Skip to content


The Privilege of Being Part of the Movement to Free Euna Lee and Laura Ling

On June 22nd I wrote a letter to Kim Jong Il asking him to free Euna Lee and Laura Ling. I would like to believe that this letter was the catalyst for what happened but in all seriousness he probably never read it. 🙂

Help Release Laura Ling and Euna Lee However being part of the movement to free Euna Lee and Laura Ling was my privilege and eventually my joy.  I tried to contribute to the movement by:

Compared to what some others did like Richard Horgan, Mallika Chopra, Natasha Bishop, and Kevin DeSoto I did very little.  But on Tuesday, August 4 I joined them, the rest of the movement and the country in eager anticipation for the release of Laura Ling and Euna Lee.

The timeline of the that day and the next day, captured on my Twitter feed, was so exciting and joyful.

After N. Korea pardon, freed journalists home in US

This is the first 2 minutes of their arrival from CNN with no commentary.

Here is the Associated Press’s footage of their arrival.

Here is CBS New’s footage of their arrival.

Here is MSNBC’s footage of the press conference.

Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy

euna-lee-reunion

I will be writing more about the diversity of reactions to their release and what I think is next.  But for now I just want to say “Thank God for the release of Euna Lee and Laura Ling.  May God use this event to bring peace to Korea.”

What were your feelings and reactions about these events?  Please share.

Posted in News.

Tagged with , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , .


Considering a post-Kim era

Today, Jack from DPRK Forum considers what North Korea may be like after Kim Jong Il.

Increased speculation into the scenarios of a post Kim era are mired in serious problems that cannot be avoided no matter what road it may take. While nobody knows the future, it is increasingly clear something is taking place in North Korea: Kim Jong Il’s reported health problems, the shakeup in the hierarchy leading to an apparent military-centric regime, the apparent succession of Kim Jong Un, and the list goes on and on.

Famine in North Korea: Markets, Aid, and ReformDespite these changes, true or false, very little is said about the people having to live under these changes and the ever-changing political winds. These changes are not only from Pyongyang, but Washington, Seoul, Beijing, Tokyo, Moscow, and others. These winds of political change inside and outside their secretive state lead to things that directly affects their lives, and it appears the populace is starting to fend for themselves. As more evidence shows they are not counting on the government to take care of them, time and again it goes right down to control from the top trying to deal with the shifting sands of bottom-up marketization (Please see Famine in North Korea: Markets, Aid, and Reform for more details).

As these important changes have been taking place since the Arduous March of the mid-late 1990’s, it is still unclear the true extent of the market activity in North Korea. However, plenty of evidence shows market activity is definitely there as the regime appears to try and solve the problems of Juche purity. Is the regime losing control of the population? If so, it is clear they are trying a lot of things to bring North Korea back on track, which may be in a time of vulnerability as rumors of succession and Kim’s health continue to swirl around. To be sure, discussion of Kim’s health is a long standing taboo, along with succession. In my opinion, it is too early to speculate the true heartbeat of the North Korean mindset on these matters, because sooner or later, these things will come to light when something does happen. The problem is, what will happen?

Nobody knows anything about that either.

As this article shows:

China’s North Korea specialists and think tanks are studying possible post-Kim futures, from a peaceful transition to a new government to factional warfare, Cui and other experts said.

Cui attended North Korea’s Kim Il Sung University nearly 50 years ago. He regularly hosts friends from his school days — retired civil servants, policy researchers and other members of the North Korean elite — at his two-story house in Beijing’s north suburbs. Recent visitors, Cui said, have described a power shift, with Kim Jong Il throwing his support behind military hard-liners and away from economic reformers to ensure the succession of his son, Kim Jong Un.

Even if that transfer goes awry, Cui said, the most likely outcome is neither meltdown nor reunification with South Korea but a successor regime, perhaps a military government, in Pyongyang that will need Beijing even more. "The hard-liners will have to rely on China because they won’t have the political power to deal with the United States," Cui said.

This I have to agree with, but again, timing is critical on how things transpire, and the ultimate fate of not only North Korea’s future, but the political map of the major players dealing with North Korea. One of the biggest issues not really discussed is the question of the normal populace. Sure, the other items, such as loose nukes, possible factions running around, dealing with a different regime, and many other things (I am sure they will be key on how the population reacts) will also be key on how to tackle the real possibility of one of the biggest humanitarian problems in modern history.

