women’s football

    They’re coming for you. They’re coming for you. North Korea’s women’s football age-group pathway teams, they’re coming for. Well, pretty much anyone in their way, it seems, after the weekend.

    As elite club football pored in microscopic detail over the fallout from events at the Etihad Stadium on Sunday evening, something remarkable, if a little less advertised, was happening in Bogotá. Three days on from the final of the Fifa women’s under‑20 World Cup final, it is worth scrolling back over the full sweep of North Korea’s run to that point, which reached its glorious end note on Sunday night, and in the process opened a new angle on any reasonable assessment of the team performance of the season.

    The Chollima (nickname explanation: indestructible mythic winged horse) arrived in Colombia in August with a 21-women squad drawn from six domestic teams. The league is hugely popular back home, but these are essentially players unknown to the rest of the world.

    They kicked off on 2 September with a 6-2 thrashing of Argentina in Cali. Three days later they beat Costa Rica 9-0 in a game that featured eight goalscorers. Three days after that North Korea put away the Netherlands 2-0 to seal top spot in the group.

    The knockout phase began with a 5-2 cuffing aside of Austria. And from there North Korea’s endgame was pretty much perfect, with victories against Brazil (senior world ranking: No 8), the USA (No 1) and Japan (No 7), all without conceding a goal. End result: played seven, won seven, aggregate score 25-4.

    They did it brilliantly too, producing, from the TV footage, a whirl of interplay and high-class finishing. Even the winner in the final was a beauty, scored by Choe Il-son, the hyper-talented 17-year-old cutting inside on the right, gliding past a defender, then shooting left‑footed into the roof of the net via a deflection.

    Choe might have had a hat-trick on the day and looks an awesome prospect, scooting about like a combination of teenage Wayne Rooney and teenage Michael Owen, all fearlessly clever direct running, a rogue state Endrick. It is hard to imagine there is a better 17-year-old anywhere.

    Back home, Choe plays for Pyongyang’s April 25 National Defence Sports Club. She will now disappear behind the veil, away from international competition. But not just yet. She is also eligible for the under-17 World Cup next month in the Dominican Republic (birth date, 1 January 2007; cut-off date, also 1 January 2007), where North Korea’s re-emergent women have a chance to make it a clean sweep of the Fifa age groups, including a 23 October meeting with England, who are presumably already all over the footage of what awaits them.

    Choe Il-son (right) lit up the under-20 World Cup with her fearless style of play. Photograph: Julian Medina/SPP/Shutterstock

    It is important to stress that the success of North Korea’s age-group teams will only be surprising to those who haven’t been following the run of things. North Korea has long been a force in women’s football, the players cloistered outside competition, but the senior team rarely out of the top end of the rankings over the past 20 years.

    But for the neutral, watching this was also a reminder of that most cliched and degraded of notions – sport’s ability to surprise and dissolve preconceptions. It’s North Korea, dude. How do you expect them to play? Tireless robot-pressing? A kind of unsmiling insect football enacted for the love of Dear Leader?

    In practice the North Korean style was energetic and high pressure, but also free, creative and fun, all inventive high-speed combinations. The players were engaging and a joy to watch. When Choe missed a chance in the opening minutes of the final there was a lovely moment as Sin Hyang, her attacking partner, ran across to hug her and ruffle her hair like an elder sibling, which certainly makes a change from a sulky arms‑wide gesture and moaning to the bench about not getting a pass.

    But what about the shadowy team staff? The propaganda merchants in the background? Yes, a Wikipedia click does suggest the women’s senior team manager appears to have repeatedly threatened America with nuclear war – “its cities will be transformed into towering infernos” – but wait, it’s a faulty link. This is in fact a different Kim Myong-chol, not the well-known state propagandist but the 39-year-old ex-footballer of the same name, who didn’t actually say any of that. Phew. Close one, the internet!

    More widely, women’s football in North Korea is a fascinating story. The tale has been told often of party officials returning with an outreach plan from the 1986 Fifa summit where the Norwegian delegate, Ellen Wille, literally screamed on stage in frustration, demanding a proper women’s World Cup.

    Seeing an opportunity, the regime instigated football in schools and villages and created a national league where players were given accommodation and employment in the capital. Success followed. North Korea won the Asian Cup in 2001, 2003 and 2008.

