UPDATE 1-IMF chief sees risks from surge in capital flows

DAEJEON, South Korea, July 12 (Reuters) – Asia has emerged as a global economic powerhouse but is faced with policy challenges from rising capital inflows and needs to watch out for possible shocks from Europe, the IMF’s chief said on Monday.

Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn admitted to mistakes the International Monetary Fund made in helping several Asian countries overcome the 1997-1998 financial crisis but said its efforts eventually paid off by making the region more sound.

Strauss-Kahn also said during a conference, co-hosted by the IMF and the South Korean government, that it was working on ways to enhance or redesign its existing lending facilities and that details would be available by November.

“We may have made mistakes. Who doesn’t?,” he said during the conference in the central South Korean city of Daejeon. “We have learned how big the danger of volatile capital flows is and how big those capital flows may be.”

At the same conference, South Korean Finance Minister Yoon Jeung-hyun urged the IMF to take steps to help prevent another financial crisis, repeating the country’s call for a strengthened network of financial safety nets.

“I belive the IMF has an important contribution to make, by proposing and enacting concrete and realistic measures to strengthen financial safety nets around the globe,” Yoon said.

Yoon said efforts from developing countries were not sufficient to withstand external shocks on increases in volume and high volatility of capital flows.

Strauss-Kahn also acknowledged the argument that the IMF’s prescriptions offered in return for rescuing Asia’s emerging economies of South Korea, Thailand and Indonesia during the 1990s crisis could have been better structured.

“We have learned also that we need to focus conditionality on the real problems, not having a long list of conditions that may have little to do with the problems at stake,” he said at the conference on Asia’s growing role in the global economy.

He warned of remaining downward risks mainly involving the fiscal crisis in Europe.

“Obviously Europe is today with low growth and some risks of crisis on the fiscal side, which means that policymakers need to remain attuned to negative shocks including capital inflows,” he said.

He repeated his previous view that the U.S. dollar will remain the world’s major reserve currency for a long time, saying it will take a long time before alternatives such as the IMF’s special drawing rights (SDRs) emerge as a reserve money. (Additional reporting by Cheon Jong-woo; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)

U.N. response on S.Korea ship raises calls for North talks

SEOUL, July 9 (Reuters) – The U.N. Security Council’s likely adoption of a statement on the sinking of a South Korean war on Friday without explicitly blaming the North will begin to shift focus to disarmament talks aimed at reining in Pyongyang.

The conclusion of a month-long diplomacy orchestrated by South Korea and the United States with a Council president’s statement will also likely mean the levelling off of tension fuelled by threats of war, analysts said.

“This bodes well for the six-party talks, in the way the wording stresses peace and security in Northeast Asia, which also has China’s role as mediator in mind,” said Baek Seung-joo of the state-affilaited Korea Institute for Defence Analyses in Seoul.

South Korea had hoped to see the Council adopt a new resolution with binding sanctions imposed on its neighbour as punishment for what it sees as a torpedo attack launched from a submarine that intruded into disputed waters.

Diplomats at the U.N. said a draft statement circulated on Thursday by the United States condemned what it called an attack leading to the sinking of the Cheonan but stopped short of unequivocally blaming the North.

The draft has been agreed by the five permanent council members, including Pyongyang’s ally China, and will likely be put to a vote when its 15 member states meet again on Friday at 1330 GMT, U.N. officials said. [ID:nN08234035]

“This falls short of the (South Korean) government’s plan to hold the North responsible at the Security Council and to put sanctions,” Baek said.

South Korea, Japan and the United States already have sanctions in place aimed at punishing the North for the sinking of the corvette Cheonan in March that killed 46 sailors, and Seoul may impose more as it had pledged to do in its aftermath.

The president’s statement, with the absence of a blame laid on the North, reflected the traditional course of diplomacy taken by China and also Russia that was often based on self interest over what other states presented as hard evidence, Baek said.

“China’s interest in this case was to check against U.S. control over the Korea issue,” he said.

The six-way talks by the two Koreas, the United States, Japan and Russia and hosted by China had been stalled since late 2007 and its core agreement to compensate Pyongyang in return for moves to end its nuclear programme appeared to lose all momentum as the North defied warnings and tested a long-range missile and set off a nuclear device in 2009, drawing more U.N. sanctions.

Analysts said those sanctions squeezed the North’s failed economy deeper into hardship and drove Pyongyang’s leaders to take provocative actions to divert attention from domestic woes and boost the stakes for disarmament talks. [ID:nTOE65R07W]

“As long as Kim Jong-il’s ‘military-first policy’ is in place, we can’t rule out the possibility of a second and third Cheonan incident,” said Ha Young-sun, international relations professor at the Seoul National University.

The Security Council statement will also ease discord between China and South Korea, a major investor and trading partner and may help to disperse friction between them that flared over large scale naval drills in the Yellow Sea.

Cai Jian, professor of Korean studies at Fudan University in Shanghai, said China, South Korea and others were searching for a compromise to put the worst of the recent discord behind them.

“This (draft) statement would be impossible unless the various sides were willing to compromise. China is compromising by going ahead with the statement that raises serious concern about the Cheonan, and South Korea has backed away from demanding that North Korea is condemned by name.” (Additional reporting by Chris Buckley in Beijing; Editing by Sugita Katyal)

PRESS DIGEST – South Korean newspapers – June 14

June 14 (Reuters) – The following is a summary of major South Korean newspapers on Monday prepared by Reuters in Seoul. Reuters has not checked the stories and does not guarantee their accuracy.