I am very doubtful on a smooth reunification of Korea, but the reunification question is something that is another thing mired in serious problems. However, the rhetoric on the need of reunification is filled with kicking the can down the road along with hoping the status quo not changing. After all, there are better things to worry about for the major players. From pop culture, economic difficulties in the world markets, partisan infighting, and more. However, sooner or later, these questions will have to be dealt with, and hopefully not in crisis mode.

What are the major players doing about the humanitarian crisis that is surely looming in the background? Again, good rhetoric is coming out of the spin room, but the player that makes all the difference in the world is China. Problem is, they are not talking, and with good reason. The same article points this out:

If China eventually decides to discuss a North Korean implosion with the U.S., the governments would probably be better served by letting their militaries, not civilian officials, do the talking, said Thompson, with the Nixon Center.

A meltdown would likely displace large numbers of people, and the People’s Liberation Army has displayed its ability to cope in handling natural disasters like last year’s Sichuan earthquake. PLA researchers told a group of U.S. scholars in 2007 that contingency plans were in place for the Chinese military to handle North Korean refugees and even go in to secure nuclear weapons and clean up nuclear contamination.

"So you can bet they have a plan for North Korea," said Thompson. "Will we ever see it? Hell no. Do they have it? Yeah."

As the book discussing the great famine also pointed out, China’s dealings with North Korea are client privileged, so any information with respects to trade and what they plan to do in a post-Kim regime are thin if non-existent. The question is, will China talk in the event something happens? This is also a toss-up because China has interest in not angering the regime (or some other regime if any) should anything come down the pike, because China has interest in the other players as well. That is, they have a lot at stake. From keeping the USFK away from the Yalu, keeping the nice trade agreements with the world markets (especially the United States) and not having to worry about the scores of hungry North Koreans fleeing a failed state.

Korea after Kim Jong Il Another book, also penned by Marcus Noland is Korea After Kim Jong Il, in which he goes into very meticulous detail on these possibilities, he makes it very clear the answers will not come easily. For instance, because a state fails does not mean it is the end of the state. This is also a very real possibility in the problem of reunification when dealing with a possible regime change in a post-Kim era to dire economic problems that have to be addressed such as trying to get the North in line with the South (which seems to be failing so far) along with unknown factors in a regime that may not be any better (or worse) than the last regime. On top of all of this, are the people.

What happens to them? Surely, they will need some stability, and individuals have different ideas on trying to survive. From the elites that may have incentive on keeping their perks or exploiting the situation, to the normal populace getting displaced, down to the political prisoners languishing in the massive labor camps. Surely, these individuals will need immediate attention to keep the others players stable, and it is my hope some plan is in place to deal with these things. Yes, there may be Utopic plans to magically get everything in line in the event something happens (such as the Sunshine Policy), but this is the real world, and nothing in the real world goes the way they plan. There has to be a plan B somewhere. Unfortunately, coddling a regime that constantly reneges on agreements is clearly not the way to go. Also, waiting for the despot leader to croak may make things worse instead of better as well.

This is a crapshoot, and all the players know it. Issue is, who makes the first move to risk their neck to do something about it? Sooner or later, there may be no choice. That is, from a Hail Mary move from a dying regime to masses looking for a new life will be hell.

Maybe the answer is not the high-level politicians. The answer may lie in individuals. They are already trying to survive in the markets, and despite the regime’s efforts in cracking down on these activities are choppy at best. Could it be one day the officials trying to keep the purity alive give up and try to survive too? Some evidence points to this as well with the massive corruption. I mean, one can bribe an official with some cigarettes, booze and goods to look the other way. Technology is also breaking down the iron-clad barrier that kept the hermit Kingdom sealed for so many decades. All of this seems to be the doings of the normal populace. At the moment, the iron grip of Kim Jong Il is still there and repressive as ever, but with the current shakeups, could this be a good time to exploit the situation and push them over the edge in the effort to see where it may lead? That is a very risky move, no doubt about it. Eventually, the regime will not be able to focus efforts on elites to keep them in line, because they are in a bribe situation in return for goodies from Kim, they keep the loyalty alive. That may very well end somewhere. Will they turn on the regime or jockey for power? I have no idea.