    Then came the great interruption. In 2011 five national‑team players tested positive for a rare steroid. The excuse offered was the use of a traditional medicine made from the glands of a musk deer, applied after the players were struck by lightning. Oddly enough, Fifa didn’t buy this and North Korea were banned from the 2015 World Cup, lost their ranking position, failed to qualify in 2019 partly as a result, then went into major isolation during the pandemic, re-emerging only towards the end of 2023.

    As a result, this is more or less an entirely new generation, reared in isolation. Naturally, given the history, given the lack of contact, there will be some eyebrow‑raising over their startling degree of effervescence. But it is also an exciting notion, something that speaks to a long distant past, before total knowledge and access, when sport was a large, atomised place, when teams, athletes and ways of playing would emerge only through the cycle of international tournaments.

    Pyongyang citizens at the Kaeson metro station read about the Chollima’s triumph in Colombia. Photograph: Jon Chol Jin/AP

    The evidence of Colombia is that North Korea have something that looks, with the benefit of the surprise element, like a golden generation. Next month will be another showcase for a group of players who mature around the next senior World Cup in Brazil in three years’ time. So much can happen before then, but it is an exciting element. Can you imagine the sheer, cinematic difficulty for Fifa, for its corporate handshakers, for the flag-obsessed US elements, of processing a North Korean win?

    Colombia may not have offered any real insight into the world’s most opaque nation state. But sport does have the power to make human connections, and this is at the very least a window into something else beyond the stories of dictatorial oppression and poverty. Plus, if there’s any chance at all of seeing Choe in Europe, can someone out there please get on the blower to Pyongyang and rustle up a little tiki-taka diplomacy.

    Source link

  • North Korea discloses a uranium enrichment facility as Kim calls for more nuclear weapons

    North Korea discloses a uranium enrichment facility as Kim calls for more nuclear weapons

    SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea offered a rare glimpse into a secretive facility to produce weapons-grade uranium as state media reported Friday that leader Kim Jong Un visited the area and called for stronger efforts to “exponentially” increase the number of his nuclear weapons.

    It’s unclear if the site is at the North’s main Yongbyon nuclear complex, but it’s the North’s first public disclosure of a uranium-enrichment facility since it showed one at Yongbyon to visiting American scholars in 2010. While the latest unveiling is likely an attempt to apply more pressure on the U.S. and its allies, the images North Korea’s media released of the area could provide outsiders with a valuable source of information for estimating the amount of nuclear ingredients that North Korea has produced.

    During a visit to the Nuclear Weapons Institute and the production base of weapon-grade nuclear materials, Kim expressed “great satisfaction repeatedly over the wonderful technical force of the nuclear power field” held by North Korea, the official Korean Central News Agency reported.

    KCNA said that Kim went around the control room of the uranium enrichment base and a construction site that would expand its capacity for producing nuclear weapons. North Korean state media photos showed Kim being briefed by scientists while walking along long lines of tall gray tubes, but KCNA didn’t say when Kim visited the facilities and where they are located.

    KCNA said Kim stressed the need to further augment the number of centrifuges to “exponentially increase the nuclear weapons for self-defense,” a goal he has repeatedly stated in recent years. It said Kim ordered officials to push forward the introduction of a new-type centrifuge, which has reached its completion stage.

    Kim said North Korea needs greater defense and preemptive attack capabilities because “anti-(North Korea) nuclear threats perpetrated by the U.S. imperialists-led vassal forces have become more undisguised and crossed the red-line,” KCNA said.

    North Korea first showed a uranium enrichment site in Yongbyon to the outside world in November 2010, when it allowed a visiting delegation of Stanford University scholars led by nuclear physicist, Siegfried Hecker, to tour its centrifuges. North Korean officials then reportedly told Hecker that 2,000 centrifuges were already installed and running at Yongbyon.

    Satellite images in recent years have indicated North Korea was expanding a uranium enrichment plant at its Yongbyon nuclear complex. Nuclear weapons can be built using either highly enriched uranium or plutonium, and North Korea has facilities to produce both at Yongbyon. It’s not clear exactly how much weapons-grade plutonium or highly enriched uranium has been produced at Yongbyon and where North Korea stores it.

    “For analysts outside the country, the released images will provide a valuable source of information for rectifying our assumptions about how much material North Korea may have amassed to date,” said Ankit Panda, an expert with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

    “Overall, we should not assume that North Korea will be as constrained as it once was by fissile material limitations. This is especially true for highly enriched uranium, where North Korea is significantly less constrained in its ability to scale up than it is with plutonium,” Panda said.

    In 2018, Hecker and Stanford University scholars estimated North Korea’s highly enriched uranium inventory was 250 to 500 kilograms (550 to 1,100 pounds), sufficient for 25 to 30 nuclear devices.

