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Murakami novel acknowledges Nanjing Massacre, sets off online frenzy
(People's Daily Online) 15:58, March 03, 2017

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A photo of Haruki Murakami's latest novel, "Killing Commendatore," composed of two volumes.

Japanese contemporary best-selling author Haruki Murakami has earned plaudits from many Chinese citizens after releasing his latest novel, "Killing Commendatore," which acknowledges the large-scale loss of civilian life during the Nanjing Massacre.

During the massacre, Japanese troops committed mass murder and rape in Nanjing, then the capital of the Republic of China, in December 1937. To the fury of many in China and around the world, some conservative Japanese politicians and historians now deny that the massacre took place, or they put the death toll at a much lower number than most believe to be true.

In the novel, which was published in Japan on Feb. 24, Murakami writes: “...for the exact number of civilian victims [of the Nanjing Massacre], debates existed among historians. But generally, it is not in dispute that the majority of residents were embroiled and killed in the war.”

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Haruki Murakami

He adds that some put the Chinese death toll at 400,000, while others say it was 100,000. "But what is the difference?” he wonders in the book.

The remarks have electrified Chinese netizens, leading some web users to hail Murakami as a “conscientious and upright writer of integrity.”

Nanjing Massacre Memorial Hall, the official hall memorializing those killed in the massacre, posted a comment on the site's official Weibo account: “As Murakami said, there’s no difference between 400,000 and 100,000 ... According to the verdict of the Tribunal for Tani in 1947, there were more than 300,000 victims in total. Eighty years have passed, yet many Japanese still eschew the appropriate reflection on and repentance of the country's militarism.”

During a 2015 interview with Kyodo News, Murakami said Japan should repeatedly apologize for the atrocity to China, the Korean Peninsula and other countries involved in the conflict.
 
South Korean constitutional court upholds impeachment of President Park
Xinhua/Agencies | Updated: 2017-03-10



South Korean police officers stand guard in front of the Constitutional Court, before the Constitutional Court ruling on Park's impeachment, in Seoul, South Korea, March 10, 2017. [Photo/Agencies]


SEOUL - South Korea's Constitutional Court upheld the impeachment of President Park Geun-hye on Friday, removing her from office over a graft scandal involving big business that has gripped the country for months.

The court's acting chief justice Lee Jung-mi read the ruling on the impeachment, broadcast live nationwide, saying it was the unanimous decision of eight justices.

By law, the court's ruling takes effect immediately after the reading. Park will be required to leave the presidential Blue House as she officially lost all of presidential power and her title as incumbent president.

Park becomes South Korea's first democratically elected leader to be forced from office. A presidential election will be held in 60 days, according to the constitution.

The bill to impeach President Park was passed in the National Assembly on Dec 9 by an overwhelming majority.

A total of 20 hearings had been held since Feb 27. Tens of witnesses appeared in the courtroom for questioning.

In recent months, almost 80 percent of South Koreans had supported Park's impeachment, but some 15 percent had opposed it.

In 2004, late President Roh Moo-hyun was impeached, but he was reinstated two months later.
 
Relationship between China and South Korea: Pressure Continues


On February 23, 2017, Colonel Ren Guoqiang – the representative of the Ministry of Defense of China stated at a regular press conference, that China strongly opposes the deployment of the THAAD missile defense system in South Korea, as it causes serious damage to the strategic aspects of safety and interests of the neighboring countries, including China and Russia, and violates the strategic balance in the region.

Colonel Ren Guoqiang expressed the hope that South Korea will cherish the achievements of the development of relations between the Armed Forces of the two countries: China hopes that South Korea will build on the ideas of peace and stability in the region, and also take into account the fundamental interests of the two peoples, the precautionary approach to the issues that affect the strategic security and interests of China.

“Such an approach will create positive conditions for the smooth development of relations,” but in parallel to these declarations Beijing continues to carry out a hardline policy against South Korea, aimed at trying to force Seoul to cancel the decision to deploy THAAD. Calculations by South Korea show that, in 2016, China took measures that have become an indirect expression of protest against the decision of Seoul regarding the THAAD on 43 occasions altogether. According to the Ministry of Unification data, published on February 3, 2017, this number of responses were received since July 8 of the last year, when an official decision was made on the THAAD. In the social and cultural spheres, 23 cases of pressure from China were reported, 15 – in economics, and 5 cases in the sphere of foreign policy and security.