Technology

KOREA ECONOMIC DAILY

Hynix (000660.KS) a signed a “poison put” arrangement with creditors as fears arose of possible hostile takeover attempts, after creditors sold 5 percent of their shares and revealed plans to sell 5 percent more sometime this month, which could reduce their total holdings to 16 percent, according to a company source.

Every win by the South Korean national football team during the 2010 World Cup will have an economic value of around 2.5 trillion won ($2.01 billion), and if the team was to reach the next round of 16 the rise in public morale would be unmeasureable, according to a local research institute.

DONG-A ILBO

Close to 1 million people gathered at local plazas to cheer the South Korean national team during the World Cup match against Greece on Saturday, with big LCD screens placed in key locations throughout the city to provide live coverage of the match.

South Korea president Lee Myung Bak will visit Toronto to attend the G20 leaders summit beginning on June 26, and will also take the opportunity to visit Panama and Mexico once the summit is over, according to a Blue House spokesman.

MAEIL BUSINESS NEWSPAPER

A number of South Korean government websites were hit by denial of service (DDoS) attacks, but no damages were reported as authorities quickly spotted the attacks and blocked access, according to the Ministry of Public Administration and Security. ($1=1245.9 Won) (Reporting by Suh Kyung-min; Editing by Jonathan Hopfner)

Bernanke: Emerging markets play stabilizing role

May 30 (Reuters) – U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said the world economy depends ever more on emerging markets to maintain strong domestic growth and economic and financial stability.

Bonds | Global Markets

“Improvements in emerging market policies and policy frameworks … have ramifications beyond the emerging market economies themselves,” Bernanke said in video-taped remarks prepared for delivery to a conference sponsored by the Bank of Korea in Seoul on Monday morning.

Bernanke did not discuss the outlook for the U.S. economy or interest rates.

Actions taken by the South Korean government and the Bank of Korea since the Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s helped Korea weather the crisis that swept economies around the world in 2007-2009, he said.

Korea had amassed a budget and trade surplus and pushed banks to prepare for shocks, Bernanke said. In addition, the Korean central bank’s move to focus on domestic price stability rather than on stabilizing exchange rates also helped the country during the turmoil, he said.

As a result of a formal inflation-targeting regime adopted by Korea’s central bank in 1998, it could lower rates during the crisis without scaring investors off, Bernanke said.

“In earlier crises, foreign investors were not inclined to give emerging market policy makers the benefit of the doubt when they promised low inflation and sustainable fiscal policies,” he said. (Reporting by Mark Felsenthal; Editing by Leslie Adler)

South Korea, Japan make show of unity over North Korea

South Korea and Japan on Saturday vowed to stand united against North Korea ahead of a regional summit likely to press China over its reluctance to blame Pyongyang for the sinking of a South Korean ship.

Leaders of the three big northeast Asian powers are meeting in Seogwipo, a honeymoon resort on the South Korean island of Jeju, for a summit that was meant to boost plans for greater regional cooperation and economic integration.

Instead, the quarrel between North and South Korea has stolen the limelight. The two sides of the divided, heavily armed peninsula are at odds after a South Korean warship was sunk in late March, killing 46 sailors, and Seoul has since concluded that North Korea was responsible.

The mounting antagonism between the two Koreas has unnerved investors, worried the confrontation could erupt into conflict. Many analysts say that neither side is ready to go to war but warn there could be more skirmishes, especially along their disputed sea border off the west coast.

In talks over two days, South Korean President President Lee Myung-bak, Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama and Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao are likely to dwell the dispute, which has opened a breach between China and its neighbours, both of whom back firm international action against Pyongyang.

“Japan wholeheartedly supports South Korea,” Hatoyama told Lee in a bilateral meeting ahead of the main three-way summit, according to a South Korean government statement.

China counts neighbouring North Korea as a friend and a buffer against the other, U.S.-allied neighbours. It has stayed away from condemning Pyongyang, saying it needs to consider the evidence and urging restraint on all sides.

Wen held to that position in a meeting with Lee on Friday, but he also said Beijing would protect nobody found culpable for the sinking.

“Premier Wen especially stressed that China has always advocated and worked for peace and stability on the Korean peninsula, and opposes and condemns any action that wrecks that peace and stability,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang told reporters in Seoul on Friday, describing Wen’s talks with Lee.

“The more complicated the situation, the more we have to bear in mind the broader context,” Qin added.

Beijing’s reticence makes for tricky diplomacy for Seoul, which will need China’s backing or abstention from voting to get through a U.N. Security Council statement or resolution criticising North Korea over the sinking. As a permanent member of the Security Council, China can veto such actions.

The leaders of South Korea and Japan made a show on unity over that issue on Saturday.

“Hatoyama said he will take a leading role in international cooperation (against North over the Cheonan) and expressed strong will to back South Korea’s position at the U.N. Security Council,” said South Korea presidential aide Lee Dong-kwan after President Lee’s meeting with the Japanese prime minister.

Hatoyama later told reporters: “We believe what North Korea did is an objective fact.”

North Korea has said it will rip up military agreements with the South guaranteeing safety of cross-border exchanges and has reportedly put its military on combat readiness after Seoul said it would ban trade with the North and stop its commercial ships using South Korean waters.

