Tag: Seoul

  • Putin cautions South Korea against supplying of arms to Ukraine in war against Russia

    Putin cautions South Korea against supplying of arms to Ukraine in war against Russia

    Vladimir Putin has cautioned South Korea against supplying arms to Ukraine, labeling such a move as “a big mistake.”

    This warning follows Seoul’s consideration of arming Ukraine in response to the newly formed Russia-North Korea alliance, which includes a pledge to support each other against aggression.

    Putin indicated that Moscow would take actions “unlikely to please the current leadership of South Korea” if Seoul proceeds with its plan to arm Kyiv. He made these remarks while in Vietnam, following an elaborate visit to North Korea where he signed a mutual defense agreement with Kim Jong Un.

    Furthermore, Putin threatened that Moscow might provide military assistance to Pyongyang should the US and its allies persist in arming Ukraine.

    “Those who supply these weapons believe that they are not at war with us. I said, including in Pyongyang, that we then reserve the right to supply weapons to other regions of the world,” Mr Putin said.

    Seoul had earlier condemned the Russian-North Korean agreement as a threat to its national security, and national security adviser Chang Ho-jin had said his country planned to “reconsider the issue of arms support to Ukraine”.


    In response to President Putin’s statements, South Korea’s presidential office announced on Friday that it is considering “various options” for supplying arms to Ukraine, noting that their decision will “depend on how Russia approaches this issue.”

    Additionally, South Korea summoned Russian ambassador Georgy Zinoviev to express strong disapproval of the military agreement with North Korea, urging Moscow to “immediately cease” its cooperation with Pyongyang.

    This development follows a pledge of mutual support between Putin and Kim Jong-un against perceived aggression, with China playing a significant role in their growing alliance. Despite South Korea providing humanitarian aid and military equipment to Ukraine, it has refrained from sending lethal weapons due to its policy against arming nations at war.

    Some in Ukraine hope that the military collaboration between Russia and North Korea might prompt South Korea to reconsider its stance.

    During Putin’s visit to Pyongyang, Kim Jong-un expressed “full support” for Russia’s actions in Ukraine. There is mounting evidence that North Korean missiles are already being used by Russia in the conflict.

    John Kirby, spokesperson for the US National Security Council, commented on the Russian-North Korean pact, stating it should “concern any country that values peace and stability.”

    He added that the agreement was “no surprise” as the US had been alerting the international community about the developing defense relationship between the two nations for months.

    Japan also voiced its concerns, with government spokesperson Yoshimasa Hayashi labeling the agreement “unacceptable” and expressing alarm that President Putin did not rule out military technology cooperation with North Korea.

    Analysts warn that this treaty could have significant global and regional consequences. Not only might North Korea openly arm Russia, but Russia could also become involved in any new conflict on the Korean peninsula.

    Tensions remain high between the two Koreas, which are technically still at war and maintain a heavily fortified border.

    Recently, North Korean troops briefly crossed the border into South Korea on Thursday, retreating after warning shots were fired.

    This incident marks the third such occurrence in less than three weeks, with South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff suggesting the previous incidents appeared to be accidental.

  • Akufo-Addo in Korea to meet president Yoon Suk Yeol

    Akufo-Addo in Korea to meet president Yoon Suk Yeol

    President Akufo-Addo accepted an invitation from Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol and departed Ghana on Friday, May 31, 2024, for Seoul, Korea.

    He is leading the Ghanaian delegation to the Korea-Africa Summit, scheduled from June 4th to 5th, 2024, in Seoul.

    Accompanying President Akufo-Addo are Foreign Affairs Minister Hon. Shirley Ayorkor Botchway and officials from the Foreign Ministry, Trade Ministry, and the Presidency.

    The President is expected to return to Ghana on Thursday, June 6, 2024.

    During his absence, Vice President Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia will serve as Acting President, as per Article 60(8) of the constitution.

  • North Korea launches cruise missiles off coast of the east – Seoul reports

    North Korea launches cruise missiles off coast of the east – Seoul reports

    North Korea shot some missiles into the water on its east side, according to South Korea’s military.

    Recently, the country with nuclear weapons has been testing missiles a lot, causing tension in the area.

    The rocket was launched near the Sinpo port on Sunday. We don’t know how many or what kind of missiles there are yet.

    North Korea tested a new missile called Pulhwasal-3-31 on Wednesday, according to South Korea’s Yonhap news agency.

    South Korea’s military said they have been working with the United States to watch for any more actions from North Korea after the new launch at 08:00.

    In the past few months, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has been more aggressive in his policies and what he says, and has stopped some agreements that were meant to keep peace and has increased military action.

    Pyongyang said it tested a new missile and underwater drones in January. They claim the drones can carry a nuclear weapon.

