Tag: South Korea

  • South Korean trade official kidnapped in Libya

    South Korean trade official kidnapped in Libya

    The head of South Korea’s trade mission in Libya has been abducted in the capital Tripoli.

    He was kidnapped in an upscale district of the city on Sunday evening, according to officials in Seoul.

    The authorities have struggled to secure Libya since the 2011 war that toppled Muammar Ghaddafi, with militia and armed gangs still controlling large parts of the country.

    This is the second kidnapping of a foreign national in the last few days.

    Mr Han Seo-Woo, who headed the Libya unit of South Korea’s Trade-Investment Promotion Agency, was on his way home from work when his vehicle was ambushed in an affluent neighbourhood of Tripoli.

    His driver, an Iraqi national, was left behind by the kidnappers.

     

  • Kayode shoots Nigeria into Round of 16: As Flying Eagles beat South Korea 1-0

    Kayode shoots Nigeria into Round of 16: As Flying Eagles beat South Korea 1-0

    The Flying Eagles of Nigeria on Thursday defeated South Korea 1-0, to qualify from Group B for the knockout stage or round of 16. The match was at the ongoing 2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup in Turkey.

    The Nigerians finished second in Group B with six points behind seven-point Portugal, which defeated Cuba 5-0 in the other match in the group.

    Olanrewaju Kayode put Nigeria ahead when he headed home a free kick from the left by skipper Abduljaleel Ajagun in the ninth minute. Defender Wilfred Ndidi came close with header after 15 minutes off a corner and moments later Kayode’s shot missed narrowly after he was put through on goal by Michael Olaitan.

    Shehu Abdullahi also missed with a header inside the box after 32 minutes and minutes later Kayode turned sharply inside the box but his effort missed target. In the 54th minute, Nigerian goalkeeper Samuel had to dive to stop Sunggyu Han right inside his goal area.

    Nigeria continued to dominate the game, but failed to utilise the chances they had created. Kayode then forced goalkeeper Changgeun Lee to make a big save after 73 minutes and seven minutes later, substitute Samuel Eduok saw his effort from the left hit the side net.

  • South, North Korea agree to high-level talks

    South and North Korea plan to seek closer contact through high-level talks this week after months of escalating tension, according to officials on Monday in Seoul.

    Representatives from the two sides agreed on Monday to meet during a working session in the border location

    of Panmunjom, according to South Korea’s unification ministry.

    The planned talks are to take place on Wednesday and Thursday in Seoul.

    The deal was the result of negotiations lasting almost 17 hours.

    It was not clear who North Korea would send, a spokeswoman said.

    South Korea is to be represented by Unification Minister Ryoo Kihl Jae. Seoul originally proposed a ministerial-level meeting.

    Tensions have been high between North Korea and South Korea and its ally the U.S. since North Korea carried out its third nuclear test on Feb. 12.

    The test triggered condemnation from the international community and resulted in more sanctions against the

    reclusive state.

  • North Korea to restart nuclear reactor in weapons bid

    North Korea to restart nuclear reactor in weapons bid

    North Korea announced plans on Tuesday to restart a mothballed nuclear reactor that has been closed since 2007, but emphasized it was seeking a deterrent capacity, the state-owned KCNA news agency said.

    It also stated that North Korea did not repeat recent threats to attack South Korea and the U.S.

    The state-owned KCNA news agency said North Korea would restart all nuclear facilities for both electricity and military uses.

    The announcement came amid soaring tensions on the Korean Peninsula as the U.S. bolstered its forces in the region after a series of threats by Pyongyang to attack U.S. bases in the Pacific and to invade South Korea.

    North Korea, one of the most isolated and unpredictable states in the world, conducted its third nuclear test in February but is believed to be some years away from developing nuclear weapons, although it claims to have a deterrent.

    A speech by the North’s young leader Kim Jong-un, delivered on Sunday but published in full by KCNA on Tuesday, appeared to dial down the prospects of a direct confrontation with the U.S. as he stressed that nuclear weapons would ensure the country’s safety as a deterrent.

