KR North Korea Megathread - Dear Leader and his shenanigans

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There's so much news about North Korea right now and what Un is doing, I got a suggestion for a NK megathread, so here it is. Post the world's greatest nation's antics here. I'm merging a few of the more recent threads to continue discussion.



ORIGINAL POST:
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https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/south-korea-planning-war-decapitation-132232777.html

South Korean President Moon Jae-in has pushed for a new plan for a rapid war with North Korea and an overhaul of the country's defense industry to overwhelm and crush the North's government, the South Korean newspaper The Chosun Ilbo reported Tuesday.

Moon took office in May promising to attempt to engage diplomatically with North Korea and seek peace, but in the months since, the North has provoked the international community with missile tests at a blistering pace.

For some time, South Korea has been training a "decapitation force," reportedly with the help of the US Navy's SEAL Team 6, but now an increasingly bold North Korea may demand quicker action.

South Korea's new plan identifies more than 1,000 targets for precision missile fires and sites for marines to drop in and quickly kill North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, the paper reported.

The plan represents a more independent version of South Korea's current plan, which relies on support from US aircraft carriers. As it stands, no major military commander recommends military action against North Korea, which has a staggering array of conventional — and potentially nuclear — weapons pointed at Seoul, where 26 million call home.

But South Korea's new plan to quickly and decisively dominate the North relies on reforming the defense-acquisition process and cutting out wasteful spending to wield the full might of its economic dominance against Pyongyang, according to the report. For that reason, don't expect the plan to take effect anytime soon.
 
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I certainly hope it's from Kim deciding to put down the fork rather then directly from medical issues. As shitty as N.K. with fatboy is, No clear heir and a big fight over the whole thing would likely be worse. Here I sit, Hoping Norkville's dictator is healthy. Clownworld can be a very strange place.
Kim III is not as bad as his father, him staying where he is it's actually the best thing.
Rate me optimistic, but I have the sensation that if he stays up another 20 years he could slowly make things better, a bit like his grandfather.
 
Kim III is not as bad as his father, him staying where he is it's actually the best thing.
Rate me optimistic, but I have the sensation that if he stays up another 20 years he could slowly make things better, a bit like his grandfather.
He just wants to pal around with Trump again. He's starving as protest until he returns.
 
Kim III is not as bad as his father, him staying where he is it's actually the best thing.
Rate me optimistic, but I have the sensation that if he stays up another 20 years he could slowly make things better, a bit like his grandfather.
I respectfully disagree, but I still love you.

Defectors have gone on record and said that's he's just as bad, if not worse. The last Kim was horrible, but people still tend to like him better than the current one because even though the last one was reigning during the Great Famine, and did unspeakable things, he at least did some good things for the country, at least in the eyes of the people.

Kim III, though? He's done nothing, but stuff his face, and kill people while the country starves to death in fear. NK has been at it's lowest point since the the Great Famine, and now there's a pandemic destroying the country, and the leader has done nothing about it while just killing, torturing, and eating left and right, and the people have fucking noticed.

In NK, most of the people used to believe that the Kims just didn't know about what was going on, and/or were doing their best to help their country and it was just the outside world causing all the suffering. With Kim III, they know it's him, and they do not like him.

They don't say it out loud, but the reverence and goodwill they once had for the family is no longer there.
 

North Korea Investigates Youth Who Avoid Hard Labor Mobilization Drives

North Korea has launched an investigation into youths from privileged families who avoid mass mobilization campaigns that send thousands of young people to “volunteer” for hard labor in coal mines and rural farms, sources in the country told RFA.

North Korea, which routinely forces citizens to provide free manual labor for government projects, farm work and industry -- labels the laborers as “volunteers” who willingly toil as an expression of their love for the country and its leaders.

Free labor is necessary for the cash-strapped government of a country with serious economic problems resulting from a prolonged suspension of trade with China due to the coronavirus epidemic and years of U.S. and UN economic sanctions over Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile programs.

