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Moon urges US move towards formally ending Korean War
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Oct 12, 2018

Chinese action debut and South Korean family drama win at Busan
Busan, South Korea (AFP) Oct 13, 2018 - A thrill-a-minute actioner from China and a moving South Korean drama about a unique family reunion have taken the top prize at Asia's largest film festival, with judges lauding both for their "original" takes.

"Savage", from first-time Chinese director Cui Si-wei, pits a forest ranger against gold thieves in a snowy mountain range and won praise from the New Currents award jury at the Busan International Film Festival (BIFF) for being "strikingly accomplished and riveting".

South Korean production "Clean up", from debut feature director Kwon Man-ki, charts the tale of a struggling woman who is offered a salvation of sorts when she meets someone from her past.

It is a film with "perfect control and masterful psychological development," the jury statement read.

BIFF's New Currents award comes with prizes of $30,000 for the two most impressive efforts from first- or second-time Asian filmmakers and there had been a buzz around town after screenings of "Savage" in particular. The film now looks certain for wide commercial release in China and beyond.

Veteran South Korean director Kim Hong-joon, who led the New Currents jury, said the judges were unanimous in their decision to award "Savage" its prize.

"[It shows] a mastery of genre cinema, with multi-dimensional characters and thrilling action sequences," said Kim.

Other highlights of this year's BIFF included a documentary section that featured films that scratched away at the region's political and social scars.

The gripping Taiwanese effort "Opening Closing Forgetting", from director James T. Hong, looked at how Chinese farmers survived human experimentation by occupying Japanese forces during the Second World War, but have never really recovered from the horrors they were put through.

It took the BIFF Mecenat Award for best documentary -- winning praise from the award panel for its "profound dedication to its story" -- along with Kelvin Park's "Army", which shed light on lives led by South Korea's military conscripts.

- Nod to a martial arts master -

BIFF draws to a close Saturday night with the gala world premiere of martial arts master Yuen Woo-ping's "Master Z: The Ip Man Legacy", a branch off from the franchise of Hong Kong-produced box office hits which were centred around the life of the man famous for teaching Bruce Lee.

This time the story focuses on one of the men Ip Man fought, played in the film by rising martial arts star Max Zhang who must face off against an evil drug lord played by Hollywood's David Bautista ("Guardians of the Galaxy"), among others

It will be the first time in its 23-year history that BIFF has brought the curtain down with a martial arts or action film. It is a fitting tribute to the 73-year-old Yuen, the man who added the action to the likes of Oscar-winner "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" (2000), and both "The Matrix" and "Kill Bill" franchises.

"It is a great honour," said Yuen after a press preview screening of the film. "Film has always been my life. I think that martial arts films are full of humanity and I hope to share that with the world."

The Busan festival will by its close on Saturday night have screened 324 films from 79 countries across its varied programmes -- including 115 world premieres -- and just over 195,000 people attended over the ten days, a boost for organisers who came in to this year's event having shrugged off a few years of political pressure and controversy.

It all started in 2014 with the screening of a documentary about the Sewol ferry disaster of that year -- which resulted in the deaths of more than 300 people.

It was critical of the then government and both funding cuts and sackings followed its screening but the air has now cleared under the government of President Moon Jae-in.

South Korean President Moon Jae-in called Friday on the United States to move towards the nuclear-armed North's demands for a declaration the Korean War is over, as the allies pursue increasingly different approaches towards Pyongyang.

Washington has shied away from a formal announcement that the 1950-53 conflict, when hostilities ceased with an armistice rather than a peace treaty, has ended, saying that the North must first take more steps towards giving up its atomic arsenal.

For its part Pyongyang -- which long insisted it needed nuclear weapons to defend itself against a possible US invasion -- has pledged only to work towards denuclearisation "of the Korean peninsula", demanding simultaneous moves by Washington in return, with a peace declaration its first priority.

"The North has stopped all nuclear and missile tests, dismantled its only nuclear test site and is now dismantling its missile engine test facilities, and is promising to take steps toward dismantling its Yongbyon nuclear complex if the US takes corresponding measures," Moon told the BBC.

"Declaring the end of the war is a political declaration that the US would end decades of hostile relations with the North," he said.

"Moving towards such a process is the corresponding measure the US should take," he added, according to a transcript released by the presidential Blue House.

The comments, made ahead of Moon's departure Saturday for a tour of European capitals, emphasise the increasing differences between Seoul and Washington, which has 28,500 troops stationed in the South to defend it from its neighbour.

Experts say the offers made by the North will have little impact on its military capabilities, and Pyongyang itself has said it has no further need to test its weapons.

But Moon said Kim understood denuclearisation meant more than closing testing facilities.

It also included "dismantling facilities that produce nuclear weapons and develop missiles", he said, "and it includes everything else, such as getting rid of existing nuclear weapons and nuclear materials".

Pyongyang has made no such declaration in public, and missiles were included in the designs of propaganda posters on display in the capital last month, when it celebrated the 70th anniversary of the foundation of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, as the country is officially known.

- 'Bold agreements' -

The dovish Moon has long favoured engagement with the North, which is subject to multiple UN Security Council sanctions over its nuclear and ballistic missile programmes, and visited Pyongyang last month for his third meeting with leader Kim Jong Un.

Moon has dangled large investment and joint cross-border projects as incentives for steps towards denuclearisation, with Seoul opening a joint liaison office in the North Korean border city of Kaesong last month and promising to pursue cross-border road and rail projects.

Earlier this week Moon's foreign minister Kang Kyung-wha told parliament Seoul was reviewing its own sanctions against the North. She later backtracked, saying she had misspoken, and her ministry said no active review was in place.

In response to Kang's remarks, Trump said: "They won't do it without our approval. They do nothing without our approval."

The United States, which spearheaded global efforts to squeeze the North Korean economy last year, has been adamant that the sanctions remain in place until Pyongyang's "final, fully verified denuclearisation".

But after a visit by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to Pyongyang, Trump said this week that a second summit between him and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un could happen after the US midterm elections in early November.

Kim and Trump traded personal insults and threats of war last year before a rapid rapprochement culminated in their historic first meeting in Singapore in June, although critics said their joint statement saw Kim make only a vague commitment towards denuclearisation, with no concrete measures.

Moon expected Kim and Trump to make "bold agreements" in the upcoming summit, he told the BBC, adding he remained "very optimistic" about their talks.

Seoul said separately that the two Koreas will hold high-level talks at the border on Monday to discuss how to implement the agreements made at last month's Pyongyang summit, when Moon and Kim vowed to meet again in Seoul "at an early date".

The South's unification minister Cho Myung-gyon will led Seoul's delegation to the meeting in the border truce village of Panmunjom, his ministry said in a statement. It was not yet clear which North Korean officials would take part.


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NUKEWARS
China, Russia push to ease N. Korea sanctions as Seoul mulls options
Seoul (AFP) Oct 11, 2018
China and Russia have backed easing sanctions on Pyongyang "at an appropriate time", as South Korea's foreign minister said Seoul was mulling lifting its own measures, threatening cracks in global restrictions on the nuclear-armed North. Pyongyang is sanctioned under multiple UN Security Council resolutions over its weapons programmes and has repeatedly called for the measures to be loosened, citing a freeze in its nuclear and missile tests. At three-way talks in Moscow, vice foreign ministers f ... read more

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