In the end, I think it is going to boil down to food. I cannot see any other possibility, because at the moment, food is the basic source of survival, and I am going to guess whoever controls the food controls the country. At the moment, the food is increasingly becoming the property of the people despite the ongoing efforts to keep the old Juche system in place. If one can sell grain on the market at a better price than the regime’s paltry and even non-existent payments in return for redistribution, why bother (other than fear of getting shot)? That has been the pillar of social control in North Korea, and as domestic supply falters or is unstable, outside sources are a considerable variable, too.

Could the population show discontent when aid is not going to those who need it and instead redistributed to areas more important on keeping the regime alive? What about the market diversion? How about trade in other commodities or simply liquidation? China may have a huge role in all of this, and wheeling and dealing is surely to take place, not only with North Korea (or whoever is in the driver seat) but others as well with interests in the region.

Maybe it is time to show people care about people.  After all, the person behind the barbed wire will have a lot to offer somebody else when a regime failed them. However, they are going to need a helping hand. Who is going to step up and embrace the mother who lost her child, the orphan, the displaced worker with no job, an elite looking to strike a deal on some good flats in some city, or some outsider looking to make some money in the resources? What about the prisoner who does not know anything other than fear and hunger? I do not hear anything about this on the nightly news.

One day, it will be headlines.

This post was written by Jack, author of the blog DPRK Forum.  In Jack’s words, DPRK Forum is based on his “obsession with trying to understand one of the most isolated, secretive states on the planets.”

Posted in My Thoughts.

Tagged with , , , , , , , .


Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-08-02

  • RT @LiberateLaura: Ling-Lee negotiations begun last wk via NK UN Mission making progress; trying to agree on U.S. envoy http://bit.ly/194inC #
  • RT @LiberateLaura: In case anyone didn’t think North Korea is a slave state. NK "150 Day Struggle." http://bit.ly/27EfyC #
  • NK opens it first fast-food restaurant. http://bit.ly/79LyM Thanks to DPRKForum. "McKimmie?" http://bit.ly/11hGXX #
  • Help Release Laura Ling and Euna Lee. Please sign the online petition. It will only take a minute. http://bit.ly/FAuV7 #
  • "Ling & Lee’s (mercifully, thus far, non-hard labor) imprisonment has focused much more attention on the horrors of NK." http://bit.ly/eCOgs #
  • RT @LiberateLaura: @Goalcom rates Portugal-NK 1966 World Cup Soccer match as one of Top Ten comeback of all-time. http://bit.ly/zoGhL #

Posted in My Thoughts.

Tagged with , , , , , , , , .


Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-07-26

  • Kim Jong Il on eHarmony. Funny parody though the ending is jarring. Thanks to Arowana Films, Danny Cho and Grace Su. http://bit.ly/z1G7N #
  • U.S., N.Korea Negotiate over Detained Journalists. Hopefully in a few weeks Laura and Euna will be free. http://su.pr/2E4NWa #
  • Buy a pair of boots and have them delivered as a gift to a kid in North Korea. http://su.pr/30VbMb Boots by Sun Yang http://su.pr/9KPVXl #
  • NK Defectors resettling in America. If they don't know anyone they're sent to KY. http://bit.ly/CnCIj #
  • One NK refugee has been waiting in an Immigration Detention Centre in Thailand since Dec. 2006 for the U.S. to give her a visa. What's up? #
  • North Korea tests weapons on children. Unfortunately this is not news, it's been going on forever. Thanks @cephasung. http://bit.ly/3auo8k #

Posted in My Thoughts.

Tagged with , , , , , , , , , .


Kim Jong Il on eHarmony

Arowana Films created a humorous parody of eHarmony commercials.  Instead of your typical American couple this eHarmony commercial is about how Kim Jong Il and Penny met.

Kim Jong Il is played by the Korean-American comedian Danny Cho while Penny is played by his friend Grace Su aka Peachies.

The video is quite funny though the ending is somewhat jarring.  You can see it below hosted by YouTube.

I think this video is great because we need to raise awareness about the atrocities going on in North Korea any way we can.  You can see more videos like this at Kim Jong Il Jr.

Posted in Pop Culture.

Tagged with , , , , , .


North Korean Refugee Now Dancing

Joseph Kim’s father starved to death when he was thirteen.  His mother and sister went to China to look for food and he never heard from them again.  Joseph tried to survive by working fourteen hours a day in a coal mine and various other jobs.  But when he could not make ends meet he too fled to China.