Here are some specifics. On January 3, 2017, the Peoples’ Republic of China (PRC) State Administration of Quality Control, Inspection and Quarantine issued a list of cosmetic products banned from being imported into China. It lists the names of 28 cosmetic products of which 19 are produced in South Korea. The reasons for the ban on the importation of products cited the absence of certificates or a discrepancy between the description and the actual composition of the product, although they had previously successfully passed customs clearance, and there had been no problems with regard to their quality.

The ban, however, did not come as a surprise, since, in terms of popularity, South Korean cosmetic products in China are in the second place, after TV serials, and when the Chinese government introduced tough restrictions on South Korean popular culture, it has become clear who is next. On January 7, the “Huanqiu’s Daily” newspaper published an article titled “South Korea Draws Troubles upon Itself because of Missile Defense System – THAAD”, where it was openly stated that China will not sacrifice its national interests for cosmetics (previously, South Korean cosmetic companies had a 67% share of the Chinese market).

Earlier, plumbing took a blow. On December 20, 2016, the PRC authorities published a similar list of imported automatic toilet-bidets, and again out of 47 models – 43 models produced by South Korean firms were prohibited. Add to this China’s tightening of import control measures and non-tariff barriers and exclusion of Chinese producers of EVs using Korean batteries from the list of subsidized companies.

Cooperation in the field of classical music has also been subjected to suffering. So, the well-known pianist Kun-Woo Paik was denied a visa. Various other singers and musicians have also begun to experience delay in the issuance of visas.

In addition to pressure in trade there has also been a show of force. On January 9, approximately ten Chinese military aircrafts flew through the South Korean Air Defense Identification Zone to the south of the island of Jeju and to the west of the island of Iodo. According to the South Korean military, AWACS aircraft – bombers and reconnaissance aircrafts, invaded the country’s airspace, coming either from one of the air bases on the territory of China or from Liaoning aircraft carrier, which is involved in exercises in the Yellow, East China and South China Seas. At the same time, eight aircrafts flew over the Korean Strait and reached the Japanese Air Defense Identification Zone.

Although this is NOT the country’s airspace, or an exclusive economic zone, South Korea requires that all aircrafts crossing this zone, receive advance permission from the South Korean party, but the Chinese aircrafts had not made any requests. The South Korean Military informed their Chinese colleagues about the fact of violation of air borders, and then raised 10 F-15K and KF-16 fighter jets into the air, taking measures to oust the intruders. In response, the Chinese party said that it was conducting military exercises – in the same style of South Korean responses to North Korea’s declaration of maneuvers in dangerous areas.

In February and August, 2016, three Chinese military aircrafts had flown over the zone of the South Korean Air Defense Identification Zone, but this time it was not a single flight – a group of several planes flew within the restricted area for a few hours. In addition, this time China raised the long-range H-6 bomber in the air, which is capable of carrying ten supersonic anti-ship missiles and can fly from China to the island of Guam in the Pacific Ocean.

Separately, we note a move that suggested itself for a long time. At the end of December 2016, Chinese authorities expelled 30 South Korean Protestant missionaries, who were engaged in religious activities in the areas of China bordering to North Korea. More specifically, about 30 were expelled only from the Yanbian Korean Autonomous Region, and expelled in 24 hours, so that some priests were forced to leave, unable to solve issues with their rented or purchased properties.

As one of the Chinese political scientists said about these priests from South Korea, the authorities have long had grievances: pastors are engaged not so much in preaching as in the transportation of North Korean defectors from North Korea and attempts to create a Christian underground in North Korea, at the same time collecting intelligence information. It is no coincidence that the concentration of South Korean priests is unusually large in those districts of China with close proximity to the North Korean border.

Finally, Chinese visa centers sharply restricted the issuance of entry visas for citizens of South Korea, although no new requirements have been introduced: “fill out the form correctly and provide a photo of the correct size and format.” Many rumors abound regarding the decision to ban tourism in South Korea, however, according to the Financial Times, since last July when Seoul and Washington officially announced the deployment of THAAD missile defense system on the Korean Peninsula, 3.8 million Chinese tourists visited South Korea. This is 27% more than in the same period of the previous year, and almost 40% more than in the same period of 2014. The increase occurred despite the fact that the Chinese state-owned mass media, warned of a reduction in the number of Chinese tourists visiting South Korea due to rising anti-Korean sentiment.