    For the past two years, they have been launching missiles and developing weapons almost every month, ignoring UN sanctions.

    Earlier this month, Kim Jong Un said that the goal of reuniting with South Korea is no longer important. He said that South Korea is now the main enemy.

    This has made people worry that North Korea is getting ready for a war.

    South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol told his cabinet recently that if North Korea does something bad, South Korea will respond much more strongly, because its military is very powerful.

  • Head of Seoul police accused of tragic Halloween crush

    Head of Seoul police accused of tragic Halloween crush

    The leader of the police in Seoul has been accused of not doing his job after a Halloween accident that killed 159 young people in South Korea.

    Kim Kwang-ho is the top police officer who has been accused in connection to the tragedy, as reported by the local news.

    He is being blamed for not having enough police officers in Itaewon, central Seoul, on October 29, 2022.

    Over 100,000 people were in that place that night.

    Some of the families of the victims are glad that someone was charged, but they think it should have been done sooner.

    Mr Kim, who is in charge of the Seoul Police, was not working on 29 October when something bad happened. He was at home.

    Authorities say that 137 police officers were sent to Itaewon that night.

    There were a lot more young people in the Itaewon entertainment district than there were police officers.

    Something seemed wrong in 2022 just after 6:30 pm, a few hours before the deadly crowd accident happened in a side street.

    Most of the people who died that night were in their twenties.

    In January 2023, a report said that city and emergency responders did not plan well and did not respond to emergencies correctly.

    It was found that nothing was done to prevent the emergency, and the right actions were not taken after people asked for help.

    Investigators also said that because people didn’t understand what was happening, they didn’t share information on time and different groups didn’t work together.
    Map picture 2 .

  • At least 10 hurt in ‘rampage’ in South Korea near to Seoul

    At least 10 hurt in ‘rampage’ in South Korea near to Seoul

    An attack by a guy outside Seoul, South Korea‘s capital, left at least 10 people hurt.

    Just before 18:00 local time (09:00 GMT) on Thursday, the event took place close to a metro station in the commuter town of Seongnam.

    Some victims reportedly suffered stab wounds, while others were reportedly struck by the assailant’s vehicle.

    Later, the suspect was taken into custody there. Uncertainty surrounds the attack’s motive.

    The attack was referred to as a “rampage” by local media.

    Almost two weeks have passed since a previously unheard-of stabbing in Seoul. Three people were hurt, and one person died.

  • Find out why Man City, Atletico Madrid’s pre-season friendly was delayed

    Find out why Man City, Atletico Madrid’s pre-season friendly was delayed

    Manchester City’s pre-season friendly against Atletico Madrid in Seoul faced a half-hour delay due to torrential rain.

    Heavy rain in the South Korean capital caused the match to be postponed for at least 30 minutes, with images on social media revealing the pitch at the Seoul World Cup stadium submerged in water.


    Pep Guardiola fielded a full-strength starting line-up for the match against Diego Simeone’s Atletico Madrid, with Ederson in goal and Erling Haaland leading the attack.

    This match marked the third and final game of City’s tour of Asia, having previously secured a 5-3 victory against Yokohama F Marinos in Tokyo and a 3-1 win over Bayern Munich in the Japanese capital before arriving in South Korea.

    Following their Asian tour, Manchester City will take on Arsenal in the Community Shield on August 6, and their Premier League title defense will begin with an away fixture against Burnley on August 11.

  • South Korea lifts visa restrictions on Chinese visitors

    South Korea lifts visa restrictions on Chinese visitors

    Following prolonged tensions between the two countries over COVID, Seoul decided to remove visa requirements for Chinese visitors.

    In light of China’s improved COVID-19 situation, South Korea has decided to resume issuing short-term visas to visitors from China.

    The government made the decision to resume regular short-term visa application procedures at its consulates in China on Saturday after a Friday anti-virus meeting.

    However, officials warned that depending on how the virus evolved, the testing requirements might later be relaxed.

    The move marks the end of a long COVID-related restriction that had sparked tensions with Beijing.

    Seoul and Beijing at loggerheads

    In December, China abruptly ended its stringent “zero-COVID” policy, leading to a wave of infections.

    This raised the prospect of millions of Chinese travellers making their way abroad for the first time in three years.

    In January, while China battled a surge of COVID infection cases, Seoul stopped issuing most short-term visas.

    Travelers rush to take advantage of China reopening

    This raised business concerns, as South Korea depends heavily on exports to China.

    Seoul defended their actions, saying that the spread of the virus in China was creating concern over the possible emergence of new variants.

    It also accused the Chinese authorities of not being transparent with their COVID data.

    South Korea’s Vice Interior Minister Kim Sung-ho, who is in charge of disaster and safety management, said the move to lift restrictions came after the number of infections among Chinese arrivals dropped significantly.

