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Source: www.bignewsnetwork.com --- 27 days ago
North Korean leader Kim Jong Il is still nowhere to be seen, more than a week after South Korean intelligence Officials revealed the belief he is recovering from a stroke. As VOA's Kurt Achin report... ...
Source: au.rd.yahoo.com --- 2 days ago
SEOUL (AFP) - South Korean Prime Minister Han Seung-Soo on Tuesday warned his cabinet over attempts by Chinese and North Korean computer hackers to obtain state secrets, Officials said. ...
Source: au.rd.yahoo.com --- 14 days ago
SEOUL (AFP) - US negotiator Christopher Hill has extended his stay in North Korea where he is trying to save a crumbling nuclear disarmament deal, US and South Korean Officials said Thursday. ...
Source: www.msnbc.msn.com --- 15 days ago
The two Koreas will break an eight-month deadlock in diplomatic relations and hold military talks this week, their first since Seoul's new president took office, South Korean Officials said. ...
Source: www.washingtonpost.com --- 7 days ago
SEOUL, Oct. 9 -- With its toxic securities and its insistence on open markets, the United States has a lot of nerve and a lot to answer for. That, at least, is what South Korean Finance Minister Kang Man-soo argued as he prepared to leave for a weekend meeting in Washington of finance Officials s... ... Source: www.moreover.com --- 14 days ago
SEOUL - NORTH and South Korean Officials held talks on Thursday after months of frosty relations but the meeting ended early with little progress, pool reports from the venue said. ... Source: www.washingtonpost.com --- 7 days ago
SEOUL, Oct. 9 -- With its toxic securities and its insistence on open markets, the United States has a lot of nerve and a lot to answer for. That, at least, is what South Korean Finance Minister Kang Man-soo argued as he prepared to leave for a weekend meeting in Washington of finance Officials searching for ways to calm the global financial crisis. ... Source: news.smh.com.au --- 2 days ago
South Korean Prime Minister Han Seung-Soo on Tuesday warned his cabinet over attempts by Chinese and North Korean computer hackers to obtain state secrets, Officials said. ... Source: www.chron.com --- 15 days ago
The two Koreas will break an eight-month deadlock in diplomatic relations and hold military talks this week, their first since Seoul's new, conservative president took office in February, South Korean Officials said today. ... Source: www.iht.com --- 12 days ago
Kim Jong Il, who is believed by South Korean and U.S. Officials to have suffered a stroke, has made his first public appearance in one and a half months, the North's state-run news agency reported. ... Source: www.ajc.com --- 15 days ago
SEOUL, South Korea — Military officers from the two Koreas will meet this week, the first official contact between the nations since Seoul's new, conservative president took office in February, South Korean Officials said Wednesday. ... Source: www.channelnewsasia.com --- 7 days ago
SEOUL - South Korea's government on Thursday proposed a one-billion-dollar fund to support inter-Korean economic projects and provide aid to the North next year despite frosty ties, Officials said. ... Source: csmonitor.com --- 10 days ago
South Korean Officials recall M&M's and Snickers, as China's production standards improve. ... Source: www.upi.com --- 14 days ago
SEOUL, Oct. 2 (UPI) -- South Korean National Pension Service decided against bidding for Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering Co., Officials said Thursday. ... Source: www.freerepublic.com --- 3 days ago
Pictures of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il issued by the communist state may be several months old and possibly taken before his reported illness, South Korean media said on Monday, raising more questions about his health. North Korea's state TV broadcast pictures of Kim on Saturday inspecting a women's military unit, as the reclusive country stepped up a campaign to show its "Dear Leader" was healthy after U.S. and South Korean intelligence Officials said he may have suffered a stroke in August. The photographs of Kim, wearing sunglasses and looking generally healthy as he talked outdoors with women soldiers, were... ... Source: www.kentucky.com --- 9 days ago
A North Korean defector gave a piano recital Monday at the State Department, telling assembled diplomats and Officials that the ability to freely listen to music from other countries can influence repressed North Koreans' view of the world. Kim Cheol-Woong, a pseudonym used to protect family members still in North Korea, received standing ovations as he played Frederic Chopin's "Nocturne," the Korean folk song "Arirang" and "Amazing Grace" in the ornate Benjamin Franklin Room, high atop the State Department. His comments came as diplomats worked to salvage stalled North Korean nuclear disarmament talks. Kim, the son of a prominent North Korean and former first pianist of the State Symphony Orchestra, said the North severely restricts the music people can study, listen to and play. He said he fled his homeland, working in a Chinese timber mill before arriving in South Korea in 2003, so that he could freely express himself. "In North Korea, people are desperate for music," said Kim, speaking through an interpreter between songs. "You can imagine how influential one piece of music can be on your awareness." ... Find more results for South Korean Officials on RSSMicro.com |
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