This, however, does not mean a complete break in joint initiatives. During a closed session in Busan on December 20-21, the second meeting of representatives of South Korea and China was held on the issue of determining the exact boundaries of their exclusive economic zones (EEZ) in the Yellow Sea. The problem is that in some areas the exclusive economic zones of South Korea and PRC overlap. The South Korean party insists on defining the boundaries of the exclusive economic zones along the line equidistant from the coastlines of the two countries. In Beijing, however, it is believed that the border location should take into account the length of the coastline and the density of the local population.

Curiously, a mere fact that Chinese investors continue to buy up land in South Korea is perceived as economic pressure. According to the data published by the Kunming Institute of Financial Management Bank on February 21, 2017, a number of foreigners residing in South Korea reached over 2 million people (3.9% of the total population) in 2016, whereby 50% of them are Chinese, including those of Korean origin. Last year, Chinese investors bought 2 million 620 thousand square meters of land, and if in 2011 the territory in the possession of Chinese citizens totaled 3.7 million square meters, in the past year it has reached 16.9 million. However, this can be explained by the fact that property prices in Hong Kong, Singapore and Vancouver, where Chinese people live in large numbers, have risen sharply.

Naturally, Seoul has retaliated. Thus, the government of South Korea has begun to address the issue of whether the economic pressure from China violates WTO rules. A representative of South Korea’s Foreign Ministry, alleged this on February 7, but in order to lodge a complaint with the WTO, proof must be submitted that certain measures have been adopted by Beijing deliberately. And then there are many controversial issues, and a lack of specific evidences to say with certainty whether there has been a violation of the WTO charter.

Then, apparently in response to the expulsion of the priests, South Korea refused to grant work visas to nine teachers of the Confucius Institute (Beijing’s National Project, which aims to acquaint the world with Chinese culture and especially with the Chinese language). The Ministry of Justice stated that the decision was made in accordance with immigration legislation. And then on February 19, 2017, the Consulate General of China in Jeju, made a presentation to South Korea on the issue of preventing Chinese citizens from entering the territory of South Korea.

Separately, it is worth noting the increased level of violence against maritime police and Chinese poachers engaged in illegal fishing in South Korean waters and South Korea’s exclusive economic zone. Thus, on February 16, 2017, the coast guards tried to conduct an examination of about thirty ships, which were hung with steel spears and metal sheets on the sides to prevent climbing aboard. Once, one vessel was successfully detained, then another 40 ships joined the group of Chinese fishermen. After several verbal warnings, the maritime police used the on-board machine gun, after which the intruders fled. Similar incidents, which led to machine-gun fire, took place on November 1 and December 11, 2016.

Recall, the behavior of Chinese fishermen poaching in South Korean territorial waters has become more aggressive, and since October 11, 2016, after the incident, when the Chinese poachers crushed the boat with a group of coast guard officers with their vessels, the South Korean authorities have introduced new rules, which greatly simplify the use of firearms arms including – shoot to kill.

This is clearly not the end of the period of tension in relations between the two countries, especially given the fact that the authorities of the South Korea are not going to give in on the THAAD issue, and therefore it is possible that new levers of exerting influence on Seoul may appear among Beijing’s arsenal.

Konstantin Asmolov, PhD in History, Leading Research Fellow at the Center for Korean Studies of the Institute of Far Eastern Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences, exclusively for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook.


http://journal-neo.org/2017/03/10/relationship-between-china-and-south-korea-rk-pressure-continues/
 
China hoping for political stability in South Korea
China Plus/Xinhua Updated: 2017-03-10 21:27:07

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Foreign ministry spokesperson Geng Shuang .[Photo: fmprc.gov.cn]

China's Foreign Ministry has said it would not comment on the latest developments in the impeachment of South Korea's president Park Geun-hye, saying that the matter belongs to the ROK's domestic affairs.

Foreign ministry spokesperson Geng Shuang also added that "as a neighboring country, we hope the ROK can maintain political stability."

The comment came during a daily foreign ministry briefing in response to a question about the latest political upheaval in Seoul.

Park was ousted as the country's head of state after the constitutional court upheld a motion to impeach the scandal-ridden leader Friday. She became the first ROK leader to be permanently removed from office through impeachment.

Geng said China had spoken positively about efforts Park had made to improve China-ROK relations when she was in office.

"However, as for her decision to deploy the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system, China has expressed definite opposition," Geng said.