    “Our nuclear strength is a reliable war deterrent and a guarantee to protect our sovereignty,” Kim said.

    “It is on the basis of a strong nuclear strength that peace and prosperity can exist and so can the happiness of people’s lives.”

    Kim’s speech, delivered to the central committee meeting of the ruling Workers Party of Korea, appeared to signal a small shift from threats against South Korea and the U.S., but it was some distance from any kind of end to the crisis.

    “The fact that this (speech) was made at the party central committee meeting, which is

     

    the highest policy-setting organ, indicates an attempt to highlight economic problems and shift the focus from security to the economy,” said Yang Moo-jin of the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul.

    But if Pyongyang follows through with its plan to restart the nuclear facilities, it will have longer-term security implications for the region.

    Reactivating the aged Soviet-era reactor at the Yongbyon nuclear plant will produce plutonium, a tested path to acquire more fissile material than a uraniumn enrichment programme.

    It was unclear how quickly the Yongbyon plant, whose cooling tower was destroyed as part of a de-nuclearisation deal, would take to restart and it was impossible to verify whether it was still connected to North Korea’s antiquated electricity grid at all.

    “It was a reactor that was nearing obsolescence with a cooling tower that wasn’t functioning properly when it was blown up. It could mean they’ve been rebuilding quite a few things,” said Yoo Ho-yeol, North Korea specialist at Korea University in Seoul.

    The move to restart the reactor comes as a big blow to China’s stated aim of restarting de-nuclearisation talks on the Korean peninsula, prompting a foreign ministry spokesman in Beijing to express regret at the decision.

    As well as restarting the 5MW reactor at Yongbyon, the North’s only known source of plutonium for its nuclear weapons programme, KCNA said a uranium enrichment plant would also be put back into operation.

    The nuclear plant’s output would be used to solve what KCNA termed an “acute shortage of electricity” and to bolster “the nuclear armed force”.

    After being hit with U.S. sanctions for conducting the February nuclear test and what it has viewed as “hostile” military drills being staged by Seoul and Washington in the South, Pyongyang had threatened a nuclear strike on the U.S., missile strikes on its Pacific bases and war with South Korea.

    Washington, which has said it has not seen any evidence of hostile North Korean troop moves, deployed a warship off the Korean coast overnight.

    The U.S. earlier bolstered forces staging joint drills with South Korea with Stealth fighters and has made bomber overflights in a rare show of strength.

    Much of the rhetoric that has come from Pyongyang in recent weeks has been a repeat of previous bouts of anger, but the length and intensity has been new, leading to concerns that the tensions could spiral into clashes.

    In Washington, the White House has said the U.S.takes North Korea’s war threats seriously.

    However, the White House spokesman Jay Carney said on Monday: “I would note that in spite of the harsh rhetoric we are hearing from Pyongyang, we are not seeing changes to the North Korean military posture, such as large-scale mobilisations and positioning of forces.”

    A U.S. defence official said on Monday the USS McCain, an Aegis-class guided-missile destroyer used for ballistic missile defense, was positioned off the peninsula’s southwestern coast.

    It was not immediately clear where the ship was on Tuesday.

    In Pyongyang, the party congress meeting and a subsequent assembly of the country’s rubber-stamp parliament reiterated the usual anti-American rhetoric and criticised South Korea, but the mood appeared to have changed.

    The pariah state has once again started emphasising economic development as it shifts to the major April 15 celebration of the birth of its founder, Kim Il Sung, the grandfather of the current ruler.

    For the young Kim, it appears that cementing control of the party and state had now taken top priority as well as improving living standards in a country whose economy is smaller than it was 20 years ago, according to external assessments.

    Kim appointed a handful of personal confidants to the party’s politburo, further consolidating his grip on power in the second full year of his reign.

