Twenty-four years ago, tens of thousands of college students protested in Seoul, calling for democracy.
But today thousands of students gathered at Chonggye Square, calling for the government to cut their tuition fees.
“Half-price tuition, half-price,” shouted the crowd sitting on the ground, holding a candle in each hand.
Friday’s gathering came at the peek of recent student protests against the government, calling on the government and the ruling Grand National Party to keep its promise to halve college tuition.
Grand National Party’s new floor leader Hwang Woo-yea announced last month that the party will push ahead with the “half-price tuition” policy, one of President Lee’s key campaign pledges.
Unlike the original pledge, however, the new GNP plan aims to slash college tuition in half only for students from households in the bottom 50 percent income bracket.
Students, nongovernmental organizations and opposition politicians took to the streets in central Seoul, criticizing the government and the GNP party for paying lip service ahead of next year’s presidential election.
“Like me, many students can’t afford to pay tuition fee, so have to take a student loan. I came out here because the situation is getting worse,” said Chung Tae-young, 22, a junior at a Seoul university.
Joining the college students on Friday were also 40- and 50-somethings sitting side by side with the students.
“I came here because I feel responsible for this happening,” said Moon Byung-joon, 54, an office worker.
“Many students are having difficulty repaying their tuition loans. I think it is our responsibility for ignoring their plight,” he added.
The candle light vigil Friday was led by a nationwide network of people concerned about the high tuition fees, a national alliance of college students and the four opposition political parties. They urged the police to “guarantee a free and peaceful rally.”
College students and their parents here have long complained about the nation’s notoriously expensive tuition fees -- the second-highest among OECD universities after the United States. Last year, the average annual university tuition reached 7.5 million won for private schools and 5 million won for state schools.
Source: Korea herald
World's X-files
Friday, June 10, 2011
Wednesday, June 8, 2011
Samsung to buy Nokia?
Last week it was Microsoft. This week it's Samsung.
Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/samsung-buying-nokia-rumor-2011-6#ixzz1OiwCYNj3
Market chatter says Samsung wants to buy Nokia, and Samsung isn't denying it, Arild Moen at Dow Jones reports. (Samsung says it doesn't comment on rumors as standard operating procedure.)
Moen doesn't say where the rumor of Samsung buying Nokia came from. It's just "speculation."
But, Nokia is so utterly screwed it's hard to figure out why anyone would want it. Is its strong distribution really worth the ~$20 billion+ it would cost to buy the company?
Update: On Twitter, Florian Mueller points out Samsung would get a nice set of patents to fight Apple with if it bought Nokia.
Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/samsung-buying-nokia-rumor-2011-6#ixzz1OiwCYNj3
Ban Ki-moon receives full support for second term as UN Secretary-General
European Commission President Barroso is the latest to back Ban Ki-moon for another five-year term as Secretary General of the United Nations.
After serving as Secretary-General since January 2007, Ban Ki-moon announced his intention to run for a second term on 6 June in New York.
“At a time of unprecedented global change, the world increasingly looks to us, the United Nations, to lead on the great collective issues of the day,” he said. “That is our challenge as we look ahead.”
President Barroso applauded Ban Ki-moon in a statement.
“Let me tell you how much we, in the European Union, appreciate his wisdom and his dedication to the solution of the important issues on our planet, from sustainability and supporting developing countries to our constant struggle for peace,” he said. “I believe Ban Ki-moon has been and is a very good Secretary-General of the United Nations and we will be very pleased to see him continue in that very important position.”
Ban Ki-moon has also received backing from France, China, the US and Britain.
In a statement of support UK Prime Minister David Cameron said, “He has championed and renewed the vital role of United Nations in tackling complex global challenges."
No rivals have emerged and Ban Ki-moon is expected to win another term as Secretary-General.
Read more: Ban Ki-moon receives full support for second term as UN Secretary-General - New Europe http://www.neurope.eu/articles/Ban-Kimoon-receives-full-support-for-second-term-as-UN-SecretaryGeneral/106920.php#ixzz1Oif7Bi7i
U.S. Congress proposes another bill on tougher sanctions against North Korea
The U.S. House of Representatives will consider a bipartisan bill on reinforcing sanctions on North Korea, along with Iran and Syria, for their proliferation activities, a senior congresswoman said Tuesday.