"As China and the ROK are each other's neighbors that cannot be moved away, the development of bilateral ties in the past 25 years has brought substantial benefits to both peoples," Geng said. ' "China has always been open and positive to cooperation and exchanges with the ROK, a position that has never changed," he said. "But the crux of the current difficulties facing bilateral ties is the THAAD deployment."

"We hope the ROK government can face China's concerns squarely, heed the voices of the public, look at the whole picture of bilateral cooperation and regional peace and stability, and stop the deployment to remove obstacles in bilateral ties and bring them back on a normal track," Geng said.

China has repeatedly said that the ROK and U.S. deployment of THAAD gravely undermined regional strategic balance and the security interests of countries in the region, including China, and runs counter to peace and stability in the Korean Peninsula.

THAAD is designed to intercept incoming missiles at an altitude of 40-150 km. Its X-band radar can peer deep into Chinese and Russian territories.
 
Gansu attracts more investment from Taiwan
Xinhua, March 14, 2017

Gansu Province saw robust growth in investment from Taiwan last year, said local authorities on Monday.

Gansu signed 34 investment deals worth a total of 7.25 billion yuan (about 1.1 billion U.S. dollars) with Taiwan businesses last year, said Wang Feng, head of the provincial Taiwan affairs office.

Actual investment from Taiwan last year was about 1 billion yuan, almost three times that of 2015, Wang said. Taiwan entrepreneurs set up 9 new companies in Gansu.

Gansu organized dozens of exchange activities for college students and young people from the two places last year.

The province plans to use its advantage in the Belt and Road Initiative to boost cooperation with the island in agriculture, biomedicine and culture.
 
China readying countermeasures against missile defence shield in South Korea, retired PLA general says

The military will deploy its own system before Seoul sets up the American one, Wang Hongguang says

PUBLISHED : Monday, 13 March, 2017, 11:05pm
UPDATED : Tuesday, 14 March, 2017, 6:10am

China knew it might not be able to stop Seoul deploying a US anti-missile system and was prepared to counter with its own anti-radar equipment, a retired PLA general said on Monday.

The comments by Wang Hongguang came as a South Korean court’s decision to uphold the impeachment of Park Geun-hye, the country’s former president, fanned hopes Seoul might put plans for the Terminal High Altitude Area Defence system on hold.

China vows ‘resolute’ measures as US deploys first parts of THAAD missile system to South Korea

Park supported the installation of the system to help protect South Korea against threats from North Korea, which Beijing says can peer through China’s defences.

Wang, former deputy commander of the Nanjing Military Region, said China could not take the chance the next South Korean president would change policy and roll back the deployment.

The first THAAD components arrived at the Osan Air Base in South Korea last week.

Wang said Beijing had measures in place to neutralise THAAD’s radars. “We will complete our deployment before THAAD begins operations. There is no need to wait for two months [before the election of the next South Korean president],” he said on the sidelines of the political sessions in Beijing. “We already have such equipment in place. We just have to move it to the right spot.”

Yue Gang, a military commentator and former People’s Liberation Army colonel, said China could either destroy THAAD or neutralise it.

“Destroying [THAAD] should only be an option during wartime,” Yue said.

But China could interfere with the system’s functions through electromagnetic technology, he said.

Yue said an ideal place to install the Chinese equipment was on the Shandong peninsula on the country’s east coast, opposite South Korea.

US must ditch deployment of THAAD missile-defence system

Fu Qianshao, an aviation equipment expert with the PLA Air Force, said China could also send planes – manned or unmanned – to fly close to THAAD to interfere with its radar signals. All the country’s armed forces had the capacity to interfere with radar signals, Fu said.

Wang said China’s chief concern was not just with South Korea’s deployment of the American system but also the United States’ broader potential to contain the region in a sophisticated web of missile defence systems in Japan, Singapore, the Philippines and even Taiwan.

The THAAD system consists of a sophisticated radar and interceptor missiles designed to spot and knock out incoming ballistic missiles.


This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as:
China ‘ready to counter’ THAAD deployment


http://www.scmp.com/news/china/diplomacy-defence/article/2078476/china-readying-countermeasures-against-missile-defence
 
Wang said Beijing had measures in place to neutralise THAAD’s radars. “We will complete our deployment before THAAD begins operations. There is no need to wait for two months [before the election of the next South Korean president],” he said on the sidelines of the political sessions in Beijing. “We already have such equipment in place. We just have to move it to the right spot.”