In China he remained in hiding for a year until he found a LiNK safe house.  LiNK applied on his behalf for asylum in the U.S.  At the age of sixteen he arrived in the U.S. as the first North Korean unassisted refugee minor.

Now Joseph Kim is helping LiNK as a nomad, like the three nomads who are currently staying at my place and did the recent screening of Seoul Train.  You can see Joseph dancing in the video below, he is the one with the blue bandana.

It is amazing what can happen when just a few people show compassion.

Posted in Pop Culture.

Tagged with , , , , .


Seoul Train Screening Recap

On Tuesday, July 14 GRX had its first North Korea event, a Seoul Train screening by LiNK.  I along with eight others plus three LiNK volunteers watched this moving documentary.

I was both delighted and disappointed by the number that attended.  Delighted because just a few minutes before the screening was scheduled to start no one had yet come.  Delighted because the screening was done so last minute.  Disappointed because I know I could have and should have done a better job of scheduling and marketing.  When I did a similar screening in Boston over twenty people came.  I think the big difference was that screening had people from various churches but here my network is still small and I know very few people at other churches.

Though I have seen Seoul Train many times the documentary still moves me.  I am so appreciative of Jim Butterworth and Lisa Sleeth for producing this documentary.  I actually met Jim a couple of years ago and treated him to a nice lunch as a way of saying thank you.  He’s a great guy and lunch was a lot of fun.

Seoul Train is not an easy documentary to stomach because it is a series of real life tragedies, one after the other.  This documentary was made in 2004 and I know a little more now than when I watched it before about what happened to some of the North Korean refugees.  This knowledge made some parts of the film a little more difficult to watch.  For example, if you want to know what happened to the first group of refugees in this film, watch this interview of the missionary who led them.

But as difficult it was to watch it always inspires me to help the North Koreans who cannot help themselves.  North Korean refugees have no rights.  If they return to North Korea they will be brutally tortured and/or killed.  If they stay in China they must live in the shadows, at the mercy of traffickers and other exploiters.  They depend on the generosity of missionaries and other human right activists.

Pastor Dave Chae and I will debrief later to talk about the positives and negatives of this screening.  At the end of the screening I asked people if they might want to help in terms of doing other events like this or to get together to pray but I did not receive any response.  They are probably still trying to digest what they learned.  The encouraging thing is three people bought the Seoul Train DVD and one person bought Mike Kim’s Escaping North Korea.

Posted in Documentaries.

Tagged with , , , , , , , .


North Korea According to the Secret Asian Man

Secret Asian Man 2009-07-05

I couldn’t have summarized it better myself. 🙂

Updated 2009-08-18: Gil Asakawa posted about the illustration he purchased by the Secret Asian Man cartoonist Tak Toyoshima.  It’s of a very large Kim Jong Il chasing after Euna Lee and Kim Jong Il.

Posted in Pop Culture.

Tagged with , , , , , .


Seoul Train Screening in Silicon Valley

You are invited to a special presentation…

clip_image002

With its riveting footage of a secretive and dangerous Underground Railroad, Seoul Train is the gripping documentary that reveals the life and death of North Koreans as they escape their homeland as well as China.

This powerful documentary will be presented by LiNK (Liberty In North Korea). They are a non-profit organization working to expose the human rights violations happening in North Korea. They will also hold a Q&A session afterwards so please come out and learn about this gripping and tragic story going on in our world today.

Date & Time: Tuesday, July 14th at 7:00 PM—Admission is Free

Location: Foothill Covenant Church; 1555 Oak Avenue, Los Altos, CA

You can download the flyer here.  Please feel free to distribute and promote.

This is the Seoul Train trailer.

Posted in Events.

Tagged with , , , , .


Love North Korea

Recently I have spent time reflecting on what God has designed me to do.  I feel like one of those things is to somehow help North Korea.  I am not sure if I am right and I don’t know how to do it.

However over the past few months what has been impressed upon me is to just take small steps and let the Holy Spirit lead.  This is one of those first steps and I hope it was the right one.

Below is a famous satellite photo showing how dark North Korea literally is.  All around North Korea is light but North Korea is plunged in darkness.  This darkness is not only physical but is also symbolic of the horrible oppression the North Korean people endure.  North Korea is a country desperate for light, desperate for love.

North Korea is Dark

Posted in My Thoughts.

Tagged with , , .