The bill, co-drafted by Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Florida), who chairs the House Foreign Affairs Committee, and Rep. Brad Sherman (D-California) calls for the expansion and strengthening of sanctions against the so-called rogue states.
Among a set of stipulations in the bill is to tighten reporting requirements in the existing nonproliferation act to include information on persons who have acquired materials mined or otherwise extracted within the territory or control of the three nations.
It also sanctions any entity that is selling conventional military goods or technology to them.
“The continued collaboration between Iran, North Korea and Syria helps drive the dangerous programs and policies of each of these rogue states, and endangers the United States and our allies,” Ros-Lehtinen said in a press release. “The threats posed by these rogue regimes to free nations and to the oppressed people of these three countries grow every day.”
She added the measure will “strengthen laws already on the books which seek to prevent these rogue states from sending dangerous materials to one another, other rogues and extremist groups.”
Source: Yon Hap News
The bill, co-drafted by Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Florida), who chairs the House Foreign Affairs Committee, and Rep. Brad Sherman (D-California) calls for the expansion and strengthening of sanctions against the so-called rogue states.
Among a set of stipulations in the bill is to tighten reporting requirements in the existing nonproliferation act to include information on persons who have acquired materials mined or otherwise extracted within the territory or control of the three nations.
It also sanctions any entity that is selling conventional military goods or technology to them.
“The continued collaboration between Iran, North Korea and Syria helps drive the dangerous programs and policies of each of these rogue states, and endangers the United States and our allies,” Ros-Lehtinen said in a press release. “The threats posed by these rogue regimes to free nations and to the oppressed people of these three countries grow every day.”
She added the measure will “strengthen laws already on the books which seek to prevent these rogue states from sending dangerous materials to one another, other rogues and extremist groups.”
Source: Yon Hap News
Tuesday, June 7, 2011
Volcano erupts in chile causing mass evacuation
Southern Chile's Puyehue volcano erupted for the first time in half a century, prompting evacuations for 3,500 people as it sent a cloud of ash that reached Argentina, authorities said.
The National Service of Geology and Mining said the explosion that sparked the eruption also produced a column of gas 10 kilometers (six miles) high, hours after warning of strong seismic activity in the area.
"You can see the fire (in the volcano) and a plume of smoke, and there's a strong smell of sulfur," top Los Rios region official Juan Andres Varas told reporters.
The government, which earlier ordered the evacuation of 600 people, expanded that number to 3,500 people to be relocated to shelters in safe areas. Authorities issued a red alert, the maximum warning level, for the area.
A border crossing between Argentina and Chile was closed.
Yeimi Obando, a professor who was evacuated, told National Television of Chile that people "are very worried" about the effect of the ashes on their cattle and other animals.
A cloud of ash could be seen in the Patagonian resort town of Bariloche in Argentina, about 100 kilometers (62 miles) east of the volcano.
"We're trying to stop car traffic and ask that people stay at home and close their doors and windows to prevent the volcanic ash from coming in.
The city's airport was also closed," Carlos Hidalgo, Bariloche's communications secretary, told TN television.
"Ash was dumped like a snowstorm," he said. "The city is covered in gray ash."
Nearby localities were also affected, said Hidalgo, whose city of 50,000 people welcomes thousands of foreign tourists each year to its lakes and mountain scenery, as well as ski slopes in the winter months.
Argentine officials in La Angostura announced late Saturday that the Andean town of 16,000 people was on "red alert" and residents were urged to ration water use.
Flagship airline Aerolineas Argentinas cancelled six flights on Saturday because of the volcano, the company said.
Puyehue is located 870 kilometers (540 miles) south of the capital city Santiago in the Cordon Caulle complex nestled in the Andes mountains. Its last major eruption was in 1960, following a magnitude 9.5 earthquake.
Source: Yahoo!
Saturday, June 4, 2011
South Korea vows strong response to any future North Korea attacks
South Korea’s defense minister has warned that his country would respond very strongly to any future attacks by North Korea.
Kim Kwan Jin said at a regional security conference in Singapore on Saturday that his government must react with stiffer responses than in the past because North Korean provocations are becoming increasingly bold.
Kim said North Korea has been insincere in previous talks and must change its attitude for South Korea to return to formal discussions.