Yue Gang, a military commentator and former People’s Liberation Army colonel, said China could either destroy THAAD or neutralise it.

“Destroying [THAAD] should only be an option during wartime,” Yue said.

But China could interfere with the system’s functions through electromagnetic technology, he said.

Eventually concrete action was required to be taken. Nonetheless, the optimum solution to the crisis would be the next government of SK to halt the entire project. Under a DP government (which appears to be the front runner in the elections), such a move is not entirely impossible.
 
Park’s lack of contrition sparks surprise, outrage

Korea JoongAng Daily - 2017-03-14

Civic activists, political parties and common citizens are expressing disappointment and even outrage at former President Park Geun-hye’s total lack of contrition as she left the Blue House and returned to her residence in Samseong-dong, southern Seoul, Sunday.

Civic activists who had called for Park’s resignation at candlelight vigils since last October in Gwanghwamun Square in central Seoul were particularly incensed at what appeared to be Park’s defiance of the unanimous ruling of the Constitutional Court on Friday removing her from presidency.

Two days later, Park departed from the Blue House Sunday evening, escorted by a motorcade, for her old residence in Samseong-dong, where hundreds of supporters awaited her holding national flags. She waved from the car, beaming, and went on to greet her most loyal aides and lawmakers before entering her home.

Her former presidential spokesman Min Kyung-wook, a lawmaker of the Liberty Korea Party, read out a four-sentence statement from Park immediately afterward.

I feel sorry that I could not complete the mandate given to me as president,” said the statement. “I express my gratitude to people who have supported and trusted me. I will take all responsibility for these results. Though it may take time, I believe the truth will eventually prevail.

These were Park’s only remarks since the historic ruling of the Constitutional Court on Friday upholding the National Assembly’s decision to impeach her for a corruption scandal involving her friend Choi Soon-sil.

One civic organization that has been demanding Park’s resignation, Bisang 2016, released a statement immediately saying, “When we see that you are closing your eyes to the fact that 80 percent of the people requested your dismissal and intentionally incite the few blindly supporting you in order to maintain that small authority, it confirms that it is a good thing you were driven out of office.

The organization plans to hold a press conference Tuesday to demand a proper investigation into Park and for her to be summoned and prevented from leaving the country. Park is now stripped of the immunity from prosecution she enjoyed as president.

The Korean Confederation of Trade Unions said in a statement that, “President Park took the remarkable position that she will remain the president for a small number of pro-Park forces and her supporters. The time in which a suspect is granted freedom is time that enables the concealing and destruction of evidence.

Lee Eun-jin, a 33-year-old merchant at a market in Daegu, told the JoongAng Ilbo Monday, “Though she was disgracefully kicked out of the Blue House, she was smiling brightly, which made me question whether former President Park understands the situation properly.” Daegu is Park’s hometown: she represented it as a lawmaker for five terms.

Choi Kyun-sang, a 35-year-old company employee from Seoul, said, “At the time of the ruling on the impeachment of former President Roh Moo-hyun [in 2004], Park called for him to ‘humbly accept’ the Constitutional Court’s decision. Her going against its decision now can only be seen as a mockery of the people.”

A group of around 20 university student councils held a press conference at the Gwanghwamun Square in central Seoul on Monday, and a spokesperson said, “Former President Park, who shows no repentance and instead is attempting to unite the conservatives, needs to be arrested.” They vowed to continue holding candlelight vigils including one on April 1 for college students.

All the major parties except the conservative Liberty Korea Party also expressed dismay at Park’s apparent rejection of the court’s decision.
[The Liberty Korea Party is a center-right political party in South Korea. Until February 2017, it was known as the Saenuri Party (새누리당).]

There was no message of acceptance, self-reflection or appeal for unity by the dismissed president till the end,” said Park Jie-won, chairman of the liberal People’s Party, at a Supreme Council meeting at the National Assembly on Monday.

The Democratic Party of Korea criticized the former president for putting herself over the people. Choo Mi-ae, head of the party, called upon Park to “comply with the prosecution investigation as a civilian and criminal suspect.

Joo Ho-young, floor leader of the conservative Bareun Party, expressed “regret that she used a spokesman to leave behind a message of division and discord.

Park’s supporters, including the lawmakers of the LKP and aides that greeted the former president at her Samseong-dong residence on Sunday, are setting up a team to help her.

