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Saturday, 12 March 2016

Life Atop North Korea, Then A Ghastly Death

SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA:  In late 2013, Jang Song Thaek, an uncle of Kim Jong Un, the North Korean leader, was taken to the Gang Gun Military Academy in a Pyongyang suburb.

Hundreds of officials were gathered there to witness the execution of Jang's two trusted deputies in the administrative department of the ruling Workers' Party.

The two men, Ri Ryong Ha and Jang Su Gil, were torn apart by antiaircraft machine guns, according to South Korea's National Intelligence Service. The executioners then incinerated their bodies with flamethrowers.

Jang Song Thaek, widely considered the second-most powerful figure in the North, fainted during the ordeal, according to a new book published in South Korea that offers a rare glimpse into the secretive Pyongyang regime.

"Son-in-Law of a Theocracy," by Ra Jong-yil, a former deputy director of the South's National Intelligence Service, is a rich biography of Jang, the most prominent victim of the purges his young nephew has conducted since assuming power in 2011.

Jang was convicted of treason in 2013. He was executed at the same place and in the same way as his deputies, the South Korean intelligence agency said.

The book asserts that although he was a fixture of the North Korean political elite for decades, he dreamed of reforming his country.

"With his execution, North Korea lost virtually the only person there who could have helped the country introduce reform and openness," Ra said during a recent interview.

Ra, who is also a professor of political science and a former South Korean ambassador to Japan and Britain, mined existing publications but also interviewed sources in South Korea, Japan and China, including high-ranking defectors from the North who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Jang met one of the daughters of North Korea's founder, Kim Il Sung, while both attended Kim Il Sung University in the mid-1960s. The daughter, Kim Kyong Hee, developed a crush on Jang, who was tall and humorous - and sang and played the accordion.

Her father transferred the young man to a provincial college to keep the two apart. But she hopped in her Soviet Volga sedan to see Jang each weekend.

Once they married in 1972, Jang's career took off under the patronage of Kim Jong Il, his brother-in-law and the designated successor of the regime.

In his memoir, a Japanese sushi chef for Kim Jong Il from 1988 to 2001 who goes by the alias Kenji Fujimoto remembered Jang as a fun-loving prankster who was a regular at banquets that could last until morning or even stretch a few days. A key feature of the events was a "pleasure squad" of young, attractive women who would dance the cancan, sing American country songs or perform a striptease, according to the book and accounts by defectors.

Jang also mobilized North Korean diplomats abroad to import Danish dairy products, Black Sea caviar, French cognac and Japanese electronics - gifts Kim handed out during his parties to keep his elites loyal.

But North Korean diplomats who have defected to South Korea also said that during his frequent trips overseas to shop for Kim, Jang would drink heavily and speak dejectedly about people dying of hunger back home.

Few benefited more than Jang from the regime he loyally served. But he was never fully embraced by the Kim family because he was not blood kin. This "liminal existence" enabled him to see the absurdities of the regime more clearly than any other figure within it, Ra wrote.

Ra said Hwang Jang Yop, a North Korean party secretary who defected to Seoul in 1997 and lived here until his death in 2010, shared a conversation he once had with Jang. When told that the North's economy was cratering, Jang responded sarcastically: "How can an economy already at the bottom go further down?"

Jang's frequent partying with the "pleasure squad" strained his marriage. Senior defectors from the North said it was an open secret among the Pyongyang elite that the couple both had extramarital affairs.

Their only child, Jang Kum Song, killed herself in Paris in 2006. She overdosed on sleeping pills after the Pyongyang government caught wind of her dating a Frenchman and summoned her home.

Still, the marriage endured. When Kim Jong Il banished Jang three times for overstepping his authority, his wife intervened on his behalf.

After Kim suffered a stroke in 2008 and died in 2011, Jang helped his young nephew, Kim Jong Un, establish himself as successor. At the same time, he vastly expanded his own influence - and ambition.

He wrested the lucrative right of exporting coal to China from the military and gave it to his administrative department. He purged his rivals, including Ri Yong Ho, the chief of the military's general staff, and U Dong Chuk, a deputy director at the Ministry of State Security, the North's secret police.

