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Tag Archive 'Death'

Jan 31 2012

Iran web developer sentenced to death (AP)

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TEHRAN, Iran ? Iran’s state media say the Supreme Court has upheld a death sentence against a web developer convicted of spreading corruption.

The semiofficial Fars news agency says blogger Saeed Malekpour was found guilty of promoting pornographic sites. It says the Supreme Court approved the death sentence handed down by a Revolutionary Court that deals with security crimes.

Malekpour was reported imprisoned in October, 2008 and confessed on Iranian TV that he developed and promoted pornographic websites.

The website gerdab.ir, affiliated with the elite Revolutionary Guard, called Malekpour the head of the biggest Persian-language network of pornographic websites.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iran/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120129/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_iran_death_sentence

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Jan 02 2012

NKorea media laud son, nation grieves Kim Jong Il (AP)

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PYONGYANG, North Korea ? North Korea prepared to lay longtime ruler Kim Jong Il to rest while the hermit state’s official media on Tuesday lauded his son and heir apparent as a person “born of heaven” ? suggesting the transition to a new leadership was under way.

The streets of the North Korean capital, Pyongyang, were quiet Tuesday morning as thousands grieved the death of their “Dear Leader.” With an 11-day mourning period in effect, flags flew at half staff, shops were closed and streams of mourners ? some wailing ? placed flowers at memorials around the city.

“Today, as well as yesterday, the Korean people have been coming here to Mansu Hill in deep sorrow at the loss of the benevolent father of our nation with the infinite feeling of longing,” said Ri Ho Il, a lecturer at the Korean Revolutionary History Museum. “Our General (Kim Jong Il) is our people’s benevolent father. He defended our people’s happiness, carrying on his forced march both night and day.”

Kim died Saturday of a massive heart attack brought about by overwork and stress, according to the North’s media. He was 69 ? though some experts question the official accounts of his birth date and location. The state funeral is to be held on Dec. 28.

North Korean officials say they will not invite foreign delegations and will allow no entertainment during the mourning period.

Kim’s death and the possibility of a power struggle in a country armed with nuclear weapons and known for its unpredictability has heightened tensions in the region.

President Barack Obama agreed by phone with South Korean President Lee Myung-bak to closely monitor developments. Japan’s government also said it was being vigilant for any “unexpected developments.”

North Korean state media have given clear indications that Kim’s third son will succeed him.

The Korean Central News Agency on Tuesday described Kim Jong Un as a “a great person born of heaven,” a propaganda term only his father Kim Jong Il and his grandfather Kim Il Sung had enjoyed. The Rodong Sinmun, the newspaper of the ruling Workers’ Party, added in an editorial that Kim Jong Un is “the spiritual pillar and the lighthouse of hope” for the military and the people.

It described the twentysomething Kim as “born of Mount Paektu,” one of Korea’s most cherished sites and Kim Jong Il’s official birthplace. On Monday, the North said in a dispatch that the people and the military “have pledged to uphold the leadership of comrade Kim Jong Un” and called him a “great successor” of the country’s revolutionary philosophy of juche, or self reliance.

Whether the transition would be a smooth one remained an open question, however.

South Korea’s military has been put on high alert, and experts warned that the next few days could be a crucial turning point for the North, which though impoverished by economic mismanagement and repeated famine, has a relatively well-supported, 1.2 million-strong armed forces.

“The situation could become extremely volatile. What the North Korean military does in the next 24-48 hours will be decisive,” said Bill Richardson, a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations who has made several high-profile visits to North Korea.

Kim was in power for 17 years after the death of his father, the charismatic founder of the North Korean nation.

His death could set back efforts by the United States and others to get Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear weapons ambitions. It also comes at a sensitive time for North Korea, which is preparing for next year’s 100th anniversary of the birth of Kim Il Sung.

Concerns are high that Kim Jong Un ? being young and largely untested ? may feel he needs to prove himself by precipitating a crisis or displaying his swagger on the international stage.