The so-called Samseong-dong team will continue to support Park as she will not be given any of the special treatment afforded former presidents in the past because she was impeached.

BY SARAH KIM [kim.sarah@joongang.co.kr]

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South Korea’s impeached ex-president Park Geun-Hye (C) arrives at her private residence in Seoul on March 12, 2017. South Korea’s impeached ex-president Park Geun-Hye left the presidential Blue House on March 12, two days after the Constitutional Court’s verdict removing her from office over a massive corruption scandal. / AFP PHOTO / YONHAP / STR / – South Korea OUT /
 
Citizens gasp as Park Geun-hye is unrepentant to the very end

The Hankyoreh
Posted on : Mar.14, 2017 16:51 KST Modified on : Mar.14, 2017 16:51 KST

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Riot police, reporters and supporters crowd outside Park Geun-hye’s private home in Seoul’s Gangnam district, Mar. 13. (pool photo)

Park still saying the “truth will come out”, while offering no apology for Choi Sun-sil scandal

On the evening of Mar. 12, Ahn Ji-hun, 34, watched a live broadcast of former president Park Geun-hye returning to her home. Perhaps because of Park’s personal history, Ahn had felt a little compassion for her. But now, he says, that compassion is gone.

Seeing her smiling as she reached her house sent chills down my spine. It was so shocking,” Ahn. “When I saw pro-Park lawmakers gathered in front of her house to welcome her, it felt like she was a president who had finished her term in office or a leader who was being oppressed. My feelings of pity shriveled up.

People who were expecting some kind of message of acceptance of the Constitutional Court’s ruling or call for unity from Park, who left the Blue House two days after the Constitutional Court decided to uphold her impeachment, are expressing their feelings of shock and disappointment. Instead of offering an apology for the Choi Sun-sil scandal, which forced the people who had elected Park as president to take to the streets to force her out of power, Park made a statement of outright defiance.

Jung Ji-yeong, 56, had trouble sleeping that night. “I couldn‘t get to sleep with the thought of how unlucky South Koreans are to have chosen such a person to be president and to have paid for her food,” she said. “As Park said, I hope the truth is quickly brought to light. The Special Prosecutor hasn’t completed the investigation either. If Park considers herself innocent, she should hurry up and let the prosecutors investigate her.

Park Seo-gyeong, 43, who had expected the leader of a country to have some sense of responsibility, felt despondent. “I realized that [Park] is not a grown-up. She’s even worse than an elementary school kid. For several months, our society was divided and chaotic. At the least, Park should have apologized to the people.

There were people who died because of her on Mar. 10, and asking their forgiveness would have been the polite thing to do. She never stopped her irresponsible habit of stirring up division. There isn’t a single criminal who doesn‘t think their situation is unfair. Park needs to be quickly investigated by the Prosecutors as planned so that the truth can be revealed,” Park Seo-gyeong said.

On Mar. 13, all the political parties except for the Liberty Korea Party were united in their demand that the truth that Park had mentioned be brought to light through an exhaustive investigation by the prosecutors.
[Note: The Liberty Korea Party is a center-right political party in South Korea. Until February 2017, it was known as the Saenuri Party (새누리당).]

Since Park is now a private citizen and a suspect with 13 charges against her, she needs to work with the Prosecutors’ investigation to reveal the truth. Through an immediate and firm investigation free of any political or governmental considerations, the Prosecutors must disclose the full truth before the people and sternly prosecute her crimes,” said Minjoo Party leader Choo Mi-ae during a meeting of the party’s supreme council.

The truth will be revealed not by the Blue House but by the prosecutors. If Park feels that all this is unfair, she should wait no longer and work actively with the Prosecutors’ investigation to bring the truth to light,” said People‘s Party leader Joo Seung-yong during a meeting of the party’s supreme council.

The Prosecutors‘ investigation of Park needs to be conducted by the law and according to the law,” said Jung Byeong-guk, former leader of the Bareun Party, during a radio interview with the Catholic Peace Broadcasting Corporation.

The Prosecutors should swiftly send a summons to Park Geun-hye and they should take all measures necessary for the investigation including tracking her bank accounts and searching the Blue House,” said Justice Party leader Shim Sang-jung during a meeting of party leadership.

During a meeting of the Liberty Korea Party’s emergency committee, Chung Woo-taik, the party’s floor leader, avoided any direct mention of the Prosecutor’s investigation. “We will put the impeachment case behind us and focus on restoring stability to the government and unifying the country,” Chung said.


