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PROPAGANDA or ground-breaking work by North Korean artists? Propaganda, says Foreign Affairs Minister Stephen Smith; ground-breaking contemporary art, says the Queensland Art Gallery. Full Article at The Age
SEOUL (AP) President Obama's envoy on North Korea said Thursday that officials in Pyongyang agreed on the need to resume nuclear disarmament talks but did not say when they would return to the negotiating table. Full Article at USA Today
SEOUL, South Korea — President Barack Obama's envoy on North Korea says he did not meet with leader Kim Jong Il during his trip to Pyongyang. Full Article at Fort Worth Star-Telegram
US envoy says he did not meet with NKorean leader The Associated Press More News President Barack Obama's envoy on North Korea says he did not meet with leader Kim Jong Il during his trip to Pyongyang. Full Article at KansasCity.com
He was not expected to have met with North Korea's reclusive leader, Kim Jong-il. The Chinese-brokered talks bring together envoys from the US, Russia, Japan, China and the two Koreas. Full Article at Al Jazeera
Kim Jong Il, top leader of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), made an inspection tour of the Kanggye General Tractor Plant and a newly built stock farm in Jagang province recently. Full Article at Xinhua
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- President Barack Obama's envoy on North Korea says he did not meet with leader Kim Jong Il during his trip to Pyongyang. Full Article at 11Alive | Atlanta
SEOUL: North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il visited a tractor factory and cattle farm in a northern town, state media reported Thursday, in an apparent sign he was unlikely to meet a visiting US envoy. Full Article at Channel News Asia
The Iranian leader was chosen from 11 candidates - selected by human rights experts - including North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il, President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe, and Myanmar's General Than Schwe. Full Article at New Kerala
North Korean leader Kim Jong Il has a network of underground tunnels - containing railway lines, a water supply and even vegetation - to help him escape Pyongyang in an emergency situation. Full Article at Webindia123
Kim Jong-il has a network of secret tunnels as an escape route in case of emergency, according to a prominent defector. Full Article at Rantburg
Seoul: In wintry Pyongyang this week, the challenge for US president Barack Obama's first envoy to North Korea is how to convince its obsessively secretive leader that he would be mad not to talk with the outside world about disarming. Full Article at DNA India
While climate delegates are quarreling in Copenhagen, and President Barack Obama is collecting his Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo, an important story is unfolding in relative obscurity, in North Korea. Full Article at Forbes
Dec 9 (Reuters) - U.S. envoy Stephen Bosworth was slated to hold talks on Wednesday in Pyongyang with senior North Korean officials on ending the country's boycott of international nuclear disarmament discussions. Full Article at Reuters Alert Net
SEOUL -- U.S. President Barack Obama's first envoy to North Korea arrived in Pyongyang on Tuesday to try to coax the prickly state back to the nuclear talks it quit a year ago, but without offering it any new incentives. Full Article at China Post
A sort of tea party movement may be breaking out today in the least likely of all places. The unseen pillars of Korean society are its ajummas. Full Article at The New Ledger
Corea del Norte llego a un mundial despues de 44 años de ausencia y en esta edicion le toco bailar con las tres feas. Full Article at Soccer Blogs
Stephen Bosworth is due to stay for three days and meet top North Korean officials, but not leader Kim Jong-il, for talks analysts say may lead to a pledge from Pyongyang to end its boycott of the nuclear discussions but no big breakthroughs. Full Article at Irish Times
Full Comment’s Araminta Wordsworth brings you a regular dose of international punditry at its finest. Full Article at National Post
Has Kim Jong-il even seen who his brethren are drawn against? Full Article at Unprofessional Foul
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South Korean conservative activists burn a North Korean flag and a portrait of its leader Kim Jong-Il during a rally in Seoul on November 11, 2009 denouncing a sea clash between South and North Korean navy boats in the Yellow Sea the day before.
View Photo »South Korean conservative activists burn a portrait of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il (L) during a rally in Seoul on November 11, 2009 denouncing a sea clash between South and North Korean navy boats in the Yellow Sea the day befor.
View Photo »This undated photo released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency on October 25, 2009 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Il inspecting the newly-built Mt. Myohyang Recreation Ground in North Pyongan province.
View Photo »This undated photo released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency on October 25, 2009 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Il inspecting the Huichon Silk Mill in Noth Korea's Jagang province.
View Photo »This undated photo released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency on October 25, 2009 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Il inspecting the Youth Electric Complex at Huichon city in Noth Korea's Jagang province.
View Photo »This undated photo released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency on October 25, 2009 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Il posing with staff of the Youth Electric Complex at Huichon city in Noth Korea's Jagang province.
View Photo »This undated photo released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency on October 25, 2009 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Il inspecting the Huichon University of Technology in Noth Korea's Jagang province.
View Photo »this undated photo released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency on October 24, 2009 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Il (C) inspecting a newly-built pig farm at an undisclosed location in North Korea.
View Photo »this undated photo released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency on October 24, 2009 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Il (C) inspecting a newly-built pig farm at an undisclosed location in North Korea.
View Photo »this undated photo released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency on October 24, 2009 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Il (centre L) inspecting a newly-built pig farm at an undisclosed location in North Korea.
View Photo »this undated photo released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency on October 24, 2009 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Il (C) inspecting a newly-built pig farm at an undisclosed location in North Korea.
View Photo »This undated picture, released from North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency on October 21, 2009 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il inspecting the newly-built apartment houses in Mansudae Street in Pyongyang.
View Photo »This undated picture, released from North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency on October 21, 2009 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il inspecting the newly-built apartment houses in Mansudae Street in Pyongyang.
