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Showing posts with label Asia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Asia. Show all posts
North Korean soldiers
July 29, 2016: North Korea publicly executed six officials in charge of supervision of its workers overseas in May following the defection of 13 workers at a North Korean-run restaurant in China a month earlier, a local Pyongyang watcher said.

"North Korean leader Kim Jong-un ordered six officials, including intelligence officials, to be executed publicly on May 5 due to their lack of control over overseas (North Korean) workers," Choi Seong-yong, chairman of the Abductees' Family Union, claimed, citing people familiar with the matter.

Eighty public officials and 100 people who have their family members working overseas were forced to watch the execution, he said.

In early April, a group of 12 women and one man fled from a North Korea-run restaurant in China's eastern port city of Ningbo and defected to South Korea. 

In the following month, three female workers at a North Korean restaurant in the midwest city of Shanxi reportedly defected to the South.

"North Korea locked the families of the defectors up and forced them to take ideological education at a training facility in Myohyang Mountain, in the northern part of the communist country," Choi said.

The North Korean authorities have argued the workers didn't defect to the South but were kidnapped by the South Korean government. 

Source: Yonhap, July 29, 2016

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"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed, but by the punishments that the good have inflicted." - Oscar Wilde

North Korea: 6 officials responsible for April defection publicly executed


The State Administration of Cultural Heritage (SACH) will launch a campaign to crack down on criminal damage to the Great Wall.

China to crack down on damage to Great Wall
Visitors to the Great Wall of China just north of Beijing 
[Credit: AFP/Getty Images]
The campaign will involve regular inspections and random checks on protection efforts by authorities in 15 provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities.

The SACH will open a special tip line for information about violations and damage to the Great Wall from the public.

Built from the third century B.C. to the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), the Great Wall stretches over 21,000 kilometers from the northwestern province of Gansu to north China's Hebei Province.

According to SACH statistics, about 30 percent of a 6,200-km section of the wall built in the Ming Dynasty has disappeared, and less than 10 percent is considered well-preserved.

The Great Wall has faced threats from both nature and humans. Earthquakes, rain, wind and other natural elements have left the wall with many decayed and crumbling bricks.

Human activities, such as reckless development by some governments and theft of bricks by local villagers for use as building materials, as well as agriculture near the wall, have damaged the landmark, according to research by the China Great Wall Society.

A lack of protection efforts in remote regions and a weak plan for protection have also contributed to the damage, the society added.

In 2006, China released a national regulation on Great Wall protection. However, Great Wall experts have urged local authorities to draw up more practical measures to better implement the regulation.

This year, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region included Great Wall protection expenditures in its budget. The government of Fangcheng City, Henan Province, began a campaign for conservation experts and local residents to work together to protect the wall.

Source: Xinhua Net [August 02, 2016]

China to crack down on damage to Great Wall

Peter Gardner
Peter Gardner
The New Zealander arrested in China in 2014 for allegedly trying to leave the country with 30 kilograms of methamphetamine is still in jail awaiting a verdict.

Peter Gardner has been in a Chinese jail cell for over a year, after he was stopped at Guangzhou Baiyan International Airport and allegedly caught with $25 million of meth in his bags.

Speaking on The Nation, China's ambassador to New Zealand Wang Luton said a decision on his verdict is still being discussed, and the death penalty is a possibility.

"I think our people in China are still working on this case, and China is a country of the rule of law. We will do anything according to the rule of law," he said.

He said the death penalty has been effective in fighting crime, but authorities are cautious about carrying it out.

"The local government, the local court, couldn't decide for the death penalty. They've got to submit this to what could be the Supreme Court for the final decision. There are very strict procedures to go through for the final decisions."

He said the fact it is a New Zealander facing the death penalty is being discussed, but he cannot say more.

Peter Gardner maintains his innocence and claims he was carrying a drug precursor, which is legal in China.

Source: Newshub, July 16, 2016

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Opposed to Capital Punishment? Help us keep this blog up and running!


"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed, but by the punishments that the good have inflicted." - Oscar Wilde

New Zealander Peter Gardner still awaiting verdict on meth charges in China