By Park Soo-jin and Oh Seung-hoon, staff reporters
Please direct questions or comments to [english@hani.co.kr]

http://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_national/786469.html
 
Chinese premier stresses peaceful development of cross-Strait relations
(Xinhua) 15:57, March 15, 2017

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Chinese Premier Li Keqiang gives a press conference at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, capital of China, March 15, 2017. (Xinhua/Cui Xinyu)

BEIJING, March 15 (Xinhua) -- Premier Li Keqiang said Wednesday the Chinese mainland's stance of opposing "Taiwan independence" and promoting peaceful development of cross-Strait relations is consistent and clear-cut.

Li made the remarks while addressing a press conference after the conclusion of the annual session of China's national legislature.

"No matter how the situation on the island may evolve, the fraternal bond between the mainland and Taiwan will not be severed, the history and the reality that both sides of the Taiwan Strait belong to one China will not be changed, and our resolve and sincerity in safeguarding the peaceful development of the cross-Strait relations will not waver," Li said.

He said the Chinese mainland will continue to uphold the 1992 Consensus, which acknowledges that the Chinese mainland and Taiwan belong to one China, as the political foundation for the cross-Strait relations.

While vowing resolute opposition against "Taiwan independence," Li said the well-being of the people across the Strait will be promoted.

More policies will be introduced to help Taiwan people find jobs, create businesses, work and live on the mainland, he said.

"We will continue to provide favorable policies so that Taiwan businesses and Taiwan compatriots can share opportunities of development with the mainland," he said. "Anyway, we are one family."
 
One day the Seoul may find itself swallowing up all the costs at the end... be a willing expendable pawn amidst the geopolitical game between the two giants... right now it's starting to pay back the costs :D

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

[Analysis] US Secretary of State softens rhetoric on China visit


Posted on : Mar.20,2017 17:33 KST Modified on : Mar.20,2017 17:33 KST

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US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi leave after a press conference at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing, Mar. 18. (Yonhap News)

Rex Tillerson had been critical of China for THAAD retaliation while in South Korea, immediately before Beijing visit

After calling on China to play a bigger role in the North Korean nuclear issue during his visit to Japan and South Korea, US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson toned down his strident rhetoric considerably during his visit to China on Mar. 18 and 19. In South Korea, he sharply criticized China’s retaliatory measures against South Korea in regard to the THAAD missile defense system, but in China he barely touched the subject.

When Tillerson met Chinese President Xi Jinping on Mar. 19 at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, he focused on the US and China working together to develop their relationship. Tillerson said that the US wanted to avoid clashes and conflict, to develop its relations with China based on a spirit of mutual respect and cooperation and to make a joint response to the challenges facing the international community.

Xi responded that the two countries’ shared interests were much greater than their disagreements and that China-US relations had to be viewed from a long-term strategic perspective. The Chinese president went on to say that the two countries should strengthen their communication and cooperation on issues facing the region while stabilizing bilateral relations by respecting each other’s core interests and major concerns.

China has previously stated that the deployment of THAAD on the Korean Peninsula infringes on one of China’s core interests. There was reportedly no mention of the issue of North Korea’s development of nuclear weapons during the meeting. In addition to this, Tillerson adopted a conciliatory stance, saying that Trump, “looks forward to enhancing that understanding, and the opportunity for a visit in the future.”

Tillerson also strained to highlight common interests rather than differences with China during the press conference held after his meeting with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on Mar. 18. He said that the US and China share the view that tensions on the Korean Peninsula are very high and that the situation has reached quite a dangerous level.

We share a common view and a sense that tensions on the peninsula are quite high right now and that things have reached a rather dangerous level, and we’ve committed ourselves to doing everything we can to prevent any type of conflict from breaking out,” Tillerson said.

This is clearly different from Tillerson’s remarks during his joint press conference with South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se on Mar. 17 in which he urged China to put more sanctions and pressure on North Korea. In South Korea, Tillerson firmly stated that this was not the time for dialogue with North Korea; in China, he left open the possibility of dialogue.

In fact, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi appeared to be rebutting the remarks that Tillerson had made in Japan and South Korea. Wang said that problems must be resolved using peaceful and diplomatic means regardless of the situation, which was a tactful contradiction of Tillerson’s reference to military action against North Korea the previous day. While Wang repeated China’s current position on the THAAD issue, Tillerson made no remark at all on the subject, despite the fact that in South Korea he had urged China to refrain from retaliatory measures against THAAD.