    When the curbs were first introduced in January, 20% of Chinese travelers to South Korea had tested positive.

    Last week only 1.4% of Chinese travelers tested positive on arrival.

    Other restrictions, including testing requirements continue to remain in place.

    Travelers from China have to produce a negative test before departure and undergo a PCR test upon arrival in South Korea.

    Those who test positive are to stay quarantined for a week.

  • Itaewon crush: Officer under investigation discovered dead at home

    A South Korean police officer who was under investigation for the deadly Halloween crush in Seoul was discovered dead at his home, presumably by suicide.

    The 55-year-old, identified as Inspector Jeong, was a local police intelligence officer.

    Jeong was a suspect in an investigation into the police response to the crush, which tragically killed 156 people, mostly teenagers, and injured another 196.

    On Wednesday, he was suspended for allegedly covering up police failings.

    Jeong is accused of ordering coworkers to delete an intelligence report written ahead of the Halloween event that warned of the possibility of a serious incident occurring.

    Local media reports say a family member found the officer at 12:45 local time at his home in northern Seoul on Friday. Police are investigating the circumstances of his death.

    Most of those killed in the crush on 29 October were celebrating Halloween in the nightlife district of Itaewon for the first time since the Covid-19 pandemic.

    Some accounts say more than 100,000 had descended on the area that evening.

    The first call to police from Itaewon came at 18:34 local time, several hours before the deadly crush took place in an alley off the main road.

    Authorities said they had 137 officers on the ground at Itaewon that night. But they were outmatched by the many thousands that had flocked to the area.

    The entire local police department and fire service are currently being investigated for their role in failing to prevent and respond to the deadly crush.

    The victims’ parents and loved ones have pushed for accountability over Seoul police’s response and preparation ahead of the large event in the nightlife district of Itaewon.

    South Korea is in mourning, with many young people feeling let down by authorities.

    “I felt sad at first. But now I’m angry. I’m here because this incident could have been prevented. Those people were close to my age,” said 22-year-old university student Kang Hee-joo.

    Tens of thousands of people gather for a protest near to Seoul city hall regarding the Halloween crush disaster in Itaewon on November 5, 2022 in Seoul, South Korea.
    IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption, Thousands of people gathered in Seoul to protest the authorities’ response to the Halloween crush disaster in Itaewon

    On 5 November, thousands of people took to the streets for vigil-protests near Seoul City Hall Plaza.

    On stage, speakers took turns to rail against the government in speeches interspersed with mournful song performances and prayers recited by Buddhist monks.

    “Although the government clearly has responsibility, it is looking for perpetrators from irrelevant organisations… the incident occurred because the government did not play its very basic role,” said one speaker.

    “Step down, Yoon Suk-yeol’s government! Step down, Yoon Suk-yeol’s government!” the crowd chanted, waving their candles and placards.

    Thousands of people took part in a candlelight vigil to mourn the 156 people killed in the October 29 Halloween crowd crush, at Seoul City Hall Plaza, in Seoul on November 5, 202
  • North Korean missile lands near South Korean waters for the first time

    North Korea has launched the most missiles in a single day, and a ballistic missile has landed near South Korean waters for the first time since the countries’ division in 1948.

    North Korea launched at least 17 missiles off its eastern and western coasts on Wednesday morning, with one landing near the rivals’ tense sea border, according to South Korea’s military.

    Seoul responded quickly by launching missiles.

    It was the most missiles fired by the North in a single day – and the first time a ballistic missile had landed near the South’s waters since the countries’ division in 1948.

    “This is unprecedented and we will never tolerate it,” South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said.

    The missile landed outside South Korea’s territorial waters, but south of the Northern Limit Line (NLL), a disputed inter-Korean maritime border.

    It landed 35 miles from the South Korean city of Sokcho, on the east coast, and 100 miles from the island of Ulleung, where air raid warnings were issued.

    “We heard the siren at around 8.55 am and all of us in the building went down to the evacuation place in the basement,” an Ulleung county official said.

    “We stayed there until we came upstairs at around 9.15 am after hearing that the projectile fell into the high seas.”

    Yoon Suk-yeol, the South Korean president, said it was an “effective act of territorial encroachment”.

    South Korean warplanes fired three air-to-ground missiles into the sea across the NLL after Mr Yoon’s office pledged a “swift and firm response” so Pyongyang “pays the price for provocation”.

    South Korea is in a period of national mourning after more than 150 people were killed in a deadly crowd crush in the capital, Seoul.

    Hours before the missiles were launched, the North threatened to use nuclear weapons to get the US and South Korea to “pay the most horrible price in history” in protest over the two nations’ ongoing military drills that it views as an invasion rehearsal.

    Washington said the drills were “purely defensive in nature” and that the US had made clear to North Korea that it harbored no hostile intent towards the country.