(Additional reporting by Chris Buckley in SEOGWIPO; Writing by Chris Buckley; Editing by Nick Macfie)

South Korea says no chance North will go to war

South Korea sees no chance of the latest tension on the divided peninsula turning to outright war but is deeply concerned that the North may try terror attacks on civilians, a high ranking South Korean official said on Friday.

He also said that though both sides have been careful not to push too far, Seoul was ready to send in troops if there is what he called “extreme provocation” by the North.

Relations on the peninsula have plunged back into the Cold War freezer following the March sinking of a South Korean warship, killing 46 sailors, which an international investigation last week said was caused by a North Korean torpedo in one of the deadliest incidents since the end of the 1950-53 Korean War.

“I can assure you North Korea will never use that option (full scale war), simply out of national interest,” the South Korean official, who asked not to be named, told foreign reporters.

He said Pyongyang knows major conflict, including the use of nuclear and chemical weapons, would result in the forced reunification of the peninsula.

Analysts say the million-strong but poorly equipped North Korean military is no match for the South and its U.S. ally, which keeps 28,000 troops on the peninsula.

Asked about possible civilian attacks, the official said: “That’s the part over which we have the most concern”.

The South Korean government is already stepping up security ahead of the G20 summit which Seoul hosts in November.

There have been some concerns that the North might use South Korean workers in a joint industrial park just inside its border as hostages.

“In that case we would use the military,” said the official.

But he doubted the North would do anything to damage the Kaesong industrial estate for fear of triggering social unrest. Tens of thousands of families in the area rely on it for their income, in a country which uses handouts to feed its population.

“North Korea is very afraid of shutting down Kaesong,” he said. Most of the salaries for the workers go straight to Pyongyang, making Kaesong an important source of legitimate income for the North Korean leadership.

Both Koreas have said they would fight if the other attacks but have scrupulously avoided giving the impression they would be the first to attack.

However, some analysts warn that the more the hermit North feels pushed into a corner, the more dangerous it will become.

It was that reason that the South has not directly accused North Korean leader Kim Jong-il, the official said.

The mounting tension comes at a difficult time for the North.

Kim Jong-il’s health appears to be waning after a suspected stroke nearly two years ago and he is trying to ensure the succession of his youngest son to the leadership of the family dynasty that has run the impoverished state since its founding after World War Two.

Kim has also set 2012 as the year to reverse his country’s steady economic decline and turn the destitute state into a prosperous nation — something it has no chance of doing without massive outside aid.

“If you read carefully, North Korea is afraid … and we are careful not to hurt their (the military’s) pride,” said the South Korean official.

(Editing by Michael Perry)

US backs S Korea bid for UN action, North to cut last link

SEOUL, MAY 26

With political and military tension increasing daily on the Korean Peninsula, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Wednesday that Washington would stand beside Seoul as it seeks redress at the United Nations Security Council over North Korea’s sinking of a South Korean warship.

On Wednesday, the North Korean military threatened to “completely block South Korean personnel and vehicles” from a joint industrial park in the North Korean town of Kaesong if the South resumes psychological warfare against the North, mainly through propaganda broadcasts across the border. It also said it would attack and destroy the propaganda loudspeakers to be put up along the border by the South, calling them a “military provocation.”The North cut off some cross-border communication links and expelled eight South Korean government officials from the joint industrial park, South Korea’s Unification Ministry said.

Clinton stopped short of detailing what measures would be sought at the Security Council, where China, a veto-wielding member and a North Korean ally, was likely to block attempts to impose new sanctions. “We’re very confident in the South Korean leadership, and their decision about how and when to move forward is one that we respect and will support,” Clinton said at a news meet after meetings with the South Korean President, Lee Myung-bak, and Foreign Minister Yu Myung-hwan. “I believe that the Chinese understand the seriousness of this issue and are willing to listen to the concerns expressed by both South Korea and the US.”

She spoke of the “immediate crisis” of the sinking that “requires a strong but measured response”.

North Korea has denied any role in the sinking of the ship and the loss of 46 South Korean sailors.

She endorsed President Lee’s “right approach” in trying to avoiding “escalation and a broader conflict” while seeking international support to punish the North. “The key word” during the South Korean leaders’ meetings with Clinton was her strategy of “strategic patience,” said President Lee’s spokesman.

Those comments followed the South’s decision to cut off most trade with the North and the North responding by terminating all communications with the South and threatening to launch artillery shells across the border. nyt

CORRECTED – SCENARIOS-North Korea again at centre of regional tension

North Korea warned it would close the last road link across the increasingly tense peninsula if the South goes ahead with a threat to broadcast anti-Pyongyang propaganda into its hermit neighbour.

Tensions are mounting after the South blamed the North for torpedoing one of its warships, killing 46 sailors.

Following is a look at what may have motivated the North to raise the stakes by sinking the South Korean corvette Cheonan and how it may react to the hard line from the conservative South Korean government of President Lee Myung-bak:

REVENGE

One popularly ascribed motive for the March 26 sinking of the Cheonan was payback for a humiliating defeat in a naval clash in November near their disputed maritime border. The South’s navy was operating under new rules of engagement imposed after Lee took office, to strike fast and strike to win decisively.

The humiliation may have been all the greater because the North, and its self proclaimed “invincible” army, got pounded when it may not even have been looking for a fight in the first place. “It’s a case of getting beaten up when they weren’t even being very cocky,” an expert on the North’s propaganda said.

