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Top diplomats kick off Japan, China, S.Korea meeting
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Aug 23, 2016


UN Command condemns N. Korea mine-laying on border
Seoul (AFP) Aug 23, 2016 - North Korea has been laying fresh landmines on its side of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) with South Korea, the UN Command said Tuesday, following a spate of high-profile defections.

Military personnel were seen planting mines on the North's side of a river crossing known as the Bridge of No Return -- close to the border truce village of Panmunjom, a spokesman for the UN Command, which oversees the Korean War armistice, told AFP.

In a statement the UN Command "strongly" condemned the Korean People's Army (KPA) activity.

"The presence of any device or munition on or near the bridge seriously jeopardises the safety of people on both sides," it said.

The statement added that thousands of visitors -- often school-aged children -- take part in tours to the DMZ.

Despite its name, the DMZ separating the two Koreas is one of the world's most heavily militarised frontiers, bristling with watchtowers and landmines.

It acts as a buffer zone, stretching two kilometres on either side of the actual frontier line.

Because the 1950-53 Korean War ended with an armistice rather than a formal peace treaty, the two Koreas remain technically at war.

The UN Command declined to "speculate" on why the KPA was engaged in laying fresh mines. But South Korea's Yonhap News Agency cited a military source as saying it may be an attempt to prevent front-line troops from defecting.

Cross-border Korean tensions are currently running high, with North Korea on Monday threatening nuclear strikes as South Korea and the United States began a large-scale military exercise which Pyongyang views as a provocative rehearsal for invasion.

The North has also been rocked by a series of defections, most recently that of its deputy ambassador to Britain who fled to the South in a major propaganda victory for Seoul.

Yonhap said the South Korean military was using banks of loudspeakers along the border to crow about the defection.

In August last year South Korea accused North Korea of planting landmines that maimed two soldiers on border patrol.

Foreign ministers from Japan, China and South Korea kicked off a two-day meeting in Tokyo on Tuesday with their countries at odds over territorial disputes, a US missile defence system and perennial regional problem North Korea.

Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida, China's Wang Yi and South Korea's Yun Byung-Se met for dinner at a Tokyo hotel ahead of the start of formal talks on Wednesday.

The three shook hands and smiled for cameras without making any remarks before starting their meal.

The talks are the first since March of last year and come ahead of the Group of 20 summit in China early next month.

"It is extremely important for the foreign ministers of the three countries that play major roles in the region to gather together and exchange opinions frankly," Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told reporters earlier.

The meeting comes as Sino-Japanese tensions over a territorial dispute have spiked this month, while China and South Korea have sparred over the planned deployment in the latter country of a US anti-missile system.

The Tokyo-Seoul relationship is also prone to periodic tension due to the legacy of Japan's wartime aggression.

Japan and China are locked in a long-running dispute over uninhabited islets, called the Senkaku in Japan and the Diaoyu in China, in the East China Sea, with tensions over them a frequent hindrance to closer ties.

Tokyo has lodged more than than two dozen protests through diplomatic channels since August 5, saying there have been about the same number of intrusions by Chinese vessels into its territorial waters.

"We will deliver Japan's thinking directly and clearly," a foreign ministry official said regarding the dispute with China. "It is important for us to send our message firmly."

The visit by China's Wang marks the first by a Chinese foreign minister to Japan since Xi Jinping became president in March 2013.

Separately, China has complained about the planned deployment of the US Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system in South Korea, arguing the missile shield goes against its own national security interests and warning it will heighten regional tension.

South Korea, wary of offending China, had wavered, but went ahead in the face of North Korea's continued missile development.

North Korea, meanwhile, is likely to be a key topic at the meeting, though finding common ground will be difficult

Japan and South Korea regularly condemn Pyongyang for its nuclear and missile development, and feel frustrated by what they see as a lack of pressure on the country by China, seen as its economic lifeline.

Bilateral meetings between Kishida and his Chinese and South Korean counterparts are also scheduled.

The three-way meeting is expected to be followed later this year by a summit. The leaders met in November last year in South Korea.

N. Korea rolls out on-demand TV service
Seoul (AFP) Aug 23, 2016 - North Korea is rolling out an on-demand TV catch-up service, allowing people with some sort of internet access to enjoy the highly-propagandised output of its four state-run TV channels at their leisure.

The system, which goes by the name "Manbang" ("Everywhere"), functions like a sharply pared-down Netflix with an on-demand service menu that divides programming by channel and genre.

Viewers can scroll through the day's programmes -- usually aired during a 3:00pm-11:00pm window -- and select a particular TV show to watch at their leisure.

A programme introducing the service that aired on Korean Central Television (KCTV) last week said it was available to any institute, company or household that subscribes to North Korea's state-operated intranet.

The number of intranet subscribers in North Korea is unknown, but KCTV said "hundreds" of people had signed up to the Manbang service in Sinuiju -- one of three cities where the system is being rolled out.

Set up in 2000, the intranet only allows access to selected, government-approved websites and mostly functions as a communication platform between government agencies, universities, industry and commerce.

Outside of hotels catering to foreigners, access to the full-blown Internet in North Korea is for the super-elite only -- a few hundred people or maybe 1,000 at most.

The KCTV programme interviewed a housewife who explained how she had been able to perfect a recipe by watching and re-watching her favourite cooking programme.

The new service "demonstrates a technological advancement," said Martyn Williams, editor of the North Korea Tech website.

"But it is unclear how many apartment buildings and houses in North Korea have access to the kind of high-speed data service that such a service relies on," Williams said.

The service also provides access to selected study sources, suggesting it could be used to enhance distance learning.


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