30 May

LiNK Newsletter May 2008

Posted by S.K.

Crossing, Shin Dong-Hyuk, and more in this month’s newsletter.

Read on…

17 Apr

Where has all the courage gone?

Posted by S.K.

That is the title of a column by Joseph Hong, a LiNK staffer.  I know LiNK know about this blog, but are they actually reading it?  Anyway

Few countries today can claim as staggering a list of human rights violations as North Korea.

For starters, there’s a resurgent famine driven by gross government mismanagement that threatens millions of lives, hundreds of thousands of political prisoners languish in concentration camps, and an estimated half-million refugees remain in hiding from forced repatriation that often results in torture and execution.

As the situation grows ever more desperate for those fleeing the world’s most repressive regime, urgent attention is needed.

The People’s Republic of China regards North Korean refugees as “economic migrants” and actively hunts them down in an effort to prevent a mass migration through the long Chinese-North Korean border, in violation of the 1951 Refugee Convention.

Reports from the field indicate that China is offering increasingly lucrative bounties for cases that lead to arrest and repatriation.

North Koreans seeking asylum in countries that do not repatriate refugees are put in severely overcrowded detention centers, sometimes for well over a year, before being issued exit visas.

In light of this, it is fair to say that international institutions have totally failed in their duty to protect refugees and curtail human rights violations.

Regarding the increasing bounties for refugees, I was going to post this but I could not really confirm it.

While the opinion piece urges governments to do more for the North Korean people, it is even better if individuals take matters into their own hands.

21 Jan

Note to LiNK

Posted by S.K.

Dear LiNK,

It’s been almost a year since you launched your new website. Looks great. Now please update it. As a matter of fact, I’ve met the web designers in a job (didn’t get it though) interview last year and, according to them, updating it is a breeze. I notice that the news section is updated occasionally, but that’s someone else content (my news feed is done automatically by the spiders at Google). Even I, now juggling two jobs, can find the time to write something once a day (most of the time). Even if it means copy/paste old press releases would be great. In this Web 2.0 environment where users demand a constant flow of content, there no excuse for organizations seeking an online presence to display old content, much less 10 months old content. Hell, I’ll do it for you, for free.

your adoring fan,

kyochan