By most accounts, Kim Jong-il would have to have agreed to the torpedo attack. What may have come as a surprise was that the South was able to come up with evidence — some remains of the torpedo — to prove the North’s involvement.

LEADER UNDER PRESSURE

Some experts say that the attack seems to have been disproportionate to the North’s losses in the November skirmish, especially as most North Koreans would have had no idea the clash had even taken place, and certainly not that it lost.

One explanation is that the reclusive Kim, known at home as the “Dear Leader”, is struggling to secure the succession of his youngest son to head the family dynasty that has run the North since its founding after World War Two.

As a result, he needs to display his strength, especially to the military elite that he has nurtured and put at the top of society’s hierarchy.

Kim himself looks in poor health after an apparent stroke nearly two years ago. His government also reportedly faced rare public unrest after a disastrous change in the value of the currency late last year forced the closure of private markets, which help make up for the state’s inability to supply its own people with enough food.

Dictatorships undergoing internal political turmoil tend to manifest disproportionately belligerent behaviour to the outside world, said Victor Cha, a U.S. expert who had been involved in negotiations with the North.

EXTORTION

North Korea has often staged provocative incidents as a way to get back to the negotiating table with the South and regional powers to extract economic and political concessions.

If this was the motive, then it backfired. Whatever inclination there may have been to bring the six regional powers back together to formulate a massive package of aid to the North in return for Pyongyang’s promise to dismantle its nuclear arms programme all but disappeared with the sinking of the Cheonan.

Kim Jong-il’s interest may have been more in separate talks with the United States to discuss a permanent peace treaty to replace the armistice that ended fighting in the 1950-53 Korean War, than with the group hosted by China and also involved South Korea, Japan and Russia.

Some analysts and defectors from the North say the leaders in Pyongyang have a genuine fear of an invasion by the United States launched from the soil of its ally, South Korea. There is also huge mileage for domestic propaganda purposes in telling its public that it was negotiating with the United States on equal footing. Staging a deadly attack in the waters near a naval border it had disputed gives the North’s military an excuse to demand talks on ending a truce.

PEACE TREATY

This is a variation on the above scenario, with the difference that the North is looking for a security framework instead of aid. The Cheonan sinking is the latest in a series of incidents along the disputed maritime border in the Yellow Sea, including an exchange of artillery fire in January.

Kim Jong-il may be hoping to goad the United States into taking more seriously his demands to agree finally a peace treaty to end formally the 1950-53 Korean War. Washington has been reluctant to be lured into those talks, arguing the North must first give up its efforts to build nuclear weapons.

Much of the justification for his iron rule, and extreme poverty that faces most of his population, is that it is the only way to keep a belligerent United States at bay. A peace treaty would not only allow him to stop raiding his depleted treasury to pay for one of the world’s largest standing armies, some analysts say it would also open the way to international financial aid for his broken economy.

The peninsula remains in a technical state of war because the Korean War ended in a truce, not a peace treaty. If Kim keeps making the Yellow Sea border — drawn unilaterally by the U.S.-led United Nations Command at the end of the war — a combat zone, maybe that would eventually lead to peace treaty talks. After all, previous instances of North Korean misbehaviour resulted in negotiations that led to benefits.

ARMS SALES DEMO

North Korea depended heavily on exports of missile and artillery parts for a large part of its income before U.N. sanctions last year for testing a nuclear device sharply cut off its trade. It may have wanted to demonstrate its capabilities in submarine and torpedo warfare.

(Editing by Jonathan Thatcher and Bill Tarrant)

SCENARIOS – North Korea again at centre of regional tension

North Korea warned it would close the last road link across the increasing tense peninsula if the South goes ahead with a threat to broadcast anti-Pyongyang propaganda into its hermit neighbour.

Tensions are mounting after the South blamed the North for torpedoing one of its warships, killing 46 sailors.

Following is a look at what may have motivated the North to raise the stakes by sinking a South Korean battleship and how it may react to the hard line from the conservative South Korean government of President Lee Myung-bak:

REVENGE

One popularly ascribed motive for the March 26 outh Korean corvette Cheonan was payback for a humiliating beating in a naval clash in November near their disputed maritime border. The South’s navy was operating under new rules of engagement imposed after Lee took office, to strike fast and strike to win decisively.

The humiliation may have been all the greater because the North, and its self proclaimed “invincible” army, got pounded when it may not even have been looking for a fight in the first place. “It’s a case of getting beaten up when they weren’t even being very cocky,” an expert on the North’s propaganda said.

By most accounts, Kim Jong-il would have to have agreed to the torpedo attack. What may have come as a surprise was that the South was able to come up with evidence — some remains of the remains of the torpedo — to prove the North’s involvement.

LEADER UNDER PRESSURE

Some experts say that the attack seems to have been disproportionate to the North’s losses in the November skirmish, especially as most North Koreans would have had no idea the clash had even taken place, and certainly not that it lost.

One explanation is that the reclusive Kim, known at home as the “ear Leader” is struggling to secure the succession of his youngest son to head the family dynasty that has run the North since its founding after World War Two.

As a result, he needs to display his strength, especially to the military elite that he has nurtured as leader and put at the top of society’s hierarchy.