Jang's campaign for more influence was apparently aimed at pushing for the kind of economic overhaul that China has introduced, Ra wrote. But he underestimated how unpalatable the idea was to Kim Jong Un, whose totalitarian rule would be undermined by such reform.

Ra said it was impossible to establish the exact sequence of events that led to Jang's downfall. But it was clear his hubris played a role. At the height of his power, photographs in the North Korean media showed Jang leaning on an armrest, looking almost bored, while his nephew spoke.

Announcing his execution, North Korea said Jang, "human scum worse than a dog," had betrayed the Kim family by plotting to overthrow the younger Kim, using economic collapse as a pretext, and to rule the country himself as premier and "reformer."

He was accused of planting his followers in key posts and profiteering from minerals exports. His indictment pointedly noted that Jang had stood up and clapped only "halfheartedly" when Kim was being upheld as supreme leader.

In 2013, Kim, after hearing complaints about Jang's expansion of power, ordered his department to relinquish the management of a fishing farm and a condensed milk factory. But officials loyal to their "Comrade No. 1," Jang, blocked those who arrived to carry out Kim's orders from entering their premises.

It was probably the last straw for Kim, still unsure about himself and extremely sensitive about any challenge to his supposedly monolithic leadership. Meanwhile, Jang's enemies in the secret police were eager to go after him.

"There was no indication that he had a lawyer or was allowed to speak for himself during his trial," Ra said. "It was not a trial but a murder."

Jang's name has been expurgated from all official records in the North. Hundreds of his associates were purged. His wife is alive but sickly, according to the South Korean intelligence agency.

But some people in Pyongyang still remember his role in the tall apartment buildings, water parks and other showpiece projects he once zealously promoted to glorify his nephew's nascent leadership.

SECTIONSHOME | WORLD Search here... COMMENT Japan Region Seeks Full-Time 'Ninjas' For Tourism

TOKYO, JAPAN:  Wanted: six full-time ninjas who have a way with words and can do backward handsprings. Pay: about $1,600 a month.

Central Japan's Aichi prefecture said it is hiring full-time ninjas -- the martial-arts masters and stealth special assassins of feudal times -- to promote tourism in the area known for historic Nagoya castle.

Newly hired ninjas will receive a one-year contract with monthly pay of 180,000 yen ($1,580) plus bonus, said Satoshi Adachi of the prefectural government's tourism promotion unit.

They will also perform acrobatics, demonstrate the use of their trademark "shuriken" -- ninja star -- weapons and pose for photographs with tourists, he told AFP on Friday.

A poster the prefecture created says the ideal candidates are ones who "enjoy being under the spotlight even though he or she is a secretive ninja".

Japanese speaking ability is preferable, but non-Japanese individuals passionate about history and tourism are welcome as the troupe will sometimes perform in English, Adachi said.

"Our ninjas also have to be good at talking to promote tourism, although ninjas are basically required to be secretive," he said.
They also "have to be able to do backward handsprings and some dance moves", he added.

Successful candidates will go through a one-month training course in April.

The prefecture is accepting applications until March 22. Men and women aged 18 or above of any nationality can apply.

Nowadays ninjas are mostly confined to history books and fiction.

But they are also used to promote Iga, some 350 kilometres (220 miles) southwest of Tokyo, a city near the ancient imperial capital of Kyoto that was once home to many ninjas.

And last year, governors and mayors from prefectures around the country traded their usual  suits for ninja costumes to announce the launch of a "ninja council".

The not-so-stealthy move comes as local governments turn to tourism as an economic growth driver ahead of the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo.

Government And Opposition Far Apart Over Assad Before Syria Peace Talks

BEIRUT:  Syria's government on Saturday ruled out any discussion of the fate of the presidency at peace talks this week, just as the lead opposition negotiator said a political transition could not even start unless Bashar al-Assad was no longer president.

The statements reflected the huge challenges facing diplomats as they prepare for talks to resume in Geneva on Monday, trying to build on a ceasefire deal that has reduced violence sharply since February 27.