But citizens who have connections can get out of the unpaid labor drives.

When the adult offspring of high-ranking government officials failed to show up for work duty in North Pyongan province, central party’s organization and guidance department sent agents to investigate, a resident of the northwestern region told RFA.

Sources said the investigation applied only to local officials of the provincial level or below.

“Authorities began an investigation into anti-socialist tendencies in the families of local officials… here in Sinuiju since the day after Youth Day [Aug. 28],” a resident of North Pyongan told RFA’s Korean Service Sept. 1.

According to the source, in early August North Korean leader Kim Jong Un ordered the country’s youth to volunteer for dangerous and difficult work in places like coal mines and rural farms.

“But it was reported to the central committee that only ordinary people without powerful backgrounds were forced by the authorities to volunteer, while none of the children of high-ranking officials volunteered,” said the source, who requested anonymity to speak freely.

“Despite the party’s appeal to young people to take the lead and become young heroes by building a strong socialist state, even as the country is boxed-in by U.S. economic sanctions, the fact that the children of the officials didn’t respond to the call is seen as a serious failure as they deliberately ignored party policies by taking advantage of their position,” said the source.

The authorities are now treating their investigation into the privileged youth as a fight against anti-socialism, according to the source, paying particular attention to any anti-socialist tendencies they uncover.

Another source, a resident of South Pyongan province, north of the capital Pyongyang, confirmed to RFA that authorities there were investigating the same issue.

“Hundreds of young people forcibly selected by the party and the Youth League organization have been sent to Sunchon Coal Mine and rural farms in South Pyongan province since the beginning of August … but there is no child of high-ranking officials among them,” the second source said.

RFA reported in late August that the Youth League in North Hamgyong selected 140 young people to provide free labor in coal mines and rural farms ahead of Youth Day.

Those that were selected were opposed to being sent to work under the program, for which youth from wealthy and well-connected families were not selected triggering anger among the residents.

North Korea’s Youth League organization includes all people aged 17 to 35, including factory workers, high-school and college students, and other young people not serving in the military.

North Korean state media reported Aug. 30 that Kim Jong Un met with young people who volunteered and took a photo with them.

RFA has reported on other North Korean forced labor schemes this year including mobilizing women for construction of a wall along the 880-mile Sino-Korean border, forcing students to haul gravel for school building construction and maintenance projects, and sending soldiers off to toil in mines immediately upon discharge.
 

Domestic Politics Could be Behind North Korea’s Rejection of Sinovac Jabs, Experts say

North Korea’s rejection of nearly three million doses of a Chinese-made coronavirus vaccine this week might be an attempt by leader Kim Jong Un to use the pandemic to consolidate power, experts told RFA.

UNICEF on Wednesday said that Pyongyang conveyed that the doses of China’s Sinovac vaccine offered under the COVAX program should be given to countries more in need, maintaining the widely doubted claim that North Korea is virus-free.

“With North Korea needing something like 60 million or more doses of a two-shot regiment to inoculate its population, the DPRK should take any shots it can get,” Harry Kazianis, senior director of the Washington-based Center for National Interest think tank told RFA’s Korean Service.

“So, this move, to be very frank, makes zero sense. The only logical explanation is that the Kim regime truly does have doubts about the current vaccines, or he likes the amount of control locking the country down gives him and, for the time being, is leveraging the crisis to gain even more power over the population and the [ruling] Korean Workers Party,” he said.

North Korea has not reported a single confirmed case of coronavirus among its population of 25.6 million, but according to previous RFA reports, it keeps unofficial records of “suspected cases,” and if these patients die, they are quickly cremated before COVID-19 can be confirmed as the cause of death.

Pyongyang outwardly maintains it is untouched by the virus due to its extensive measures against COVID-19’s spread, including the closure of the Sino-Korean border and suspension of all trade with China since Jan. 2020.