    Today’s ballistic missile launches mark another step in what feels like an incremental but steady increase of tensions in the Korean Peninsula.

    Not only was this the closest a North Korean missile has come to the South Korean shore since the countries’ division in 1948, but it also comes shortly after its longest known missile flight yet over Japan in early October.

     

  • Lee Jihan, K-Pop Singer, dead at 24 after crowd tragedy in Itaewon

    K-pop singer and actor Lee Jihan has died. The young entertainer was among the victims of the horrific crowd surge tragedy in Seoul, South Korea. He was 24.

    Lee Jihan was one of 154 people killed in the incident, which occurred on Saturday in Itaewon, a busy nightlife district in the capital city.

    Lee Jihan first gained fame competing on the second season of the popular reality singing competition series Produce 101, where 101 contestants are all vying for a chance to join an 11-member K-pop group.

    After appearing on Produce 101, Lee Jihan made a foray into acting in 2019, appearing in the popular Korean drama series Today Was Another Nam Hyun Day.

    The actor’s agency, 935 Entertainment, released a statement to multiple outlets confirming the news.

    “We are sad to deliver such news today, but Lee Jihan has passed away in the crush in Itaewon last night,” the statement read. “We would like to express our deepest condolences to his family, who are saddened by the sudden tragic news, also to everyone who loved him.”

    Lee Jihan, K-Pop Singer, dead at 24 after crowd tragedy in Itaewon

    On Saturday, thousands of people assembled in the streets of Itaewon to celebrate Halloween festivities. However, the crowd size became overwhelming, leading to panic and an eventual fatal crowd surge.

    The death toll has continued to rise since the incident, with over 80 other people reported injured, and thousands of missing person reports filed in the days since the tragedy.

    Source:myjoyonline.com

  • Itaewon crush: South Korea police admit response was inadequate

    South Korea’s police chief has said crowd control during the Itaewon crush was “inadequate” – the first acknowledgement from officials that they did not do enough to prevent it.

    Amid growing calls for accountability, Yoon Hee-keun said he felt “limitless responsibility about public safety” over what happened.

    He vowed a full investigation.

    Interior Minister Lee Sang-min also apologised for the incident that killed 156 people and injured 152 others.

    It happened on Saturday night as crowds gathered in an alley in Itaewon, a popular nightlife district in Seoul, to celebrate Halloween without restrictions for the first time since Covid.

    Mr Yoon said police had received numerous calls before the accident happened, alerting them to the seriousness of the situation, but their response was lacking.

    Seoul police have told the BBC the first call to South Korea‘s emergency number came at 18:34 local time – hours before the deadly crush reportedly began – and there were 10 more calls over the next three-and-a-half hours.

    The police chief said the police response was “disappointing”. They would conduct a “speedy and rigorous intensive investigation” to see if proper action was taken after receiving the calls, and if officers had reacted appropriately.

    In a National Assembly meeting, Interior Minister Lee Sang-min made an apology to citizens. “It is very sad for me as a father who has a son and daughter… it is difficult to express in words how unreal this situation is, and it is difficult to accept this situation,” he said.

    Mr Yoon and Mr Lee’s comments follow growing public demands for accountability. But other authorities have sought to portray it as an accident which could not be easily blamed on anyone.

    notes near the scene
    Image caption, Notes left near the scene say the crush should never have happened

    The police earlier said they deployed more officers for this year’s Halloween festivities than they did for pre-Covid parties.

    One congressman on Tuesday also pointed out that because there was no main organiser for the party, there had been no special requests made to the police for crowd control and safety management.

    “It’s impossible to ask for legal responsibility, as nobody was responsible,” said Yoo Sang-bum, who is with the ruling People’s Power Party, on local radio.

    Prime Minister Han Duck-soo appeared to echo this line later at a foreign media briefing, saying it was “difficult to have safety control in advance” for an incident without an organiser.

    He said the government would review the issue of accountability only after a thorough investigation into the causes.

    But President Yoon Suk-yeol said on Tuesday the incident revealed the importance of crowd management and a lack of research in South Korea on the subject.

    “Rather than nitpicking about whether the event had an organiser or not, it’s the people’s safety that’s important, and we need to come up with thorough measures,” he said, while suggesting the use of drones and other digital capabilities to manage crowds in future events.

    President Yoon had been facing mounting political pressure and plummeting ratings even before the incident. Police have said they had to redirect some of their resources to elsewhere in the city on Saturday night to manage huge protests against the government.

     

     

  • How did Seoul Halloween celebration turn into a deadly crush?

    Live streams and videos from social media provide extra detail as to how a Halloween celebration turned disastrous in the South Korean capital.

    Packed into narrow alleyways lined with bars and clubs, thousands of people travelled to Itaewon, an area of Seoul, for the city’s first Halloween festival since the COVID-19 pandemic.