Kim himself looks in poor health after an apparent stroke nearly two years ago. His government also reportedly faced rare public unrest after a disastrous change in the value of the currency late last year forced the closure of private markets, which help make up for the state’s inability to supply its own people with enough food.

Dictatorships undergoing internal political turmoil tend to manifest disproportionately belligerent behaviour to the outside world, said Victor Cha, a U.S. expert who had been involved in negotiations with the North.

EXTORTION

North Korea has often staged provocative incidents as a way to get back to the negotiating table with the South and regional powers to extract economic and political concessions.

If this was the motive, then it backfired. Whatever inclination there may have been to bring the six regional powers back together to formulate a massive package of aid to the North in return for Pyongyang’s promise to dismantle its nuclear arms programme all but disappeared with the sinking of the Cheonan.

Kim Jong-il’s interest may have been more in separate talks with the United States to discuss a permanent peace treaty to replace the armistice that ended fighting in the 1950-53 Korean War, than with the the group hosted by China and also involved South Korea, Japan and Russia.

Some analysts and defectors from the North say the leaders in Pyongyang have a genuine fear of an invasion by the United States launched from the soils of its ally, South Korea. There is also huge mileage for domestic propaganda purposes in tellings its public that it was negotiating with the United States on equal footing. Staging a deadly attack in the waters near a naval border it had disputed gives the North’s military an excuse to demand talks on ending a truce.

PEACE TREATY

This a variation on the above scenario, with the difference that the North is looking for a security framwework instead of aid. The Cheonan sinking is the latest in a series of incidents along the disputed maritime border in the Yellow Sea, including an exchange of artillery fire in January.

Kim Jong-il may be hoping to goad the United States into taking more seriously his demands to finally agree a peace treaty to formally end the 1950-53 Korean War. Washington has been reluctant to be lured into those talks, arguing the North must first give up its efforts to build nuclear weapons.

Much of the justification for his iron rule, and extreme poverty that faces most of his population, is that it is the only way to keep a beligerent United States at bay. A peace treaty would not only allow him to stop raiding his depleted treasury to pay for one of the world’s largest standing armies, some analysts say it would also open the way to international financial aid for his broken economy.

The peninsula remains in a technical state of war because the Korean War ended in a truce, not a peace treaty. If Kim keeps making the Yellow Sea border — drawn unilaterally by the U.S.-led United Nations Command at the end of the war — a combat zone, maybe that would eventually lead to peace treaty talks. After all, previous instances of North Korean misbehaviour resulted in negotiations that led to benefits.

ARMS SALES DEMO

North Korea depended heavily on exports of missile and artillery parts for a large part of its income before a U.N. sanctions last year for testing a nuclear device sharply cut off its trade. It may have wanted to demonstrate its capabilities in submarine and torpedo warfare. (Editing by Jonathan Thatcher and Bill Tarrant)

US urges China to punish North Korea for S. Korea ship sinking

Beijing, May 24 (ANI): The United States on Sunday asked China to back punitive measures against North Korea over strong evidence that Pyongyang was involved in the sinking of the South Korean warship, Cheonan.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton met Dai Bingguo, a state councilor of China who oversees foreign affairs, and raised the South Korean government report that formally accused the North of torpedoing the Cheonan in March, killing 46 sailors.

“We want them to take some steps in the international arena to underscore the seriousness of the matter,” the New York Times quoted a senior Obama administration official, as saying.

“We have to be realistic about what we can expect,” he added.

The official said Beijing is still digesting the findings of the investigation, which was aided by the United States and other countries.

China has reacted with extreme caution, waiting for days to express sorrow to South Korea for the loss of the crew and expressing skepticism about North Korea’s role. (ANI)

North Korea’s Kim Jong-il visits China – reports

North Korean leader Kim Jong-il has arrived in China, his destitute state’s biggest benefactor, for a rare trip abroad that could defuse regional tensions and bring him much-needed aid, reports said on Monday.

China has the most influence in curbing the North’s military grandstanding and the reclusive Kim’s previous trips to his neighbour have led to steps that have reduced security concerns for the economically vibrant region and between the rival Koreas.

The trip to China would be the first in four years and comes at a time when South Korea is considering ways to respond to a suspected North Korean attack on one of its naval ships. South Korea lost 46 sailors in what could be one of the deadliest strikes since the end of the 1950-53 Korean War.

“We have confirmed the arrival of a special train at (the Chinese border city) Dandong, and we believe it is highly likely that Chairman Kim is on board,” a South Korean government official told Yonhap news agency.

Kim later entered the Chinese port city of Dalian, Yonhap quoted officials as saying. In his last trip in 2006, Kim toured China’s industrial centres for a first-hand look under the hood of the country’s quickly growing economy.

Dalian, a thriving city that has attracted major foreign investment, is a symbol of development that Beijing’s leaders have advocated for years to Kim and his father and state founder Kim Il-sung to revive the North’s moribund economy.

A booking agent at the Furama Hotel in the city where Kim is thought to be staying told Reuters it was not accepting reservations for Monday because of “an event”.

There has been no confirmation of the trip, and reporters, camping out along the railway line that Kim’s special armoured train would have to use to enter China, were hounded out of the area by Chinese security agents just before the suspected crossing.

Yonhap said the train thought to have carried Kim crossed in the pre-dawn hours of Monday with several hundred Chinese security agents sealing off the area around the train station.