However, it has admitted to citizens in public lectures that the virus was spreading in geographically distant areas of the country as early as mid-2020.

Reuters news agency reported that the Seoul-based Institute for National Security Strategy attributed the refusal of the three million Sinovac doses, to Pyongyang’s concern over their efficacy, saying that it is more interested in vaccines made in Russia.


Impending health crisis

Kazianis said North Korea would become a ticking timebomb if it did not vaccinate its population as soon as possible.

“Unless they have a cure for COVID they are hiding, they need vaccines. Otherwise, they are only welcoming disaster sometime in the future,” he said.

The reallocation of the vaccines might be a foreign policy gesture by North Korea, Gilbert Burnham, founder of the Center for Refugee and Disaster Response at Johns Hopkins University told RFA.

“Sealing the borders has been stated as a measure to prevent entry of the COVID-19 virus, but it is unlikely that this will be successful in the long term. The DPRK health system is unlikely to be strong enough to handle a large number of people with COVID-19 if an epidemic breaks out,” said Gilbert.

Gilbert said the reallocation could have been done “with the intention of showing the world that DPRK COVID-19 containment strategies were successful in containing the virus, so the people of the DPRK do not need immunization.”

Gilbert acknowledged that there were concerns about the Sinovac vaccines but said that North Korea definitely needs to immunize its population.

“Eventually the virus will make it to the DPRK and with a poorly nourished population having many other health problems—the outlook for the people of the DPRK could be catastrophic. It is in everyone’s interest to see and help the DPRK population get immunized with whatever effective vaccine is on hand, and not argue which vaccine has a bit more efficacy than another,” he said.

Dr. Edwin Salvador of the World Health Organization (WHO) country office for North Korea told RFA that North Korea was “looking at future opportunities through COVID-19 vaccines through COVAX,” but did not discuss the reallocation.

A UNICEF spokesperson acknowledged the reallocation to RFA, saying that partner agencies were continuing to work with North Korean health authorities “to ensure that the necessary support is provided to the Government to prepare for such an opportunity,” to receive vaccines later.

The spokesperson added that although essential health supplies have been shipped to North Korea in recent weeks, but the international community should “accelerate access for supplies and for international personnel to return to the country at the earliest opportunity,” because much more is needed there.

RFA has reported that citizens in Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia and Myanmar were also reluctant to use Chinese-made vaccines for reasons ranging from high levels of anti-Chinese sentiment to distrust of their own government.
 
Mystery solved, he got slimmer and tanned to rock the new Armani at the parade for the paramilitary. Blonde dye when?
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Mystery solved, he got slimmer and tanned to rock the new Armani at the parade for the paramilitary. Blonde dye when?
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Pffft, figures.
 

Amid Food Shortage, North Korea Orders Army to Shoot Crop Thieves on Sight

With food shortages driving hungry North Koreans to steal crops from fields, authorities have deployed military units to guard farmland during harvest season with orders to shoot crop thieves on sight, sources in the country told RFA.

The campaign to stop crop theft has unfolded amid an extensive investigation into the unprecedented theft of emergency wartime supplies of anti-biotics from a government warehouse,

Chronically short of food, North Korea has seen starvation deaths this year in the wake of the closure of the Sino-Korean border and suspension of trade with China in Jan. 2020 to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

With thievery from farms on the rise nationwide, authorities in the northeastern province of North Hamgyong have ordered the military to patrol the farms there, a military source from the area told RFA’s Korean Service Monday.

“The 9th Corps have organized groups to patrol the farms day and night because thefts are happening frequently,” said the source, who requested anonymity for security reasons.

“The General Staff Department ordered them to patrol the farms because… cooperative farm thefts are increasing all over the country,” said the source.

“If the authorities do nothing to prevent this, harvest yields will be greatly reduced,” the military source added.

The source said that the farms were tasked with unrealistic production goals at a ruling Workers Party congress at the beginning of this year, which called for a major agricultural windfall as a solution to projected shortages.

