Articles by Shin Hyon-hee
Shin Hyon-hee
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Kerry urges Korea, Japan to mend ties
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry on Thursday urged South Korea and Japan to work to overcome historical animosities and improve their relations to better counter North Korean threats and other challenges together. After their talks in Seoul, Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se and Kerry also renewed calls for Pyongyang to demonstrate its commitment to denuclearization through actions. Though Kerry displayed respect for “deeply felt historical differences,” he said that positive relations between Seo
North Korea Feb. 13, 2014
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Koreas to reconvene over family reunions
The two Koreas will reopen talks on Friday on the planned reunions of separated families after their first high-level dialogue in seven years ended with no agreement due to differences over upcoming Seoul-Washington military drills, the Unification Ministry said Thursday. The meeting will start at the border village of Panmunjeom at 10:00 a.m., led by Kim Kyou-hyun, vice chief of the South’s presidential National Security Office, and Won Dong-yon, deputy head of the United Front Department of th
North Korea Feb. 13, 2014
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No agreement reached at inter-Korean dialogue
The two Koreas failed to reach an agreement during their first high-level talks in seven years on Wednesday due to differences over planned Seoul-Washington military drills.Senior officials from the two sides met at the truce village of Panmunjeom to discuss pending issues ahead of reunions of separate families slated for Feb. 20-25.During the 12-hour marathon talks, the North “constantly demanded” Seoul’s postponement of the Key Resolve and Foal Eagle exercises until after the event. The joint
North Korea Feb. 13, 2014
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Koreas to hold high-level talks
The two Koreas will hold their first high-level talks in seven years on Wednesday, the Unification Ministry said Tuesday, as the North ramps up efforts to put their strained relations back on track. The meeting will open at the truce village of Panmunjeom at 10:00 a.m. led by Kim Kyou-hyun, vice chief of the presidential National Security Office, and Won Dong-yon, deputy head of the United Front Department in the North’s ruling Workers’ Party. The vice ministerial contact will mark the first hig
North Korea Feb. 11, 2014
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‘North Korea, Japan held secret meeting’
An adviser to Japanese Premier Shinzo Abe held a meeting with North Korean officials in China in October, a news report said Tuesday, kindling speculation that Tokyo is seeking to reopen talks with Pyongyang over the issue of Japanese abductees. In response to the Kyodo News report, South Korea cautioned against any unilateral move by Japan regarding Pyongyang. “Japan’s talks with North Korea should be conducted in close communication and coordination with South Korea and the United States,” For
North Korea Feb. 11, 2014
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Former U.S. envoy to Seoul visits Pyongyang
A former U.S. ambassador to South Korea on Monday visited Pyongyang, apparently to try to secure the release of an American detained there, AP Television reported. Donald Gregg, a former Central Intelligence Agency official who served as Washington’s ambassador to Seoul from 1989-93, was leading a four-member delegation of the Pacific Century Institute, a non-governmental organization based in the Los Angeles area. The goal of his mission remains unclear, as it coincides with Pyongyang’s cancell
North Korea Feb. 10, 2014
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S. Korea, U.S. to stage military drills despite N. Korea protest
South Korea and the U.S. plan to undertake their annual military drills starting later this month despite North Korea’s threats to renege on a planned reunion of separated families. The Key Resolve and Foal Eagle exercises will begin on Feb. 24 and run through Mar. 6 and April 18, respectively, with the aim of ensuring the allies’ joint combat readiness, Defense Ministry spokesman Kim Min-seok said. The announcement came days after Pyongyang threatened to “reconsider” the agreement to hold the f
North Korea Feb. 10, 2014
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UNESCAP eyes multifaceted partnership with Korea
This is the first installment in a new series featuring the growing number of United Nations offices in Korea. ― Ed.The U.N. Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific seeks to broaden cooperation with Korea’s government, private sector and civil society to help the country play a bigger role in promoting sustainable development and inclusive growth in the region. In an interview with The Korea Herald, Kilaparti Ramakrishna, director of its East and Northeast Asia office located in
Foreign Affairs Feb. 9, 2014
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Koreas to hold family reunions Feb. 20-25
The two Koreas on Wednesday agreed to hold reunions of families displaced by the 1950-53 Korean War from Feb. 20-25 at Mount Geumgangsan, the Unification Ministry said. The decision was made at working-level talks at the North’s side of the border village of Panmunjeom. Three officials from each side took part in the meeting, which followed the North’s offer two days ago. The reunion would be the first such event in more than three years. About 100 families from each side would reunite with thei
North Korea Feb. 5, 2014
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‘East Sea’ bill passes Virginia legislative panel, headed to floor
A legislative committee at Virginia’s lower house on Monday endorsed a bill calling for the use of the name “the East Sea” in school textbooks together with “the Sea of Japan” as the state’s Korean community intensifies its longtime campaign. The House of Delegates’ education panel passed 18 to 3, sending the bill to the plenary session expected to vote Thursday. It requires new school textbooks to note that the body of water between Korea and Japan is also called the East Sea. The legislation,
Foreign Affairs Feb. 4, 2014
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Gaeseong launches electronic entry system
GAESEONG ― The two Koreas introduced an electronic identification system to their joint factory park in Gaeseong on Tuesday, marking a major operational step forward which will facilitate travel for South Korean businesspeople.More than 20 people crossed the border early in the morning through the radio frequency identification system in a test-run, where they scanned their ID cards embedded with an electronic chip for a faster and easier immigration procedure. In the past, South Koreans were re
North Korea Jan. 28, 2014
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Seoul proposes Feb. 17-22 reunions
South Korea on Monday formally proposed holding reunions of separated families on Feb. 17-22 at Mount Geumgangsan, welcoming the North’s belated acceptance of its earlier offer. Seoul also suggested a working-level meeting between the two countries’ branches of the Red Cross on Wednesday for the event’s arrangement at the North side of the border village of Panmunjeom. The message, delivered through a border telephone line, was a follow-up to Pyongyang’s offer on Friday of the first family gathe
North Korea Jan. 27, 2014
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Seoul snubs N. Korea overture, calls for action
South Korea on Friday once again turned a cold shoulder to the North’s offer of reconciliation, demanding action to prove its resolve to break from the past pattern of overtures followed by provocations. While welcoming Pyongyang’s pledge to cease slander, Seoul warned the communist neighbor against “attempting to evade responsibility for its previous military provocations by suggesting leaving behind the unsavory past.” “North Korea is insisting that its ‘crucial proposals’ don’t constitute a
North Korea Jan. 24, 2014
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Kidnapped Korean official freed in Libya
A Korean trade official abducted in Tripoli was released after Libyan authorities arrested the gunmen Thursday, capping a three-day kidnapping that prompted Seoul to issue a travel alert and highlighted the instability of the North African country. Han Seok-woo, head of the Korea Trade-Investment Promotion Agency’s Libya unit, was handed over uninjured to the Korean Embassy in the capital at about 4:15 a.m., Seoul time, the Foreign Ministry here said. He was kidnapped by four men while heading h
Foreign Affairs Jan. 23, 2014
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[Newsmaker] Korea-Japan tension rises over memorial
Tension is intensifying further in Northeast Asia after Japan protested the launch of new facilities devoted to a Korean independence fighter in China, triggering strong condemnation from Seoul. Tokyo’s Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga on Monday slammed the memorial hall that opened a day before to honor Ahn Jung-geun, who fatally shot Japan’s first Prime Minister Hirobumi Ito in Harbin in 1909 in protest against its colonial rule. Suga said Ahn was a “terrorist sentenced to death” for the
Foreign Affairs Jan. 21, 2014
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