    Some U.S. and South Korean experts speculate North Korea is covertly running at least one other uranium-enrichment plant. In 2018, a top South Korean official told parliament that North Korea was estimated to have already manufactured up to 60 nuclear weapons. Estimates on how many nuclear bombs North Korea can add every year vary, ranging from six to as much as 18.

    Since 2022, North Korea has sharply ramped up weapons testing activities to expand and modernize its arsenal of nuclear missiles targeting the U.S. and South Korea. Analysts say North Korea could perform nuclear test explosions or long-range missile tests ahead of the U.S. presidential election in November with the intent to influence the outcome and increase its leverage in future dealings with the Americans.

    North Korea had conducted test-launches of multiple short-range ballistic missiles on Thursday. In an apparent reference to those launches, KCNA said Kim had supervised test-firing of nuclear-capable 600mm multiple rockets to examine the performance of their new launch vehicles.

    ___

    Follow AP’s Asia-Pacific coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/asia-pacific

    Source link

  • North Korean table tennis players may be punished for Olympic podium selfie with rivals from South | North Korea

    For most observers, it was proof of sport’s ability, if only for a fleeting moment, to bring people together – even when they live on opposite sides of one of the world’s most heavily armed borders.

    But one of the most celebrated images of the Paris Olympics – a selfie taken by medal-winning table tennis players from either side of the divided Korean peninsula – appears to have landed the North Korea duo in trouble back home.

    In a rare moment of Korean-style ping-pong diplomacy, the South Korean mixed doubles players Lim Jong-hoon and Shin Yu-bin and the North Korean pairing Kim Kum-yong and Ri Jong-sik beamed as they posed for a selfie on the podium after receiving their bronze and silver medals at the South Paris Arena last month. The Chinese gold medallists, Wang Chuqin and Sun Yingsha, also appear in the photos.

    One of the images was posted to the Games’ official Instagram site, where it drew hundreds of thousands of likes, while People magazine named it as one of the Olympics’ top 12 moments of sportsmanship in Paris.

    But this week media reports claimed that Kim and Ri had been placed under “ideological scrutiny”. The Daily NK, a North Korea-focused website based in Seoul, quoted a high-ranking source in Pyongyang as saying that athletes and members of the North Korean Olympic Committee had been undergoing a month-long “ideological scrubbing” since returning home in mid-August – reportedly standard procedure for sportsmen and women who have been exposed to life outside the communist state.

    The website reported the country’s athletes had been instructed not to interact with fellow competitors from other countries, including the South, and were warned that “fraternisers” could face punishment.

    The table tennis players were reportedly singled out for criticism in a report submitted to officials for “grinning” as they posed alongside athletes from a country the regime has described as its “number one enemy”.

    The selfie was snapped at a time of heightened tensions between the two Koreas, whose 1950-53 conflict ended in a truce but not a peace treaty. The North recently protested against joint military exercises involving the South Korean, US and Japanese forces, while growing cooperation between the North’s leader, Kim Jong-un, and Russian president Vladimir Putin have caused alarm across the region.

    It isn’t clear what, if any, sanctions the table tennis players could face. That, the Korea Times suggested, could depend on how much remorse they show for momentarily lowering their guard in Paris.

    North Korean athletes returning from international competitions undergo a three-stage “ideological review” that ends with self-reflection sessions by team members, in which they are expected to criticise “inappropriate behaviour” among their teammates, as well as reflecting on their own actions, the Korea Times said.

    The newspaper quoted a source as saying that heartfelt expressions of contrition can spare athletes “political or administrative punishments”, the nature of which is unclear.

    Human Rights Watch said the reports “demonstrate the North Korean government’s efforts to control behaviour beyond its borders.

    “The International Olympic Committee … has a responsibility to protect athletes from all forms of harassment and abuse, as set out in the Olympic Charter,” it said in a statement. “North Korean athletes should not fear retribution for actions at the Games, not least when their actions embody the values of respect and friendship, on which the Olympic movement is built.”

    While Kim and Ri won a silver medal, other athletes have reportedly been punished for underperforming.

    The Daily NK cited the case of the North Korean football team, who were knocked out of the 2010 World Cup in South Africa after losing all three of their group games and conceding 12 goals.

    The players were reportedly subjected to a six-hour excoriation for “betraying” the communist nation’s ideological struggle, while their coach, Kim Jung-hun, was forced to work on a building site.



    Source link