North Korea conducted at least one short-range missile test Monday, a South Korean official said. But South Korea’s military sees the firing as part of a scheduled routine drill, instead of a provocation, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of a policy that bans commenting on intelligence matters.

Some analysts, however, said Kim’s death was unlikely to plunge the country into chaos because it already was preparing for a transition. Kim Jong Il indicated a year ago that Kim Jong Un would be his successor, putting him in high-ranking posts.

South Korea’s president urged his people to remain calm while his Cabinet and the Parliament convened emergency meetings Tuesday.

The Defense Ministry said the South Korean military and the 28,500 U.S. troops stationed in South Korea had bolstered reconnaissance and were sharing intelligence on North Korea.

The White House said in a statement that it is closely monitoring reports of Kim’s death. The Obama administration may postpone decisions on re-engaging the North in nuclear talks and providing it with food aid, U.S. officials said.

The administration had been expected to decide on both issues this week, possibly as early as Monday, but the officials said Kim’s death would likely delay the process.

___

Associated Press writers Jean H. Lee in Beijing, Foster Klug, Hyung-jin Kim, Sam Kim, Eric Talmadge and Jiyoung Won in Seoul and Matthew Lee in Washington contributed to this story.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111220/ap_on_re_as/as_nkorea_kim_s_death

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Dec 20 2011

Mystery surrounds son set to succeed Kim Jong Il (AP)

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PYONGYANG, North Korea ? With the sudden death of his father, Kim Jong Un went from being North Korea’s “Respected General” to “Great Successor” ? a heady and uncertain promotion for a young man virtually unknown even to the North Korean people just a year ago.

Word of Kim Jong Il’s death, announced Monday two days after he suffered a fatal heart attack, thrusts his 20-something son in the spotlight as the future head of a nation grappling with difficult nuclear negotiations and chronic food shortages.

Within hours of breaking the news of his father’s death, state media urged the nation’s people to rally around Kim Jong Un and to “faithfully revere” their next leader. The son has not appeared publicly since the announcement of his father’s death.

The death speeds up a succession process that began in earnest a little more than year ago, scant time to gain experience, build political clout and allay skepticism at home and abroad that he can lead a nation of 24 million. His father, by contrast, had 20 years of grooming before his father, North Korea founder Kim Il Sung, passed away in 1994.

News of Kim’s death shocked a nation largely kept in the dark about their leader’s health even after he suffered a stroke in 2008. Abroad, there was widespread speculation throughout 2009 about who would succeed the iron-fisted ruler.

Kim Jong Un’s emergence in September 2010 as the anointed successor settled the question of which of Kim Jong Il’s three known sons was chosen as the third-generation leader in a family dynasty that has ruled since North Korea’s post-World War II inception in 1948.

And his status as his father’s anointed successor has become clear over the course of the past year.

After appointing him vice chairman of the Central Military Commission of the ruling Workers’ Party, Kim Jong Il unveiled the son to the world just weeks later at a massive military parade to celebrate a key party anniversary.

With the world’s media in attendance and transmitting live video, the young son appeared on the balcony of the Grand People’s Study Hall in a blue suit, waving as tanks loaded with long-range missiles barreled by.

Since that first glimpse of the son, North Koreans have seen him regularly on state TV, in the Pyongyang Times newspaper and in the Korean Central News Agency as he accompanied his father on trips around the country.

Stocky and youthful, he bears more than a passing resemblance to his grandfather, Kim Il Sung, as a young man ? a similarity that plays into the emphasis on lineage and legacy as just cause to make him leader.

He began appearing with his father at state events and reportedly ran the country when Kim traveled to Russia and China, and is credited at home with orchestrating a deadly November 2010 artillery attack on a front-line South Korean island that nearly brought the foes to the brink of another war.

Kim Jong Il’s leadership was defined by his “songun” policy of putting the powerful military first. Kim Jong Un’s formal ascension will usher in a new era of leadership ? but it remains to be seen what direction he will take the nation of 24 million people.