    But as the crowds grew throughout the night to unmanageable levels, the celebration turned disastrous as a crush in one alleyway left at least 154 dead.

    Sky News has analysed videos from social media to show how it took just 30 minutes for the situation to spiral out of control.

    They also confirm an apparent lack of police or security presence in the build-up to the crush.

    Halloween celebrations

    The revellers turning up for the celebrations were predominantly young, with many travelling to the area via Itaewon train station.

    Some live-streamed videos of their evening on Facebook. The screenshot below, taken from one of these livestreams, shows crowds beginning to form on the main road by the station at 8.10 pm.

    ...

    The main road is busy, but cars are still able to drive freely and there is still space between people.

    Over the following hours, the crowds grow in size. They funnel into a series of small side streets behind the main road around the Hamilton Hotel, highlighted in yellow on the map below. These streets are small and those running north to south slope steeply.

    The alleyways, highlighted in yellow, are where the crowds began to build.
    Image:The alleyways, highlighted in yellow, are where the crowds began to build

    At 10.06 pm, people can be seen in the main alleyway running east to the west still freely moving but slowly. Some people are holding each other to avoid being split up by the crowd as they pass an Irish bar in the background.

    Later, 150 metres east of where the footage above was shot, a denser crowd grew on one of the steep and narrow side alleys. People were so close to each other that any small movement rippled through the crowd.

    In the footage below pop music is heard blasting out amongst cries of anguish as the packed-in crowd sense danger.

    People in this street narrowly avoided disaster. It would be another steep alleyway on the other side of the Hamilton Hotel where the deadly crush would occur, highlighted in dark yellow below.

    The alleyway west of the Hamilton Hotel, highlighted here, was where the crush occurred.
    Image:The alleyway west of the Hamilton Hotel, highlighted here, was where the crush occurred

    This short video shows this alleyway west of the hotel earlier in the evening. The crowd is spread wall to wall across the narrow passageway – which sits on a 20% gradient – with no escape routes.

    Around the corner, Janelle Story, an eyewitness who spoke to Sky News, filmed her view as the crowd surged. This video was captured at 10.34 pm.

    The story told Sky News: “Very suddenly this wave of people just came rushing towards us with this incredible force and urgency, and at the moment I stopped filming because it got really serious and scary.”

    She was 40 metres from the western alleyway by the Hamilton Hotel where a crush was occurring. By matching the building exterior with existing imagery from Google Streetview, Sky News confirmed the footage was taken outside the Irish bar seen in the earlier video at 10.06 pm.

    In less than half an hour, a busy but free-flowing crowd had turned dangerous.

    The video (right) can be located by matching the front of the bar with existing imagery from Google Maps (left).
    Image:The eyewitness video (right) can be located by matching the front of the bar with existing imagery from Google Maps (left)

    By 10.45 pm it became clear something was very wrong. Livestreams from the main road show ambulances and emergency personnel heading toward the Hamilton Hotel.

    In the surrounding crowds, it also began to dawn on people a serious incident had occurred. One young man had been live-streaming the party on the street with his friends having fun. As they moved towards the Hamilton Hotel, the mood changed.

    At 11.15 pm he filmed the crowd parting the way as paramedics moved through with patients on stretchers.

    ..
    Image:A stretcher-bearer carries an injured person through the crowd on the main east-west alleyway

    The video below shows the scene that the emergency services were heading from. A surge had forced the crowd to fall over, likely made worse by the steepness of the alleyway.

    Emergency workers can be seen trying to free those caught in the crush. People try climbing the walls in an attempt to escape, whilst those on a small set of stairs leading to a side door into the hotel try to lift people to safety.

    Reports suggested some people were trapped for over an hour. Other videos posted online show paramedics and members of the public attempting CPR in the moments after the surge. These videos are too distressing to share.

    In the immediate build-up to the crush, few police officers or security personnel can be seen in the busy alleys on the livestreams analysed by Sky News. Questions are now being asked of the authorities’ management of the situation.

    A photo shows a scene of crowd surge accident where lots of people fell at Itaewon area in Seoul, South Korea on October 30, 2022. While lots of people were gathering prior to Halloween, 151 people died due to falling down one upon another.( The Yomiuri Shimbun via AP Images )
    Source: Skynews.com

     

  • Seoul Halloween: Almost everyone who died in the Seoul crush has been identified, police says

    The identities of nearly all those killed in an apparent crowd surge in Seoul’s popular nightclub district Itaewon on Saturday have been confirmed, according to Seoul Metropolitan Police.

    Police confirmed the identities of 150 people killed on Sunday, according to CNN.

    The disaster claimed the lives of 153 people.

    The three unidentified bodies are all young women whose nationalities have yet to be confirmed, they added.