“Preventing residents’ intrusion into the farms for stealing crops is also important for the military to secure its own rations,” the source said.

The army built guard posts and formed patrol teams of about 20 soldiers that have been authorized to use deadly force, according to the source.

“Any illegal trespasser is regarded as ‘an impure element’ against the government system and is to be shot without warning, so the order is causing tension among the residents living near the farms,” the source said.

In nearby Ryanggang province, soldiers are also patrolling farms, said a resident of the provincial capital Hyesan.

“When I go to the outskirts of the city these days, it is common to see soldiers carrying weapons and patrolling the crops, so the people avoid those areas, especially at night,” said the second source, who requested anonymity to speak freely.

“The people are terrified that they could be shot without warning if they merely approach the fields,” said the second source.

The local neighborhood watch units and the probate office are pushing an anti-crop theft campaign of education sessions and propaganda, according to the second source.

“But the residents are not happy about it. The current food problem is considered to be our country’s worst since the Arduous March,” said the second source, referring to the 1994-1998 famine that killed about 10 percent of the country’s population of 23 million.

“The people are saying that they have to eat to survive, even if it means stealing food.”


Penicillin pilfered

A dramatic theft of penicillin from a warehouse inside a guarded government building last month underscored how chronic medicine shortages have also gotten worse since the pandemic and the closure of the border with China.

In South Pyongan province, north of the capital Pyongyang, police are investigating a large theft from a wartime medicinal storage facility of the antibiotic, which has recently doubled in price.

“The military drug management office’s no. 4 warehouse here in Songchon county was burglarized, so the judicial authorities are on alert,” a resident of the county in South Pyongan told RFA’s Korean Service Sept. 5.

“That warehouse stockpiles and stores various emergency medicines, including antibiotics set aside for civilians in the event of war,” said the third source, who declined to be named.

Governments in every North Korean province, city and county manage reserve warehouses. No. 2 warehouses store food, and No. 4 warehouses store medicine and other necessities. Some municipalities put the warehouses in spent mines or other unused facilities, where they are usually guarded by armed men to prevent theft.

Songchon county’s No. 4 warehouse is located inside the drug management office building, under tight security, according to the South Pyongan source.

“The thief who broke in cut the lock with some kind of tool and stole hundreds of doses of penicillin from the warehouse. This is the first time that wartime medicine has been stolen, so the military’s judicial authorities have been on high alert and are conducting an investigation, but there’s been no progress,” the third source said.

According to the third source, the price of 100 milligrams of penicillin recently jumped from 1,500 won (U.S. $0.25 to about 3,000 ($0.50) won.

Another resident from South Pyongan told RFA that the unprecedented theft triggered an all-out investigation.

“Individual retailers who have been reported to have sold even one dose of penicillin in the local market or in private are the first to be investigated,” said the source on condition of anonymity.

“Due to the coronavirus crisis, the operation of pharmaceutical factories was greatly reduced,” said the South Pyongan resident.

“Even the antibiotic supplies from China are depleted, leading to a big medicine shortage in the market. So, the police are investigating where sellers are getting their penicillin,” added the source.

Police investigated one retailer who said he bought penicillin off a merchant from another area a few months ago, according to the South Pyongan source.

“They searched the house, checked the production dates on the penicillin doses found in their homes, but not a single dose was found to be stolen from the No. 4 warehouse,” the fourth source said.

“Even if they catch the thief, the head of Songchon county’s drug management office will not avoid heavy punishment.”

Though Korean War hostilities ended in an armistice agreement in 1953, North Korea technically remains at war with the more prosperous South.
 
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NK's shipping more loggers to Russia to work. The NK Government takes a big chunk of the loggers' wages.




Three NK soldiers are likely doing hard time in a prison camp for doing South Korean dance moves. This will be a losing battle for the North Korean powers that be. They can't feed their troops properly and now incarcerate them for dancing. Morale will just keep going down.


 
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