“It is impossible to say with certainty what his era will look like. Trying to anticipate the near future is tough enough,” said Andray Abrahamian, executive director of the Choson Exchange, a Singapore-based nonprofit group that facilitates educational exchange with North Korea. “We expect greater caution and less willingness to try new things in the near term, making our programs more difficult to run. Things look like they’re locking down already.”

North Koreans have been told Kim Jong Un graduated from Kim Il Sung Military University; speaks several foreign languages, including English; and is a whiz at computing and technology.

But they have not been told much else.

He is said to celebrate his birthday in January, but the year ? or even the name of his mother ? have not been revealed publicly. Even his name, though whispered for years, was never published in state media until the announcement in September 2010 that he had been promoted to four-star general.

“There is a rumor that he is married, but officially we don’t know,” said Yoon Deok-ryong, who specializes in North Korean economic reform at the Korea Institute for International Economic Policy in Seoul.

The visits have also provided hints to what areas Kim Jong Un may favor when he formally takes power. Newly opened shops and factories churning out goods using digital technology have been favorite spots for a man said to like computers.

Two songs in vogue in Pyongyang are considered odes to Kim Jong Un: “Footsteps,” an obvious reference to his role in carrying out his family’s legacy, and “Song of CNC,” or Computerized Numerical Control, better known elsewhere as digital technology.

In September, he spent hours at one of Pyongyang’s showcase shops, a meat and fish shop on Pothongmun Street that sells whale meat, frozen quail and kielbasa, manager Ri Un Suk told The Associated Press in October.

His visit is proudly displayed on a plaque affixed to the wall, a tradition that until recently was reserved for his father and grandfather.

“He may be the future leader, but he’s still a good son to his father,” she said. “I was impressed by his loyalty as well as his wisdom.”

A year ago, after he made his public debut, he was familiarly referred to as the “Young General.”

In recent months, signs and plaques formally acknowledging him as the next leader began appearing with the title “Respected General.”

On Monday, the state-run Korean Central News Agency called him the “Great Successor,” and urged the people to rally around their next leader.

Kim Jong Un is expected to lean on members of his father’s inner circle, including his aunt, Kim Jong Il’s sister Kim Kyong Hui; her husband, Jang Song Thaek; and other Kim Jong Il confidants, experts said.

“Even though Kim Jong Un has been appointed as the successor, they may form a committee to rule the country at first,” Yoon said. “His power succession is not completed yet.”

There are concerns about instability due to his age and inexperience, said Narushige Michishita, an expert at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies in Tokyo.

But his age may win him backing among the young policymakers of his generation who have developed a taste for cellphones and computers, he said.

“Those people will be running the country in coming decades,” Michishita said. “So in that sense we can expect some new things, but we don’t know if that will result in political transformation.”

Kim Jong Un is known to have studied for a few years in Switzerland as a teen and is believed to speak some German and French as well as English, though experts caution against thinking of him as reform-minded just because he lived in the West.

“I wouldn’t draw huge conclusions from the fact that he spent a year or two in Europe as a boy,” Delury said. “But you know, he’s significantly younger, and generational shifts happen no matter wherever you are in the world, including North Korea, so he is going to have a different orientation.”

Apart from these few tantalizing details, much remains unknown about Jong Un or the real breadth of his power.

“There’s much uncertainty,” Yoon said. “Because we don’t know who’s really in charge.”

___

Associated Press writers Alexa Olesen in Beijing, Malcolm Foster in Tokyo and Foster Klug in Seoul, South Korea, contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111219/ap_on_re_as/as_nkorea_kim_jong_un_profile

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Dec 19 2011

Rebel China villagers demand elections, turn to central leaders (Reuters)

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WUKAN, China (Reuters) ? Protesting Chinese villagers on Sunday demanded that central leaders defuse grievances about what they called crooked land deals and a suspicious death, as a revolt that has tested Communist Party authority in this semi-rural area neared its second week.