    The Seoul Metropolitan Government had said they had received 4,024 missing person reports as of 5 p.m. local time (4 a.m. ET), though some of these reports could relate to the same people.

    Police said there is no active search for those reported missing as they believe no one went missing from the scene. They said thousands of missing person reports have been used to help identify those killed in the incident.

     

  • Rising tensions: The two Koreas exchange warning shots along the sea boundary

    The moves come amid increased tensions over North Korea’s onslaught of nuclear tests.

    North and South Korea have fired warning shots off their western coasts, accusing each other of breaching their maritime border amid rising tensions over Pyongyang’s nuclear tests.

    South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said it broadcast warnings and fired warning shots to repel a North Korean merchant vessel that crossed the Northern Limit Line (NLL), the de facto sea boundary, at approximately 3:40 am local time on Monday (18:40 GMT Sunday).

    North Korea’s military said it fired 10 rounds of artillery warning shots toward its territorial waters, where “naval enemy movement was detected”. It accused a South Korean naval ship of intruding into North Korean waters on the pretext of cracking down on an unidentified ship.

    “We ordered initial countermeasures to strongly expel the enemy warship by firing 10 shells of multiple rocket launchers near the waters where the enemy movement occurred,” the North Korean People’s Army said in a statement carried by the official KCNA news agency.

     

    JCS said the North Korean artillery firings breached a 2018 inter-Korean accord on reducing military animosities and undermining stability on the Korean Peninsula. It said the North Korean shells did not land in South Korean waters but that it is boosting its military readiness.

    There were no reports of clashes, but the poorly marked sea boundary of the Korean Peninsula’s west coast is a source of long-running animosities between the two countries. It is the scene of several bloody inter-Korean naval skirmishes and violence in recent years, including North Korea’s shelling of a South Korean island and its alleged torpedoing of a South Korean navy ship that killed 50 people in 2010.

    The latest exchange of fire came amid simmering tension, with North Korea carrying out weapons tests at an unprecedented pace this year.

    In recent weeks, North Korea has launched short-range ballistic missiles and hundreds of artillery rounds off its east and west coasts on several occasions in protest over its southern neighbour’s military activities.

    South Korea’s troops kicked off their annual Hoguk defence drills last week, designed to run until October 28, and boost their own and combined ability with the United States to counter North Korea’s nuclear and missile threats. The two allies are also set to hold joint air force drills next week involving some 240 warplanes, including F-35 fighters operated by both nations. The drills are aimed at inspecting the two countries’ joint operation capabilities and improving combat readiness, the South Korean military said on Tuesday.

    Pyongyang has reacted angrily to the exercises, calling them provocations and threatening countermeasures. Seoul and Washington say their exercises are defensive and aimed at deterring North Korea.

    “Pyongyang’s politics of blaming external threats and projecting confidence in military capabilities can motivate greater risk-taking,” said Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University in Seoul. “North Korean probing of South Korean perimeter defenses could lead to a serious exchange of fire and unintended escalation.”

     

     

  • The nuclear threat from North Korea hangs over Kamala Harris’s trip to Asia

    Washington issues a warning ahead of the US Vice President’s trip to South Korea, saying that North Korea might conduct a nuclear test while she is there. Ballistic missile tests by Pyongyang continue to ratchet up the critical situation.

    As US Vice President Kamala Harris visits Seoul this week, the US, South Korea, and Japan are closely monitoring North Korea’s Punggye-ri nuclear test site.

    North Korea has carried out over 30 missile tests in 2022 and US officials are warning that Pyongyang could use Harris’s visit as an opportunity to carry out a seventh nuclear test, and the first since 2017.

    “We have made clear that such a test would result in additional actions by the US to demonstrate our ironclad commitment to the security of the Republic of Korea and to our Japanese allies,” an unnamed White House official told reporters during a background conference call last week.

    “We have made clear how concerned we have been by North Korean provocations and destabilizing behavior, and a nuclear test would certainly be in that category,” the official added.

    North Korea on Sunday test-fired a short-range ballistic missile into the Sea of Japan, one day before the US and South Korean troops began combined naval exercises.

    Satellite images of North Korea’s Sinpo naval dockyards, on the east coast, suggest that a new submarine, capable of firing ballistic missiles, is about to be launched.

    Kamala Harris shaking hands with Fumio KishidaKamala Harris met with Japanese PM Fumio Kishida in Tokyo on Monday

    Major US-South Korea military drills

    On Monday, the US and South Korea kicked off four days of joint military maneuvers with at least 20 warships and dozens of aircraft.

    The 101,000-ton aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan is leading a US battle group made up of guided-missile destroyers and the USS Annapolis, a Los Angeles-class fast attack submarine. It is the first joint US-South Korea exercise with an aircraft carrier since 2017.