Witnesses at the border said the security clampdown ended a few hours afterwards. The North’s KCNA news agency’s last report on Kim was on Saturday and said he attended a May Day concert in Pyongyang where songs including “This Is Icon of Socialism” and “Where Are You, Dear General” were performed.

In another sign pointing to a visit, a North Korean performance troupe that played at a meeting between Kim and top Chinese officials in Pyongyang, has entered China for shows in Beijing, a major Chinese newspaper reported.

The visit would be Kim’s first trip abroad since a suspected stroke in 2008.

PUNISHING PYONGYANG

South Korea is expected to seek economic and political punishment against Pyongyang for the attack on the ship but avoid a revenge strike that might spark an escalating conflict between the rivals and devastate its own quickly recovering economy.

China, fearful of a collapse of the Kim family regime that would bring chaos to its border, has supported the North’s leaders for decades.

It wants to prevent an escalation of military tension but is unlikely to punish its neighbour if it was to blame for the attack on the warship, analysts said.

Kim is even more reliant on China’s help after a botched currency reform at the end of last year worsened inflation and sparked rare civil unrest that raised questions about Kim’s grip on power in the state his family has run for more than 60 years.

“China has heard from South Korean President Lee Myung-bak on the ship sinking when he met President Hu Jintao last week and now it could hear from North Korea,” said Yang Moo-jin, a professor at the South’s University of North Korean Studies.

Yang said Beijing will weigh its options and see how far it is willing to cooperate with Pyongyang.

Analysts said Kim may be heading to China to seek financial aid in exchange for a return to international nuclear disarmament-for-aid talks hosted by Beijing that Pyongyang has boycotted for over a year.

Kim’s trip to China in 2000 was soon followed by a summit in Pyongyang with South Korea’s leader and the start of two major joint development projects in North Korea. A China trip in 2004 led to a push for talks on the North’s nuclear programmes.

The North has come under pressure to return to six-country nuclear talks due to U.N. sanctions imposed after a May 2009 atomic test that have dealt a blow to its wobbly economy.

The North’s official media did not announce his 2006 visit until after Kim’s armoured train crossed the border and he was safely back in North Korea.

(Writing by Jon Herskovitz in Seoul; Additional reporting by Chris Buckley in Beijing and Christine Kim and Cheon Jong-woo in Seoul; Editing by Jonathan Thatcher and Sanjeev Miglani)

Macca admits small gigs make him nervous

London, May 03 (ANI): Sir Paul McCartney has admitted that he still gets butterflies in his stomach – when he plays in small venues.

The former Beatle says that playing in front of a large audience doesn’t bother him but it’s the more intimate gigs that still make him nervous, reports the Telegraph.

Sir Paul – due to play the Hard Rock Calling event in Hyde Park, as well as the Isle Of Wight Festival in June said in an interview with Absolute Radio:

””I”ll tell you what does get me nervous, when you”re playing to small groups of people. If it”s at all kind of corporate – so in other words, charity dos – you don”t know who you”ve got in the audience.

“It can be people who really don”t like rock and roll, and you”re sitting there going ”Yeah, we”re going to have a great time tonight” and they”re just chatting to each other.

””You know, ”Well I think that was a great deal, how”s your bank?’ I sort of turn round to the band and give a look which says ”We”re working, we”re going to have to work this one, you know, there”s no relaxing”.””

Sir Paul told DJ Geoff Lloyd that he once almost gave up before Beatles were due to play at the NME pollwinners concert in the 1960s, but now he has no such problem with massive shows.

””I don”t get that kind of nervous, because if the tickets sell really well, you get an idea that these people really want to come and see you. And I kind of feel that about the people who come and see me, we”re sort of mates. We get this kind of thing going, so I don”t feel too bad.”” (ANI)

Navy ship sinking might affect six-party talks: South Korea

Seoul, Apr. 30 (ANI): The South Korean Government said that a mysterious sinking of its naval warship last month might affect chances of reopening the stalled six-party talks.

“I can”t say the incident is directly related to the future of the six-party talks. But now that the state of affairs surrounding the Korean peninsula is affected by the incident, (the government) might need to review future process of the six-party talks in relation to the current situations,” Xinhua quoted Kim Young-sun, Seoul”s foreign ministry spokesman, as saying at a news briefing on Thursday.

Speculation is running high that North Korea had a hand in the recent sinking of a 1,200-ton corvette, especially after investigators looking into the incident concluded that a powerful external explosion at a close range, possibly caused by a torpedo or sea mine detonation, was the most likely cause of the incident.

The country”s defense chief Kim Tae-young also publicly pointed a finger at possible torpedo attacks as a likely culprit. (ANI)

Internet addiction led to baby’s death

New measures are being introduced in South Korea seeking to combat the problem of internet addiction.

The move follows the trial of a couple for negligent homicide. Their three-month old daughter died of malnutrition, reportedly because they were too busy raising a virtual child in an online game.

Kim Jae-beom and Kim Yun-jeong pleaded guilty last week and will be sentenced on April 16.

James Ogloff, a professor of Clinical Forensic Psychology at Monash University, told Radio Australia’s Connect Asia program the case has reignited debate about whether or not internet addiction should be taken into account when determining if a person can be held responsible for their crime.

“There is great controversy about it, as an addiction to drugs or alcohol, it is more commonly thought of as a compulsion, so drugs and alcohol are rarely used to exonerate people,” he said.