Foreign Minister Walid al-Moualem confirmed his government's participation but said the talks would fail if the opposition had "delusions that they will take power in Geneva that they failed to take in battle".

He also heaped criticism on UN envoy Staffan de Mistura for already presenting an agenda for the talks and for saying that a presidential election would take place in 18 months.

"The government delegation will reject any attempt to put this on the agenda," Moualem told a televised news conference.

"We will not talk to anyone who talks about the position of the presidency ... I advise them that if this is their thinking, they shouldn't come to the talks."

Within hours, opposition negotiator Mohamad Alloush, already in Geneva, had described Moualem's comments as worthless.

"We consider that the transitional period starts with the fall of Bashar al-Assad or his death," he told reporters. "There's no possibility to start this period with the presence of this regime or the head of this regime in the power."

Another negotiator, Monzer Makhous, said Moualem was "putting the nails in the coffin of Geneva".

The talks will coincide with next week's fifth anniversary of a war that has killed more than 250,000 people, created the world's worst refugee crisis, and allowed for the expansion of the ISIS militant group.

They are part of the first diplomatic push since the Russian air force intervened in September to support Assad, tilting the war his way and helping Damascus reclaim significant areas in the west.

The ceasefire agreement, brokered by the United States and Russia, has been more widely respected than many expected, though fighting has continued on some important fronts, including near the Turkish border.

TRANSITIONAL BODY

Alloush's High Negotiations Committee (HNC) has praised the agenda outlined by de Mistura focused on governance, a new constitution and elections.

The HNC wants to focus on a transitional governing body with full executive powers as outlined in a 2012 Geneva communique in an early bid to end the conflict.

A UN Security Council resolution approved in December called for the establishment of "credible, inclusive, and non-sectarian governance", a new constitution, and free and fair elections within 18 months.

Moualem indicated that a "national unity government" with opposition participation was the most on offer, an idea ruled out by the HNC.

He said the government delegation would be willing to discuss de Mistura's agenda and would travel to Geneva on Sunday, but would return to Damascus within 24 hours if the other side did not show up.

As far as the government was concerned, "political transition" meant a transition from the existing constitution to a new one, and from the existing government to a new one with participation from the other side, he added.

KURDS

The diplomacy has been complicated by disputes over who should be invited to negotiate with the government.

The Kurdish PYD party, which holds sway over wide areas of northern Syria, has so far been excluded from the talks in line with the wishes of Turkey - which sees the PYD as an extension of the PKK rebels fighting for Kurdish autonomy inside its territory.

Moualem said the Syrian army and the Kurds were in "one trench" fighting ISIS, apparently in reference to the YPG militia, the PYD's armed wing, which has been battling the jihadist group in northern Syria with support from US-led air strikes.

But Moualem ruled out the idea of federalism, one of the ideas backed by the PYD and mentioned by a Russian minister as a possible model for Syria.

The Russian Defence Ministry said it had registered 10 ceasefire violations in the previous 24 hours, but the truce was largely being respected.

Rebels did, however, shoot down a Syrian government warplane over western Syria on Saturday, rebels and a military source said, although there were conflicting accounts on whether it had been brought down by a missile or anti-aircraft guns.

Rebels have previously shot down Syrian warplanes with anti-aircraft guns.

They have asked foreign backers to supply them with anti-aircraft missiles but say they have not received any, reflecting fears that they could fall into the hands of ISIS.

Donald Trump Says Protestor Who Disrupted Rally Is 'Probably An ISIS Supporter'

WASHINGTON:  A protestor tried to storm the stage while Donald Trump was speaking at a rally in the US state of Ohio but the Republican presidential front-runner brushed aside the latest incident of chaos at his events saying the man was "probably" an ISIS supporter.

The incident that took place on Saturday in Dayton city of Ohio came a day after Trump cancelled his campaign rally in Chicago citing security concerns after hundreds of people gathered at the arena to protest against his "politics of hatred" and scuffled with his supporters in the largest-ever demonstration against the real estate tycoon.

"He (the protestor) should be in jail. This guy is probably an Islamic State (ISIS) supporter. They (the court) let him go. Our court has to get tougher and smarter," Trump told his supporters in the Kansas City of Missouri last night.