Residents of Wukan Village in Guangdong province have driven off officials, erected makeshift barricades to deter police, and held protest gatherings and marches daily after the death in custody last weekend of Xue Jinbo, one of the organisers of a months-long campaign over former farmland that residents say was illegally seized for commercial development

Xue’s death, which officials said was caused by heart failure, triggered visceral anger among the village’s 10,000 residents, who believe he was abused by police.

On Sunday evening, residents vowed to take their protests into a second week unless central officials step in.

“We’ve completely lost trust in the local government,” said one villager, a 35-year-old surnamed Wu. “They’ve said they will solve our problems, but it’s all lies. They’ve cheated the ordinary people.”

“We hope that the central government will give us justice,” said another villager, surnamed Lin.

Police appear to be exerting their own pressure by blocking trucks from taking food into Wukan.

The swirling sentiments of the Wukan villagers — mixing fury at the local government with hopes directed at Beijing — underscored the volatility of the dispute and the difficulty that any officials will have in regaining their trust.

“Collusion between government and business, give me back my home,” declared one of the many handwritten banners strung across the village square. “Democratic elections are the heartfelt voice of the people.”

LAND AT HEART OF STANDOFF

Rural land in China is mostly owned in name by village collectives, which are in theory under leaders elected by residents. But in fact, higher officials can mandate seizing for development in return for compensation, which residents often say is inadequate and does not reflect the profits reaped.

The government of Shanwei, the area including Wukan, said this week that some Communist Party members and officials accused of misdeeds over the disputed land were detained and that the main land development project had been suspended.

But villagers’ fury has turned to Xue’s death and demands that officials return his body to the grieving family.

Wukan, with its clannish unity and big stake in rising land values, is an example of the kind of slow-burning discontent that is corroding party power at the grassroots.

Residents say hundreds of hectares of land was acquired unfairly by corrupt officials in collusion with developers. Anger in the village boiled over in September this year after repeated appeals to higher officials. Residents ransacked a government office and skirmished with police.

Protests and other bursts of what officials call “mass unrest” have risen with China’s rapid economic transformation and urbanisation, which has consumed farmland, often sparking contention over compensation.

“Land is the last public good in China that can be privatized. Local governments need the land to get money to run the governments and second, local officials take the land to fill their pockets, so it’s both of these issues,” said David Zweig, a professor who studies Chinese politics at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.

“This problem used to happen more in the suburbs because as urbanisation expanded, they needed the land. But now it seems to be happening all over the country.”

Between 1993 and recent years, the number of recorded “mass incidents” grew from 8,700 to about 90,000, according to most experts. Some estimates go higher.

Conflicts over land requisitions accounted for more than 65 percent of rural mass incidents, the China Economic Times reported earlier this year, citing survey data.

But most of these flare-ups are briefer and smaller than Wukan’s, and do not attract the same international attention.

China’s state-controlled media have reported sporadically on the protests, only citing official statements, and checks for “Wukan” on popular microblogging sites have been blocked, reflecting official wariness about spreading news about the confrontation.

Xue’s eldest daughter Xue Jianwan, in an interview published this week by an online Hong Kong magazine, said there were signs of bruising and physical abuse on her father’s body. Officials said doctors found the apparent bruising was caused by blood settling after his death, said the official Xinhua news agency.

The daughter, Jianwan, also said authorities refused initially to tell the family where her father had been taken, asking only later for his medical records.

(Additional reporting by Chris Buckley in Beijing and Lee Chyen Yee in Hong Kong)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111218/wl_nm/us_china_unrest_village

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Nov 10 2011

Seven Tools to Help You Not Freeze to Death This Winter [Toolkit]

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It’s starting to get cold out, but you probably know that. And we already showed you how to safely keep your house warm, but gadgets can also help. We got seven that will keep you toasty through the cold season. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/4DaI0mN5uIo/

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