View Photo »South Korean conservative activists shout slogans next to portraits of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il during a rally in Seoul denouncing the North's launch of missiles on October 13, 2009.
View Photo »South Korean conservative activists shout slogans with placards showing pictures of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il during a rally in Seoul denouncing the North's launch of missiles on October 13, 2009.
View Photo »South Korean conservative activists shout slogans with placards showing pictures of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il during a rally in Seoul denouncing the North's launch of missiles on October 13, 2009.
View Photo »South Korean conservative activists burn a portrait of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il (C) during a rally in Seoul denouncing the North's launch of missiles on October 13, 2009.
View Photo »South Korean conservative activists shout slogans next to portraits of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il during a rally in Seoul denouncing the North's launch of missiles on October 13, 2009.
View Photo »South Korean conservative activists burn portraits of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il during a rally in Seoul denouncing the North's launch of missiles on October 13, 2009.
View Photo »South Korean conservative activists burn a portrait of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il during a rally in Seoul denouncing the North's launch of missiles on October 13, 2009.
View Photo »This undated photo released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on October 10, 2009 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il visiting the newly-built North Hwanghae Provincial Art Theater. North Korea marks the anniversary of its ruling communist party.
View Photo »This undated photo released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on October 10, 2009 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il visiting the Migok Co-op Farm in Sariwon. North Korea marks the anniversary of its ruling communist party.
View Photo »This undated photo released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on October 10, 2009 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il visiting a store at the Migok Co-op Farm in Sariwon. North Korea marks the anniversary of its ruling communist party.
View Photo »This undated photo released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on October 10, 2009 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il visiting the Migok Co-op Farm in Sariwon. North Korea marks the anniversary of its ruling communist party.
View Photo »North Korean leader Kim Jong-il (C) visits a mine at the Komduck mine district in South Hamkgyong province, North Korea, in this undated picture released by North Korea's official news agency KCNA May 21, 2009. KCNA did not state expressly the date when the picture was taken.
View Photo »South Korean conservative activists burn a portrait of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il (L) during a rally in Seoul on November 11, 2009 denouncing a sea clash between South and North Korean navy boats in the Yellow Sea the day befor.
View Photo »The North Korean government’s biggest concern is international radio broadcasts like those of Radio Free Asia
The artists concerned are from a studio that operates under the guidance of North Korea's leader, Kim Jong-Il. The studio reportedly produces almost all of the official artworks in North Korea, including works that clearly constitute propaganda
Regardless of Seoul’s appeasement policy, or whatever the South does toward the North, Pyongyang hasn’t given up its aim of unifying the Korean Peninsula by military force. They are sticking to this principle and teaching North Koreans about it
During this time of year when we gather in churches and with our families to celebrate the birth of Jesus, the grim situation in North Korea is another reminder that Christians in the West must reach out in prayer to our brothers and sisters in Christ trying to survive under evil dictator Kim Jong-Il
Fragile, worsening health, long drawn-out economic collapse and growing political instability in North Korea indicate that the Kim Jong-il regime is drawing to an end
If Bosworth is not going to just listen like a middle-school student at class but raise his opinions, North Korea would not let him meet Kim Jong Il
Listen closely to what they are saying: that North Korea will return to the six-party talks if progress is made in U.S.-North Korea relations ... That means that any progress will be determined by North Korea. They can always drag their feet if they don't get the response they want, rationalizing that a...
Our aim is to get the arrest warrant on Kim Jong Il to be issued ... North Korea's crimes against humanity are no less serious than Sudan's.
Listen closely to what they are saying: that North Korea will return to the six-party talks if progress is made in U.S.-North Korea relations ... That means that any progress will be determined by North Korea. They can always drag their feet if they don't get the response they want, rationalizing that a...
Upon returning home, Bill Clinton made a debriefing to the White House, saying Kim Jong Il is healthy enough and still pretty much runs the country
Listen closely to what they are saying: that North Korea will return to the six-party talks if progress is made in U.S.-North Korea relations ... That means that any progress will be determined by North Korea. They can always drag their feet if they don't get the response they want, rationalizing that a...
If the person Chinese premier Wen Jiabao met in October in Pyongyang was a fake Kim Jong Il, that would be quite an insult to China, which is the closet ideological ally and a major economic benefactor to North Korea
They were really shocked watching how the Americans destroyed Iraq’s tanks
The North Korean government’s biggest concern is international radio broadcasts like those of Radio Free Asia. Content promoting democracy and disclosing leaders’ corruption as well as North Korea’s human rights situation—the Kim Jong Il regime considers this its biggest threat.
North Korea is in a dilemma ... It does not want markets, but can't get rid of them either.
The military is by far the largest, most capable and most efficient organization in North Korea, and Kim Jong Il is making maximum use of it
At the meeting, comrade Hu Jintao asked Choe Thae-bok to convey his invitation to General Secretary Kim Jong-il to visit China at a time convenient to him
We heard that Premier Wen believed Kim Jong-Il was in pretty good health. He managed the interactions, was engaged very actively
It adds to the calculus, let's say, of [Iranian President Mahmoud] Ahmadinejad and [North Korean leader] Kim Jong Il
Kim Jong Un has in the past months got great popularity among the younger representatives within the army, within the party, as opposed to the old guard ... Here, we can see a sort of brewing conflict, which at the moment is not visible, but within the elite they probably detected some signs of interest...
- ComradeJack
45 minutes ago
- abc_global
1 hour ago
- thiagocaleal
1 hour ago
Segundo Obama, "Guerra é instrumento para manter paz". Então passa o Nobel pro Kim Jong-Il.
- FabioMonteiro_ 1 hour ago
- deanmillermusic
2 hours ago
