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US officials set N. Korea talks in Moscow, Seoul
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Jan 27, 2012

US, S. Korean troops to stage two joint exercises
Seoul (AFP) Jan 27, 2012 - The United States and South Korea said Friday they would start two major annual joint military exercises in February and March despite the sensitive power transition under way in North Korea.

The Key Resolve drill will start on February 27 and continue until March 9. Separately, a joint air, ground and naval field training exercise known as Foal Eagle will be held from March 1 to April 30.

Seoul and Washington, which bases 28,500 troops in the South, say the drills are defensive and routine but the North habitually terms them a rehearsal for invasion.

Key Resolve, a computerised command post exercise, involves about 200,000 South Korean troops and 2,100 US soldiers.

It is "routine and defence-oriented, designed to enhance readiness, protect the region and maintain stability on the Korean peninsula", General James D. Thurman, commander of US troops in South Korea, said in a statement.

"It is based on realistic scenarios, using various assumed threats," he said.

Foal Eagle will include about 11,000 US forces along with South Korean troops in division-sized or smaller units, US authorities said.

North Korea has denounced the exercises as warmongering.

The North has taken a hostile tone with the South since its leader Kim Jong-Il died on December 17 and was replaced by his youngest son Jong-Un.

The new leader has been appointed armed forces chief and has visited several units in an apparent attempt to burnish his military credentials.

Cross-border tensions have been high since the South accused the North of torpedoing a warship with the loss of 46 lives in March 2010.

The North denied involvement but eight months later shelled a border island and killed four South Koreans.


Senior US diplomats will visit Russia and South Korea next week to discuss continuing efforts to obtain North Korea's nuclear disarmament, following the death of Pyongyang's leader Kim Jong-Il.

Glyn Davies, special representative for North Korea Policy, will travel to Moscow on Tuesday "to deepen cooperation and share perspectives on North Korea," the State Department said in a statement.

Davies will meet Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Igor Morgulov and Grigoriy Logvinov, the ambassador-at-large for six-party talks, it added.

The six parties involved in suspended negotiations for North Korea's nuclear disarmament are the United States, Russia, China, South Korea, North Korea and Japan.

Davies, whose trip will continue to February 3, will be accompanied by Clifford Hart, the special US envoy for six-party talks.

Meanwhile, Kurt Campbell, the US assistant secretary of state for East Asia and Pacific affairs, will travel to Seoul, South Korea from January 31 until February 1, the State Department said.

In meetings officials from the foreign ministry and presidency, "he will discuss a range of bilateral, regional, and global issues, including recent developments in North Korea," the State Department said.

Campbell met in Washington January 19 with senior officials from Japan and South Korea to coordinate action. In a statement, the countries urged North Korea to recommit to past agreements to end its nuclear program.

Kim's death last month threw into flux US plans for fresh diplomacy with North Korea, including a possible resumption of American food assistance to the impoverished state and more formal talks on ending Pyongyang's nuclear program.

Kim was replaced by a young and untested son, Kim Jong-Un.

Campbell will visit Hanoi, Vietnam from February 1-3 to meet with senior Vietnamese leaders to discuss bilateral and regional issues, the State Department said.

From February 3-4, Campbell will visit Phnom Penh, Cambodia to meet with senior Cambodian government officials to discuss Cambodias role as 2012 ASEAN chair, and ways to further strengthen bilateral ties.

He is due to return to Washington on February 4.

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S. Korean activists rally for freedom in N. Korea
Seoul (AFP) Jan 27, 2012 - Some 100 South Korean activists rallied Friday, urging the world to intervene to secure freedom and human rights for North Koreans and stop what they called genocide in the communist state.

Protesters included North Korean refugees and US Christian activist Robert Park, who two years ago was held by the North for 43 days after he crossed the border to stage a one-man protest over human rights violations.

"Stop genocide!" he shouted after an emotional speech that blasted human rights abuses especially in the North's camps for political prisoners.

According to South Korea's state human rights watchdog, North Korea has six such camps housing about 200,000 in total.

The rally was held to mark International Holocaust Remembrance Day, the 67th anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz.

Organisers said similar rallies were to be held in Tokyo and other foreign cities.

"We must bring the spring of freedom and democracy to North Koreans," said Ji Seong-Ho, a 31-year-old refugee who has led an anti-Pyongyang group since he arrived in Seoul in 2006.

"It's time to act and let North Koreans know that we and the international community are working for them," he told AFP.

Ji and others issued a statement calling for Seoul to intervene to protect the safety of North Korean refugees in China and accusing Beijing of repatriating some 5,000 such refugees every year.

"Tens of thousands of innocent North Koreans have been killed and innumerable families torn apart as a direct consequence of China's inhumane, illegal and unjustifiable policy towards the North Korean refugees," it said.

After the rally the demonstrators marched to the Chinese consulate to deliver a letter urging Beijing to stop repatriating North Korean refugees.

The letter said many of them face torture, imprisonment or even execution when returned to their homeland.

Rights groups have criticised China's policy of repatriating North Koreans as economic migrants, rather than giving them refugee status.



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NUKEWARS
S. Korea stages live-fire drill near sea border
Seoul (AFP) Jan 26, 2012
South Korean Marines Thursday staged a live-fire artillery drill on an island shelled by North Korea in 2010, the first such exercise since the death of Pyongyang's leader Kim Jong-Il last month. "Our troops staged two-hour firing drills today" on two frontline islands - Baengnyeong and Yeonpyeong, a Marine spokesman told AFP. A similar drill on Yeonpyeong in November 2010 provoked a N ... read more


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