October 15, 2007:
It's become more difficult to get
laid up north. For the past year, the North Korean secret police have shut down
the private rooms in restaurants, resorts and bars, where prostitution took
place. But the secret police were more concerned about the use of these rooms
for private conversations, than for illicit sex. The police believed that
criminals and corrupt officials, not to mention foreign spies, were using these
rooms for meeting and planning. The secret police are also down on
prostitution, as the women can be used as spies, to wheedle information out of
their clients.
October 14, 2007: Japan admitted that it is having
secret talks with North Korea to resolve various sensitive issues. The main one
is the North Korean kidnapping of Japanese in the past, and accounting for all
those taken. It was difficult to negotiate this in the open, so the talks have
been taken behind closed doors, where everyone can speak frankly, without
having to worry about media fallout.
October 13, 2007: South Korea is carving out a
place for itself in the international arms market. It is selling its new jet
trainer, the T-50 (which doubles as a light bomber) to Singapore, Greece, and
the United Arab Emirates. In addition, a new medium transport helicopter, to
compete with the U.S. UH-60 and similar models on the international market, is
in development.
October 12, 2007: Israel has acknowledged
that the September 6 air raid in Syria was to destroy a construction site where
North Korea was helping the Syrians to build a nuclear reactor, for the
production of nuclear bomb fuel. North Korea, which usually stays out of Middle
Eastern politics, loudly protested the Israeli raid, which Syria also protests,
but insists never took place. North Korea and Syria are both upset at the ease
with the Israelis got past the Russian made air defense systems. North Korea
uses similar equipment, and has sent officials to Syria to evaluate the
situation, and whether it's worth continuing the nuclear weapons program.
October 11, 2007: South Korea has agreed to
advocate international banking organizations, like the IMF (International Monetary
Fund) to resume lending to North Korea. That is unlikely, since North Korea
reneged on billions of dollars of foreign debts in the 1990s, and shows no
signs of having changed its attitudes. But the north is pressuring the south
for help in obtaining foreign loans. China has been pressuring the north to
reform its economy, and allow more foreign investment. But the north fears
losing control of an increasingly angry and restive population.
October 5, 2007: A meeting between top officials
from North and South Korea revealed the kind of aid the north was demanding,
and what concessions is was willing to make. Food and fuel are the most
desperately sought items. The north also wants help in upgrading regional
hospitals, which are decades behind in terms of medical equipment. In most
rural parts of North Korea, the only medical care you can get is first aid. The
north also wants the south to build them drug production plants, for simple
pharmaceuticals. The north will allow the south to install unrestricted
Internet access in the closed industrial parks in the north, where South Korean
firms have built plants that use very cheap northern labor. These "special
economic zones" have become problems for both Koreas. For the north, their
workers are exposed to South Korean managers and technicians, and find out how
bad off the north is. For the south, there are constant pressures to pay
bribes, or import forbidden goods. Recently, a southern firm was caught
illegally exporting special cloth needed to make commando parachutes. The
corruption in the north is partly the result of a tradition of secret police
tactics that allowed anything, as long as results were obtained. Thus
threatening or blackmailing the South Korean firms to smuggle in forbidden
(usually military) materials is probably widespread.