The South Korean government estimates the country has about 2 million internet addicts – almost 9 per cent of the country’s total number of web users.

Dr Roald Maliangkay, the chief of the Head of Korea Centre at the Australian National University, says the couple were playing the game at a PC Bang, a popular Korean online gaming centre similar to an internet cafe.

“These rooms are cheap, they allow you to eat and drink, you can smoke, which a lot of public places won’t allow you to,” he said.

PC Bangs are decreasing in popularity, but the South Korean government is planning to introduce two new software programs to combat the 8.8 per cent of Korean internet addicts, many of whom access the web from home, or in public places through wireless connections.

Two types of software will be available – one with a consensual shutdown program and one called Internet Fatigue, which makes games harder as time goes by so the user gets bored.

Professor Ian Hickie, from the Brain and Mind Research Institute at Sydney University, says the programs are incredibly useful.

“Often when people get stuck they don’t notice the passage of time. They need something to help them to stop,” he said.

“We see this across a lot of different behaviours like alcohol and drugs if they can’t stop the environment for a certain amount of time to regulate their behaviours.”

South Korean ship with 100 onboard sinks after suspected North Korean torpedo attack

London, Mar. 27 (ANI): A South Korean naval ship with 104 people on board has been sunk off North Korea”s west coast in what is being described as a suspected torpedo attack by North Korea.

According to local media, the ship – currently not named – went down near Baengnyeong Island, killing “several”.

The Sun quoted South Korean media as saying that a South Korean naval ship with more than 100 on board was sinking in the waters off the west coast near North Korea and a rescue operation is under way.

The report added that the South Korean ship had fired shots at an unidentified ship in the North.

While the incident has not been confirmed by South Korean Government officials, the country’s YTN TV network said an emergency security meeting is being held.

It added the government is investigating whether the sinking was due to a torpedo attack by North Korea.

The network also quoted a government source saying it was “unclear” whether the incident was related to North Korea.

“We are currently focusing on rescuing people,” the source said.

The incident took place near a disputed Yellow Sea maritime border off the west coast of the peninsula that was the scene of two deadly naval fights between South and North Korea in the past decade. (ANI)

N.Korea suspected of being behind cyber attacks on S. Korea, US

Washington, July 9 (ANI): North Korea is suspected of launching an unprecedented large cyber-attack this past weekend against South Korea and a smaller number of US government web sites.

The Internet attacks are not isolated, but closely tied a broader North Korean military strategy, including its recent missile and nuclear weapons tests, the Christian Science Monitor quoted analysts, as saying.

“The cyber attacks are part of an asymmetric warfare strategy,” says Nicholas Eberstadt, senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington.

“Part of an effective confrontation with the US war machine would be the ability to disable US information systems,” he added.

South Korea’s National Intelligence Service “believes North Korea or its sympathizers” of having masterminded an Internet attack on the web sites of government agencies, including the office of the South Korean president and the foreign and defense ministries, according to Yonhap, the South Korean news agency.

Korea Communication Commission official Lee Myung-su said the computer virus had infected 18,000 personal computers and at least 11 South Korean government sites.

US sites hit by the virus included the Treasury Department, Federal Trade Commission, and Secret Service.

The Internet attacks represent a new area of confrontation in a period of uncertainty in North Korea dominated by rising concern about the health of North Korea’s leader Kim Jong-il.

The attacks on South Korean websites suggest cyber warfare may be in lieu of attacks long predicted in the West or Yellow Sea or along the demilitarized zone between the two Koreas. (ANI)

North Korea’s nuclear test triggers outrage

Seoul, May 25 (IANS) The underground nuclear test conducted by North Korea Monday received fierce criticism from its neighbours Japan and South Korea, who called for an emergency session of the UN Security Council.

The test was a “serious threat” to peace on the Korean Peninsula and in Northeast Asia, the South Korean government said in a statement after an emergency meeting between South Korea’s President Lee Myung Bak and security officials.

The test posed “a serious challenge to the international regime on nuclear non-proliferation”, the statement added.

Seoul said it will work with other participants in international talks concerning an end to North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme – the US, Japan, Russia and China – so that the UN Security Council takes “appropriate steps” against North Korea.

Japan also called for a Security Council emergency meeting.

“Japan would never tolerate North Korea’s nuclear test,” Prime Minister Taro Aso said. “It is a serious challenge to a nuclear non-proliferation regime.”

A coordinated action of the international community was sought in response to Pyongyang’s action, Aso was quoted as saying by Jiji Press.

The Security Council was set to hold an emergency meeting Monday in New York to discuss the test, Vitaly Churkin, Russia’s representative to the UN confirmed. Russia holds the rotating Security Council presidency this month.

Japan was considering imposing its own sanctions against Pyongyang, while it began discussing with South Korea and the US drafting and submitting a new UN resolution calling for additional sanctions.

At a meeting of European and Asian foreign ministers in Hanoi, Japan pressed for a separate statement criticising North Korea’s test.

Speaking at the conference, Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Kazuo Kodama called the nuclear test “a grave threat to peace and stability”.

“We believe this nuclear test violates existing UN Security Council resolutions,” Kodama said. “We also believe it poses a grave challenge to the (Nuclear Proliferation Treaty) regime.”

India condemned North Korea’s nuclear test as “unfortunate” and said it was a development of serious concern for the world community.