    Former premier Pak Pong-ju, a key ally of the leadership dynasty, was re-appointed to the post from which he was fired in 2007 for failing to implement economic reforms.

    Pak, believed to be in his 70s, is viewed as a key confidant of Jang Song-thaek, the young Kim’s uncle and also a protege of Kim’s aunt. Pak is viewed as a pawn in a power game that has seen Jang and his wife re-assert power over military leaders.

     

  • North Korea cuts military hotline with South

    North Korea said it is cutting a military hotline with South Korea, amid high tension on the peninsula.

    BBC reports that the hotline is used to facilitate the travel of South Korean workers to a joint industrial complex in Kaesong.

    Pyongyang has been angered by fresh United Nations sanctions following its February 12 nuclear test and United States-South Korea military drills.

    In recent weeks its habitually fiery rhetoric has escalated, with multiple warnings issued.

    On Tuesday, it said it had ordered artillery and rocket units into “combat posture” to prepare to target U.S bases in Hawaii, Guam and the U.S mainland.

    It has also threatened a “pre-emptive” nuclear strike against the U.S in recent days and told the South it has scrapped the Korean War armistice agreement.

    U.S Pentagon spokesman George Little, said on Tuesday that North Korea’s threats “followed a pattern designed to raise tensions” and that North Korea would “achieve nothing by these threats.”

    North Korea has already cut both a Red Cross hotline and another used to communicate with the UN Command at Panmunjom in the Demilitarised Zone that divides the two Koreas.

    The military hotline is used by the two sides to communicate over travel to the Kaesong joint industrial zone, inside North Korea.

    “Under the situation where a war may break out any moment, there is no need to keep up North-South military communications,” a senior North Korean military official was quoted by KCNA news agency as telling the South before the line was severed.

     

  • 6 students bag  scholarships

    6 students bag scholarships

    Six Nigerian students have been awarded post-graduate scholarships to study in South Korea by the Republic of Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA). According to Mr Sang Jung, Chief Resident Representative at the agency’s office in Abuja, the students who were selected from the six geo-political zones in the country will be resume in top Korean institutions next month.

    Jung said the scholarships would provide the opportunity for the students to learn from Korea’s experience in poverty reduction and socio-economic development.

    He added that KOICA is an agency of the Korean government responsible for the delivery of grants and technical cooperation programmes in developing countries and that 16 Nigerian students had benefited from the scheme in the last five years.

    FUNAAB plans free education for less privileged students The Vice-Chancellor of the Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta(FUNAAB), Professor Olusola Bandele Oyewole has stressed the need for the University to have a policy that will enable less privileged students go through school without hassles.

    Professor Oyewole who spoke at a meeting with students of the institution last week at the Tony Anenih Hall harped on the importance of such policies that will reduce the burdens of less privileged students and make them focus on their studies.

    The V.C said: “it is high time for the University to give the less privilege students special consideration in the area of logistics, financial assistance, employment,

    participation in extra-curricular activities, among others”.

    He added that, that the management is considering setting up a Trust Fund to assist the less privilege students as it is done in other countries.

  • South Korea, U.S to boost missile capability

    South Korea, U.S to boost missile capability

    South Korea and the United States have reached an agreement on extending the range of Seoul’s ballistic missiles to counter the threat from North Korea, local media reported on Saturday, citing unnamed government officials.

    Reuters reports that under an agreement signed in 1979 and then revised in 2001 between the two military allies, the range of South Korean missiles is limited to 300 kilometers (186 miles) and a payload of 500 kilograms (1,102 lbs).

    But Seoul has long urged Washington to amend the pact enabling the South to produce missiles that could reach anywhere in North Korea to deter the communist state’s cross-border provocations.

    A government source told the influential Chosun Ilbo daily on Friday that the two countries had wrapped up negotiations on extending the range of the ballistic missiles to 800 kilometers to cover all of North Korea.

    The unnamed government source was quoted as saying the two sides have also agreed to maintain the payload limit at the current level of 500 kilograms.