Tuesday, 16 November 2010

Monday, November 15, 2010

Cocaine Airways Proves 'Sky's the Limit'







Venezuela's role in Transatlantic cocaine smuggling again confirmed. Click here for the story.

More than nine years after 9/11, state sponsored terrorists, pirates, and smugglers still sail--and fly--across the Seven Seas. Radar is nonexistent; billions spent on defense, useless.

Incredible.

There was a time when Americans would be outraged....

Europe Fears Debt Crisis Ready to Spread from Greece to Ireland, Portugal, Threatening Euro

Historic financial crisis looms--click here for the story.

North Korean Defections Continue


The South Korean government says that more than 10,000 North Koreans reached the South during the past three years.

South Korea's government said Monday the total number of North Korean defectors has surpassed 20,000 since the end of fighting in the Korean War in 1953.

Unification Ministry spokeswoman Lee Jong-joo says number 20,000 arrived in South Korea last Thursday.

"The 20,000th defector was a 41-year-old woman identified only as Kim. She came from Yanggang province, North Korea, with her two sons," Lee says.

About half the defectors have arrived since 2007. Around 2,900 defected just last year.

Unification Ministry officials say they expect the number of defectors to steadily increase because of continued economic hardship and hunger in the impoverished country.

The two Koreas are divided by a heavily fortified border, so most travel through China before reaching here.

Aid groups say tens of thousands more defectors may be hiding in China.

The Chinese government returns refugees to North Korea.

The number of defectors began rising after North Korea was swept by famine in the mid-1990's.


Critical Food Situation

The food situation in the North has again become critical.

Victoria Sekitoleko is the Food and Agricultural Organization's regional representative, and most recently visited North Korea in September. Monday she said that more than 30 percent of all North Koreans are facing substantial undernourishment.

"I have visited homes, I have visited schools, I see these people along the road. I go where they go," she says. "Wherever I go you look in the eyes of somebody and you see a starving person."

Sekitoleko says it would not take much additional outside assistance for North Korea to reach a basic level of self-sufficiency when it comes to food.

"If they can have the amount of fertilizer of 700k tons annually. If they can have the seeds - because until now, they do not have good high-tech seeds. And if they could have the fuel, plus the spare parts (for farm equipment) I'm sure they can produce enough food to feed their country," Sekitoleko states.

Aid officials say sanctions on Pyongyang, because of its nuclear program, have made donor nations reluctant to provide aid. China, South Korea and the U.N's World Food Program are the primary sources of food assistance for North Korea.

FAO's Sekitoleko says the U.N. programs tasked with helping reduce the food shortage are underfunded. "The world has told us to be there but they are starving us of any resources," Sekitoleko says.

The U.N.'s World Food Program executive director, Josette Sheeran, who visited North Korea earlier this month, says her agency has only about 20 percent of the money it needs to fund its project to boost nutrition among women and children in North Korea.

The FAO is expected to release its latest report on the food situation in North Korea early this week.

The food shortage has worsened in recent years because of flooding. The FAO says the most recent flood hit at the peak of the vegetable-growing season.


Sunday, November 14, 2010

US Lawmakers Alarmed by UN Report on N. Korea

"To supplement its foreign earnings, North Korea long been engaged in illicit and questionable international transactions. These transactions are reported to include the surreptitious transfer of nuclear and ballistic missile-related equipment, know-how and technology, illicit drug and cigarette smuggling and counterfeiting of currencies and cigarettes." - Report to the Security Council

The secretive Stalinist/Kimist state--China's vassal--is still exporting nuclear and missile materials to Iran, Syria, and Burma, according to the United Nations; and American lawmakers are (at last) alarmed. Click here to read Bridget Johnson's article in The Hill.