“For the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea to conduct such a test in violation of its international commitments is unfortunate,” S.M. Krishna, India’s new foreign minister, told reporters. He was speaking after taking charge of the ministry in New Delhi.

“Like others in the international community we are concerned at the adverse effect on peace and security in that region of such tests,” he said.

Elsewhere in the Asia-Pacific region, New Zealand joined in the chorus of condemnation, dubbing the test “another provocative act” that risked destabilising the Korean peninsula.

“It is also a significant step backwards for global nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation efforts,” Foreign Minister Murray McCully said.

“New Zealand condemns Pyongyang’s actions. They should be under no illusion as to the gravity with which the international community will view today’s events,” he said.

North Korea tests a second nuclear weapon

Pyong Yang (North Korea), May 25 (ANI): The North Korean Government on Monday formally announced that it had conducted a second nuclear test, an event that is likely to invite strong criticism from the international community.

In a statement issued through the official Korean Central News Agency, the North Korean Government said: “The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea successfully conducted one more underground nuclear test on May 25 as part of the measures to bolster up its nuclear deterrent for self-defence in every way as requested by its scientists and technicians.”

“The current nuclear test was safely conducted on a new higher level in terms of its explosive power and technology of its control and the results of the test helped satisfactorily settle the scientific and technological problems arising in further increasing the power of nuclear weapons and steadily developing nuclear technology,” the Telegraph further quoted the statement, as saying.
“The successful nuclear test is greatly inspiring the army and people of the DPRK all out in the 150-day campaign, intensifying the drive for effecting a new revolutionary surge to open the gate to a thriving nation. The test will contribute to defending the sovereignty of the country and the nation and socialism and ensuring peace and security on the Korean Peninsula and the region around it with the might of Songun,” the statement concluded.

According to the paper, the nuclear weapons test triggered an artificial earthquake measuring 4.7 on the open-ended Richter Scale.

South Korean President Lee Myung-bak called an emergency National Security Council meeting to discuss the situation.

“Both South Korea and US intelligence agencies are analysing and closely monitoring the situation,” said a spokesman for his office.

He added that the South Korean government had been warned beforehand that a nuclear test was possible.

Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso said he would set up a task force in response to the test.

The Chinese Foreign ministry said it was investigating the situation and could not comment immediately.

Diplomatic sources said they had been expecting a North Korean nuclear test, and said the rogue state was trying to increase pressure on the United States in a high-stakes negotiation.

North Korea has repeatedly warned in the past month that it intends to restart its nuclear program and build up its arsenal of nuclear weapons.

Reports of the nuclear test hit South Korean financial markets and the main KOSPI share index was down four per cent, while the won dropped more than one per cent against the US dollar. (ANI)

South Korea agrees for talks with North Korea

Seoul, April 19 (Xinhua) The South Korean government Sunday said that it has decided to accept Pyongyang’s offer for holding inter-Korean talks next week.

It will be the first governmental talks between South Korea and North Korea since South Korean President Lee Myung-bak took office in February last year.

The talks suggestion comes amid mounting tensions following North Korea’s rocket launch earlier this month. North Korea said the launch was to place a communications satellite in space while the US, Japan and South Korea viewed it as a front for testing ballistic missile technology.

North Korea last week offered to hold talks with South Korean officials Tuesday in North Korea’s border city of Kaesong.

North Korea delivered the suggestion to the South Korean authorities through a message Friday.

Pyongyang said they will inform ‘significant issues’ to South Korea at the talks, but didn’t explain further.

S.Korea’s IBK selling 5-year dollar bonds-sources

HONG KONG, April 15 (Reuters) – Industrial Bank of Korea (024110.KS) is selling benchmark five-year dollar bonds, or typically meaning of at least $500 million, two sources familiar with the sale said on Wednesday.

IBK aimed to price the deal, which could raise as much as $1 billion, at around mid-500 basis points over midswaps, said one of the sources. No official guidance has been released, and the deal is expected to price by Thursday morning in New York hours.

The debt will not carry a government guarantee since IBK, which specialises in lending to small and medium-sized enterprises, is already majority owned by South Korea, the two sources said.

Both sources declined to be identified because they were not authorised to talk publicly about the sale.

Barclays Capital, Citigroup (C.N), Merrill Lynch, and Morgan Stanley will be the lead managers for the sale, the source said.

IBK follows on the footsteps of the South Korean government, which last week raised $3 billion in a two-tranche dollar bond deal, while others including Hana Bank and steelmaker POSCO (005490.KS) have also recently sold debt.

South Korea’s two other government-owned lenders, Korea Development Bank and Export-Import Bank of Korea, have already raised $2 billion each in overseas markets early this year.

South Korean issuers are expected to continue tapping global markets, driven by the need for dollars in a country that has about $194 billion in foreign debt falling due this year, compared with just over $200 billion in foreign reserves.

Banks in South Korea averted a cash crunch after the government made billions of dollars available to the sector and took other steps such as guaranteeing some types of overseas borrowing, although lenders are still encouraged to find their own foreign funding sources.

However, concerns about profitability remain. IBK’s profit last year declined 36 percent to 764.4 billion won ($579.3 million) from 2007.

IBK is rated A by Standard and Poor’s and A2 by Moody’s, or the sixth-highest investment-grade rating. The lender is rated one notch above that at A-plus by Fitch, but with a negative outlook. (Reporting by Rafael Nam; Editing by Chris Lewis)