Trump was referring to the incident in the morning when an individual tried to jump on to the stage and probably rush towards him to harm, before a battery of secret service agents got hold of him and cordoned off Trump.

A few minutes later the Republican presidential front-runner continued with his speech. Protestors have been following Trump's rallies like a shadow, which is unprecedented in the American political election campaigns history.

Yesterday at Kansas -- his last of the three rallies of the day where the protests continued -- he warned that he would start charging the protestors.

"These people should be in jail. Then their lives is going to be ruined," he said.

"Arrest her," Trump asked the police when a woman started protested against him in the middle of his speech in Kansas.

The billionaire said the protestor in Dayton who tried to harm him was either an ISIS supporter or was a part of it.

Referring to the information available on the internet, searched by his team, Trump alleged that there are enough evidence in this regard like burning American flags.

The protestor who was produced before a local court was let off.

Trump opposed the protestor being let off and claimed that such a dangerous person should be in jail.

"He is not in love of the country," Trump said.

While reiterating that he would follow the law, Trump, at a rally, said that he is in favour of water boarding.

"It works," he said.

"I am a non-violent person," Trump said as he explained to the cheering crowd as to why he was for a strong stand against terrorist groups.

Syria Rebels Say They Shot Down Warplane In Hama Province

BEIRUT:  Syrian rebels and a group monitoring the conflict said insurgents had shot down a warplane over western Syria on Saturday, although there were conflicting accounts on whether it had been brought down by a missile or anti-aircraft guns.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said a rebel group had brought down the jet in Hama province by firing two heat-seeking missiles, saying the plane was most probably Syrian. But a rebel group operating in the area, Jaish al-Nasr, said it had brought down the jet with anti-aircraft guns.

There was no immediate word from the Syrian military.

Syrian rebels have previously shot down Syrian warplanes with anti-aircraft guns.

They have called on their foreign backers including Saudi Arabia to supply them with anti-aircraft missiles to confront Syrian and Russian warplanes. But they have said these weapons have so far not been provided, reflecting concerns that they could end up in the hands of groups such as ISIS.

Rocket Fired From Syria Hits South Turkey

ISTANBUL:  At least three rockets fired from Syria hit the Turkish border town of Kilis on Saturday but no-one was injured, the local governor's office said.
    
The firing came after eight rockets launched from an area of Syria held by the ISIS killed a woman and a four-year-old boy in Kilis on Tuesday, prompting return fire from the Turkish army.

On Saturday, two rockets landed in the garden of a military barracks and a building housing officers' families before a third hit the town, the Dogan news agency reported.

State-run news agency Anatolia said Turkish forces opened fire Saturday afternoon against Syrian positions held by ISIS, without specifying whether it was in retaliation for rockets hitting Turkish soil.

ISIS is not included in the landmark Syrian ceasefire deal between regime forces and rebels in force since February 27.

3 Indian Students Killed In Road Accident In UAE's Sharjah

DUBAI:  Three Indian students were killed today when the car they were travelling in collided with another vehicle in the UAE's Sharjah city.

The incident took place on Al Dhaid-Al Madam Road in Sharjah in the wee hours today.

Ashmid Ashraf, Muhammad Shifam and Mohammad Shounoub were returning to Dubai after a short holiday when they met with the accident. All the three students were from Kerala, Gulf News reported.

The three students were killed on the spot. The driver of the other vehicle in the accident was injured and admitted to a nearby hospital.

Colonel Haran Mubark Al Jazai, acting police director of Eastern Region, said the vehicle carrying the students caused the accident.

He said the student's vehicle entered the road from a prohibited area and collided with another vehicle which was travelling on its path.

Ashraf from Kozhikode and Shifam from Kannur were studying at Middlesex University in Dubai. Shounoub was also from Kozhikode, the report said.

The Kerala Muslim Cultural Community is making efforts to get the bodies released for repatriation to Kerala, it said.

"Middlesex University Dubai students and staff mourn the loss of our students Ashmid Ashraf, Muhammad Shifam and their friend Mohammad Shounoub in a tragic accident.