    In a statement, the South Korean military said the drills are aimed at showing “powerful resolve to respond to North Korean provocations” and improving capabilities to perform joint naval operations.

    On Monday, Kim Song, the head of the North Korean mission to the United Nations, said that US-led exercises are “an extremely dangerous act” that could push the region “to the brink of war.”

    “The security environment of the Korean Peninsula is now caught in a vicious cycle of tensions and confrontation due to the growing hostility of the United States and its following forces against the DPRK [North Korea],” he added.

    Will North Korea test nukes?

    During a visit to South Korea by US President Joe Biden in May, intelligence officials warned that North Korea was “preparing” for a nuclear test during the visit.

    Biden’s visit was not greeted with any North Korean weapons testing, nuclear or otherwise. However, hours after the US president ended his Asia trip, Pyongyang test-fired three ballistic missiles.

    Infografik Raketenreichweiten Korea EN

    This time around, analysts suggest North Korean leader Kim Jong Un could consider putting off a nuclear test in order to not overshadow Chinese President Xi Jinping and the upcoming Chinese Communist Party conference. But that is not a given.

    “There are limits to Pyongyang’s self-restraint,” said Leif-Eric Easley, an associate professor of international studies at Ewha Woman’s University in Seoul.

    “The Kim regime sees itself in an arms race with South Korea and may be looking to make up for a lost time after its pandemic struggles,” he underlined.

    “Significant North Korean missile tests can contribute to national pride and send international signals. Pyongyang could be making a show of strength while a US aircraft carrier is visiting South Korea for defense exercises,” the expert said.

    “North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs are in violation of international law, but Kim tries to depict his destabilizing arms buildup as a righteous effort at self-defense,” and tests are part of a “long-term campaign for advancing offensive military capabilities,” he added.

    The bigger picture for Asian security

    Yakov Zinberg, a professor of international relations specializing in East Asian affairs at Tokyo’s Kokushikan University, told DW that the latest saber-rattling on the Korean Peninsula “is all part of a sequence of actions and reactions among interlocking alliances that inevitably encompass the Taiwan situation and Ukraine.”

    “Harris’s visit is a message that the US remains committed to its allies and partners in the region and is a warning to North Korea not to get any closer to Russia,” he added. North Korea has denied US reports that it has been providing weapons to the Russian military as sanctions squeeze Moscow’s supply.

    Kim Jong Un threatens to use nuclear weapons if attacked

    On Harris’s itinerary will be a visit to the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) dividing North and South Korea, which symbolizes tensions on the Peninsula since the Korean War ended in 1953 without a peace treaty formally ending hostilities.

    Park Jung-won, a professor of international law at South Korea’s Dankook University, told DW the vice president’s visit to the DMZ is “highly symbolic.”

    “Pyongyang’s provocations are an effort to take advantage of the global turmoil at the moment and Harris’s visit is largely designed to underline the strength of the alliance with South Korea,” he said.

    Park added that tensions between China and Taiwan also feed into larger strategic calculations in Northeast Asia.

    In an interview earlier this week, South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol said that in the event of a conflict breaking out around Taiwan, North Korea is expected to launch an attack against South Korea.

    “I agree with that assessment,” said Park, adding that China and North Korea recognize the strategic advantage of simultaneous conflicts on the Korean Peninsula and Taiwan and the challenges that would pose to the defending states.

    “The US and South Korea must engage in discussions and draw up a detailed action plan for this sort of scenario,” Park said.

  • South Korean stalking laws sparks fury after a subway murder

    In the capital of South Korea, Seoul, a plaque bearing the phrase “Women Friendly Seoul” can be found outside the women’s lavatory at a train stop.

    The phrases, which were intended to reassure women of their safety, have taken on a fatal irony.

    Last week, inside the restroom, a young woman who worked at the station was brutally murdered. The man suspected of killing her had been stalking her for years.

    The wall underneath the plaque has since become a shrine of messages left as notes, with women and men of all ages coming to express their fury, fear, and sorrow.

    “I want to be alive at the end of my workday,” reads one. “Is it too much to ask, to be safe to reject people I don’t like?” reads another.

    The mother of a teenage girl cries as she scans the messages. “Where have we gone so wrong?” she asks, now questioning whether to allow her daughter to travel to school alone.

    Shocking murder

    The details of this murder have shocked the country. The 28-year-old had been working her usual evening shift at the subway station, unaware she was being watched.

    Her alleged attacker, 31-year-old Jeon Joo-hwan, waited for over an hour outside the toilets, wearing gloves and a disposable shower cap, before following her inside and stabbing her to death.

    It was the day before he was due to be sentenced for stalking her.

    People have left Post-it note messages at the murder scene expressing their anger and fear
    Image caption, People have left Post-it note messages at the murder scene expressing their anger and fear

    The harassment started in 2019, a year after the pair began working together. Jeon called his colleague more than 300 times begging her to date him, threatening to harm her if she refused.