Tillerson’s appears to have been watching his words in China because the US does not want US President Donald Trump‘s summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping, which is scheduled to take place early next month, to be spoiled by issues on the Korean Peninsula.

It’s also significant that Tillerson said on two occasions, during a press conference and an interview, that the US was looking for a way to coexist with China over the next 50 years. This remark suggests that the US and China are in a transitional period in their spheres of influence are in flux and that the US could acknowledge some degree of China’s influence over Asia.

By Kim Ji-eun, staff reporter
The Hankyoreh
 
Oh, the beauty of Western-style democracy. Ms. Park was selected by the will of the people, and was removed also by the will of the people, just after several months. I understand it is a complicated issue, but wonder if any country can move forward with such kind of mob democracy.

No wonder why Japan, South Korea and Taiwan are stagnant, why Confucious countries who do not blindly copy the Western model like China, Singapore and Hong Kong and Vietnam are roaring.
 
Oh, the beauty of Western-style democracy. Ms. Park was selected by the will of the people, and was removed also by the will of the people, just after several months. I understand it is a complicated issue, but wonder if any country can move forward with such kind of mob democracy.

No wonder why Japan, South Korea and Taiwan are stagnant, why Confucious countries who do not blindly copy the Western model like China, Singapore and Hong Kong and Vietnam are roaring.

Park Geun-hye was in her last year of the presidency when the courts ruled in favor of impeachment. She entered the presidential office in February 2013.

Also China and Vietnam's GDP growth rates are high because they are developing countries. Vietnam is still low-income (per capita). So they still has a lot of fast growing to do. China is enter middle income so they are still fast but slowing down, which is to be expected of a country approaching middle income. You added Singapore and Hong Kong to "roaring" but that is actually not so true. Their GDP growth rates are less. And that is because they are high income countries. They have a very high GDP per capita. That is the same reason why Taiwan, South Korea, and Japan also have slow GDP growth rates, its because they already achieved a high income per capita. I would say that it was the advance economy and large markets of the US with its very high GDP per captia and high purchasing power of the consumer market that enabled China to sell lots of goods and make lots of money. If there was no American market to consume Chinese made goods, then China couldn't have made so much money.
 
Park Geun-hye was in her last year of the presidency when the courts ruled in favor of impeachment. She entered the presidential office in February 2013.

Also China and Vietnam's GDP growth rates are high because they are developing countries. Vietnam is still low-income (per capita). So they still has a lot of fast growing to do. China is enter middle income so they are still fast but slowing down, which is to be expected of a country approaching middle income. You added Singapore and Hong Kong to "roaring" but that is actually not so true. Their GDP growth rates are less. And that is because they are high income countries. They have a very high GDP per capita. That is the same reason why Taiwan, South Korea, and Japan also have slow GDP growth rates, its because they already achieved a high income per capita. I would say that it was the advance economy and large markets of the US with its very high GDP per captia and high purchasing power of the consumer market that enabled China to sell lots of goods and make lots of money. If there was no American market to consume Chinese made goods, then China couldn't have made so much money.

Lol so much self importance. If there were no American market then someone else will be. You will see American exceptionism are a bunch of BS.
 
Lol so much self importance. If there were no American market then someone else will be. You will see American exceptionism are a bunch of BS.

When Mao finally died, Deng Xiaoping was ready to implement economic reform. He saw the successful economic examples of both Singapore and Hong Kong during the 1970s, and proceeded to make reforms by creating the special economic zones later in the 1980s. Deng Xiaoping did this because he wanted to restore the strength that China had lost so long ago. But to do that, economic strength would be needed. And the only way to do it was to make economic relations with the US and to gain access to the American markets.

Another point that should be made that highlights the importance of the US economy to China's economic growth was China needed US cooperation in order to join the WTO. In 1995 and 1996 was the so-called straits crisis. Taiwan was going to have their first presidential election. And one of the candidates spoke about Taiwanese identity. China was furious at that and threatened Taiwan with ballistic missiles. Even launched off a bunch of missiles that landed in the water not from Taiwan's coast. In order to protect Taiwan from the missile threat, the US sent a carrier as a show of force. Despite the US having done this, China continued to develop greater economic relations with the US. They signed the agreement in 1999 with Bill Clinton, and then achieved becoming a member of the WTO in 2001.
 
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