North Korea vowed Friday to launch “retaliatory military actions” against South Korea, a threat that came days after Seoul said its military had used photos of Pyongyang's ruling family for target practice.
Source: AP
Kim Kwan Jin said at a regional security conference in Singapore on Saturday that his government must react with stiffer responses than in the past because North Korean provocations are becoming increasingly bold.
Kim said North Korea has been insincere in previous talks and must change its attitude for South Korea to return to formal discussions.
North Korea vowed Friday to launch “retaliatory military actions” against South Korea, a threat that came days after Seoul said its military had used photos of Pyongyang's ruling family for target practice.
Source: AP
Friday, June 3, 2011
Mexican crime groups now making money from pirated goods
Marcelo Ramirez watches over a stall piled with pirated movies and music outside a busy Metro stop flanking the capital’s elegant Reforma Avenue. For him, buying and selling pirated goods is a way of life.
“There are no good jobs,” he said while customers browse the discs, each with a makeshift cover slipped inside a cellophane envelope. “If people could make a good living there wouldn’t be piracy. We would all buy originals.”
Absent from these discs are the disturbing drug cartel logos that have begun appearing on pirated movies and music elsewhere in the country: a “Z” or a bucking bronco for the Zetas, a monarch butterfly for La Familia Michoacana.
Experts say criminal organizations such as these have increasingly taken control of Mexico’s informal economy and with it, its multibillion-dollar market for pirated movies, music, software and other goods ― illegally producing, distributing and even exporting the latest Hollywood hits, music by popular Mexican artists and computer programs.
Criminal organizations now make only about half their money trafficking illegal drugs, said Edgardo Buscaglia, an expert on organized crime with Mexico’s Autonomous Technological Institute, a leading university. The other half of revenue, in the billions, comes from smuggling migrants, extortion, kidnappings and Mexico’s vast black market for pirated goods.
The consequences are enormous, said Jorge Amigo Castaneda, director of the Mexican Institute of Industrial Property.
The institute estimates that Mexico lost 480,000 jobs due to piracy and falsification in 2009, the latest year for which statistics are available.
For example, the faking of brand-name apparel cost the clothing industry $9.5 billion. The footwear industry, which has seen 70 percent of businesses close in recent years, must compete with the 200 million pairs of counterfeited “brand name” shoes that enter the country illegally each year.
With intellectual property of all kinds at serious risk of piracy or falsification in Mexico, the country loses its competitive edge in attracting national and foreign investment, Amigo said.
Mexico dropped six places to No. 66 in the World Economic Forum’s 2010-2011 report on global competitiveness, falling behind Panama, Costa Rica and Uruguay.
The hand of organized crime in piracy is evident, experts say.
The cartel logos popping up on movies, music and software discs are “obviously not registered trademarks, but it’s their own brand,” according to a government official who asked not to be named for security reasons.
“If someone from La Familia shows up, enters (a store) and sees that the discs don’t carry the butterfly, things are going to get ugly for the owners,” the official said. “They are forcing stores to buy their discs.”
Drug traffickers “get involved in piracy in the same way they get involved in the kidnapping of migrants,” said Gustavo Fondevila, an expert on piracy and criminal organizations with Mexico’s CIDE think tank. “They’re looking for ways to diversify their criminal business.”
Less than a mile away from where Ramirez mans his stall, Federico de la Garza sits in the Mexico City office of the Motion Picture Association where, as director, he is working on a campaign to convince Mexicans not to buy pirated goods.
Nine out of 10 movies sold in Mexico are pirated, he said.
With law enforcement and judicial institutions weak in Mexico, both the Motion Picture Association and the Business Software Alliance are working to convince the public that piracy is harmful.
The Motion Picture Association is sponsoring commercials that aim to instill a sort of “social shame” around buying pirated goods. The spots ridicule piracy and call into question a consumer’s values.
The Business Software Alliance is working with chambers of commerce throughout Mexico to encourage business owners not to purchase pirated software.
“It is not about prosecuting more people; it’s about asking society for a pact in which we can all work together,” said the association’s Mexico manager, Kiyoshi Tsuru. “The problem is massive.”
Studies suggest that Mexicans generally don’t view piracy as criminal or immoral.