    When she reported him last October, he was fired from his job and arrested. But despite a police investigation and a request to the courts for him to be detained, he was never imprisoned or given a restraining order.

    The victim was placed under police protection for a month until they concluded there was nothing significant to report. Jeon then continued to threaten and stalk.

    Since their daughter’s death, her parents and two younger sisters have barely left the funeral home, where her body still lies, surrounded by flowers from remorseful politicians.

    The family is devastated, not only by their loss but because she never told them what she was going through. So traumatized is her mother, she struggles to speak. She has decided to protect her daughter’s identity.

    The victim's uncle looks at flowers sent to the funeral home where his niece's body lies
    Image caption, The victim’s uncle looks at flowers sent to the funeral home where his niece’s body lies

    “We never worried about her,” her uncle tells me. “She was so smart and independent”. With pride he recalls how she was top of her class, winning herself a scholarship to a university in Seoul.

    As the oldest of three girls, she looked out for her sisters. These past years she had shown no sign of suffering, he says, suggesting this was because she had not wanted to burden them.

    The only person she confided in was her lawyer, who she last messaged on the morning of her murder, the day before her stalker’s sentencing. “We are almost there”, she wrote.

    Her family is now watching, along with the rest of the country, as the horrifying details of her case unfold. They have exposed weaknesses in South Korea’s stalking laws and led to accusations the country does not treat violence against women seriously enough.

    Anti-stalking laws

    Until last year, stalking was classed as a misdemeanor, punishable only by a small fine. An anti-stalking law was finally passed in October, but many argued it was insufficient and would not protect victims, primarily because of its stipulation that a perpetrator can only be prosecuted with the consent of the victim.

    This loophole, they say, makes it possible for stalkers to bully their victims into withdrawing cases – in the same way Jeon attempted to threaten his victim. Jeon reportedly told police he murdered her because he resented her for taking legal action.

    A note posted outside the subway station reads ‘how many more women need to die for this country to change?’
    Image caption, A note posted outside the subway station reads: “How many more women need to die for this country to change?”

    Data obtained by the BBC from South Korea’s National Police Agency shows that since the stalking law came into force last year, 7,152 stalking arrests have been made, but only 5% of the suspects were detained. In cases where police applied to the courts to get the suspect detained, one in three requests were denied.

    South Korea’s President Yoon Suk-yeol has acknowledged the country’s stalking laws are insufficient and has ordered the Justice Ministry to strengthen them.

    Prof Lee Soo-jung, a criminal psychologist who advises the government, says she could not sleep after she heard about the murder. “We were not able to protect her, so yes, we failed her,” she admits.

    The professor is recommending the ministry remove the clause that requires victims to agree to a prosecution. Meanwhile, the Supreme Court has proposed that stalking suspects who are not detained should be given restraining orders.

    But despite these promises, anger is growing. This week, hundreds of people gathered in Seoul dressed in black, to protest and mourn the victim.

    She was failed, the protestors shouted, by her employer, the police, and the courts, making her death symptomatic of a much bigger problem. They fear it could happen to any of them, that no space is safe.

    Safe spaces

    It has evoked memories of a similar murder six years ago, when a woman in her 20s was stabbed to death in a public restroom near Gangnam station, by a man who later said he killed her as revenge for all the women who looked down on him.

    To the protesters, this murder is proof that nothing has changed. “We’ve been fooled before, that change is coming”, the organisers bellowed over the loudspeakers. “Let’s see what happens this time.”

    “We don’t need new laws,” said Choi Jin-hyup, director of the group Women Link. “What we need is to change authorities’ attitudes towards victims.” She blames the government, which has tied itself in knots over women’s rights.

    During the recent election campaign, the president pledged to close the Gender Equality Ministry, declaring it obsolete because structural sexism no longer existed. When the gender minister visited the scene of the murder, she told reporters she did not believe this was a case of gender-based violence. There are now calls for her to resign.

    23-year-old museum curator Lee Chai-hui doesn't feel safe as a young woman in Korea
    Image caption, Museum curator Lee Chai-hui, 23, does not feel safe as a young woman in South Korea

    At the subway station, 23-year-old Lee Chae-hui lays a white flower and bows her head.

    “I’m very angry,” she says. “We keep reporting these crimes as just another mindless murder, but women are continuously stalked and attacked, and our politicians are ignoring it. People talk about how South Korea is a safe place, but as a woman in my 20s I can’t relate to this at all, I feel I live in a very dangerous society.”

    Chae-hui’s friends have a phrase they use to congratulate each other: “We survived another day.”

    The sentiment is echoed in dozens of Post-it messages asking: “How many more women need to die for this country to change?”