Even when people believe that buying pirated items links them to organized crime, foments delinquency and weakens local industry, they still shop for pirated goods. In a 2009 study of affluent consumers, the American Chamber of Commerce in Mexico reported that 88 percent of respondents had purchased pirated goods, even though most view piracy negatively.
Ramirez, the vendor, said he knows it’s a crime to buy pirated goods. Still, he regularly shops for movies ― action flicks for himself, cartoons for his children.
The stall he watches was raided by police about three months ago, he said, but normally “they don’t bother you here.”
Source: The Dallas morning news
“There are no good jobs,” he said while customers browse the discs, each with a makeshift cover slipped inside a cellophane envelope. “If people could make a good living there wouldn’t be piracy. We would all buy originals.”
Absent from these discs are the disturbing drug cartel logos that have begun appearing on pirated movies and music elsewhere in the country: a “Z” or a bucking bronco for the Zetas, a monarch butterfly for La Familia Michoacana.
Experts say criminal organizations such as these have increasingly taken control of Mexico’s informal economy and with it, its multibillion-dollar market for pirated movies, music, software and other goods ― illegally producing, distributing and even exporting the latest Hollywood hits, music by popular Mexican artists and computer programs.
Criminal organizations now make only about half their money trafficking illegal drugs, said Edgardo Buscaglia, an expert on organized crime with Mexico’s Autonomous Technological Institute, a leading university. The other half of revenue, in the billions, comes from smuggling migrants, extortion, kidnappings and Mexico’s vast black market for pirated goods.
The consequences are enormous, said Jorge Amigo Castaneda, director of the Mexican Institute of Industrial Property.
The institute estimates that Mexico lost 480,000 jobs due to piracy and falsification in 2009, the latest year for which statistics are available.
For example, the faking of brand-name apparel cost the clothing industry $9.5 billion. The footwear industry, which has seen 70 percent of businesses close in recent years, must compete with the 200 million pairs of counterfeited “brand name” shoes that enter the country illegally each year.
With intellectual property of all kinds at serious risk of piracy or falsification in Mexico, the country loses its competitive edge in attracting national and foreign investment, Amigo said.
Mexico dropped six places to No. 66 in the World Economic Forum’s 2010-2011 report on global competitiveness, falling behind Panama, Costa Rica and Uruguay.
The hand of organized crime in piracy is evident, experts say.
The cartel logos popping up on movies, music and software discs are “obviously not registered trademarks, but it’s their own brand,” according to a government official who asked not to be named for security reasons.
“If someone from La Familia shows up, enters (a store) and sees that the discs don’t carry the butterfly, things are going to get ugly for the owners,” the official said. “They are forcing stores to buy their discs.”
Drug traffickers “get involved in piracy in the same way they get involved in the kidnapping of migrants,” said Gustavo Fondevila, an expert on piracy and criminal organizations with Mexico’s CIDE think tank. “They’re looking for ways to diversify their criminal business.”
Less than a mile away from where Ramirez mans his stall, Federico de la Garza sits in the Mexico City office of the Motion Picture Association where, as director, he is working on a campaign to convince Mexicans not to buy pirated goods.
Nine out of 10 movies sold in Mexico are pirated, he said.
With law enforcement and judicial institutions weak in Mexico, both the Motion Picture Association and the Business Software Alliance are working to convince the public that piracy is harmful.
The Motion Picture Association is sponsoring commercials that aim to instill a sort of “social shame” around buying pirated goods. The spots ridicule piracy and call into question a consumer’s values.
The Business Software Alliance is working with chambers of commerce throughout Mexico to encourage business owners not to purchase pirated software.
“It is not about prosecuting more people; it’s about asking society for a pact in which we can all work together,” said the association’s Mexico manager, Kiyoshi Tsuru. “The problem is massive.”
Studies suggest that Mexicans generally don’t view piracy as criminal or immoral.
Even when people believe that buying pirated items links them to organized crime, foments delinquency and weakens local industry, they still shop for pirated goods. In a 2009 study of affluent consumers, the American Chamber of Commerce in Mexico reported that 88 percent of respondents had purchased pirated goods, even though most view piracy negatively.
Ramirez, the vendor, said he knows it’s a crime to buy pirated goods. Still, he regularly shops for movies ― action flicks for himself, cartoons for his children.
The stall he watches was raided by police about three months ago, he said, but normally “they don’t bother you here.”
Source: The Dallas morning news
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)