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South Korea activist to press North Korea on abductions

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NewsHubA South Korea activist representing the families of people abducted to North Korea is requesting a meeting with the representative of the United Nations’ human rights office in Seoul.
Choi Sung-ryong, the representative of the group Family Assembly of those Abducted to North Korea, submitted a letter to the U. N. office on Tuesday, Yonhap news agency reported.
Choi said he delivered to Signe Poulsen, the Seoul office representative of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, a letter explaining the situation facing South Korean abductees.
According to Choi, there are « 21 South Korean nationals living in Pyongyang » after they were kidnapped.
The activist included a list of their names to Poulsen, the report stated.
Their identities were determined using personal details released by North Korean authorities in 2011, Choi said.
A total of 516 South Korean nationals have been kidnapped to the North, according to the activist group.
Choi also said a source in North Korea informed him Pyongyang plans to send envoys to the annual meeting of the U. N. Human Rights Council in Geneva.
North Korea is expected to ask for interviews with the group of North Korean waitresses who defected to the South last April.
North Korea claims the women and their manager were kidnapped from their location in China.
Choi said his group is planning to pressure North Korea to allow abductees living in Pyongyang to meet with their families in the South.
« We will send families of abductees [to Geneva] to inform the international community of the kidnappings, » Choi said.
North Korea has been frequently condemned for a wide range of human rights abuses, and defectors have said they witnessed summary execution, rape, torture and forced labor under the regime.

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© Source: http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News/2017/01/18/South-Korea-activist-to-press-North-Korea-on-abductions/2011484755663/
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Philippine police kidnapped and murdered S. Korean businessman

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NewsHubPhilippine police kidnapped and murdered a South Korean businessman, then led his wife to believe he was alive for months to extort money from her, authorities said Wednesday.
The killing is the latest in a long series of criminal acts by the Philippine police force, regarded as one of the nation’s most corrupt institutions, and has fuelled concerns about its role enforcing President Rodrigo Duterte’s deadly crime war.
The man disappeared from his home in the northern city of Angeles in October last year, and his wife initially paid a ransom of five million pesos ($100,000), national police spokesman Dionardo Carlos told AFP.
– Fake drug raid –
However, the man was strangled to death and burned to ashes in a crematorium on the day he was abducted, the South Korean foreign ministry said, citing a Philippine government report.
The crematorium was owned by a former police officer, the foreign ministry said.
The South Korean government identified the man only by his surname of Ji and said he was in his 50s. Philippine media said he was a businessman who had been living in the Philippines since 2008 and had been working for a manpower company.
South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byung-Se demanded answers after receiving a phone call from Philippine Foreign Secretary Perfecto Yasay to inform him of the murder.
« Minister Yun, expressing grave shock over the implication of Philippine police officers in the case, asked that the Philippine government get to the bottom of the case and bring those responsible to justice, » a foreign ministry spokesman said.
Ricky Santa Isabel, one of the officers accused of going to Ji’s house and abducting him, surrendered this week, according to Carlos, the police spokesman.
He said another two officers who went with him to the house, as well as their superior, were under investigation.
All four accused officers were from the Anti-Illegal Drugs Group based at national police headquarters in Manila, according to Carlos.
He said a retired police officer was also believed to be involved but had fled to Canada, and that there were South Korean accomplices. Carlos did not elaborate on the identities or actions of the South Korean suspects.
Santa Isabel and his two colleagues went to Ji’s house on the pretext of a drug raid, according to Carlos.
The abductors demanded from Ji’s wife a ransom of eight million pesos on October 30, 12 days after he was killed, according to the Philippine Daily Inquirer newspaper, which first reported the news.
It said that she paid five million pesos ($100,000), but the kidnappers then demanded another 4.5 million pesos and continued to say he was alive.
The case has drawn criticism from some lawmakers and media in the Philippines as an example of corrupt policemen expanding their illegal activities after being given freedoms by Duterte to prosecute his war on drugs.
Duterte has encouraged police to kill drug traffickers and addicts, and vowed to shield them from prosecution.
Nearly 6,000 people have died in Duterte’s drug war since he took office in the middle of last year.
Carlos insisted to AFP the abduction of Ji was not related to Duterte’s drug war, saying the problem of kidnappings for ransom by corrupt police had existed for a long time.
« It turned out it was an old modus operandi where bad cops claim there is a drug raid and turn it into a kidnap for ransom, » Carlos said.
At least 167 policemen are under investigation for being involved in various money-making rackets, some of them under the cover of the drug war, Metro Manila police chief Oscar Albayalde told reporters.
The police force was among the most corrupt national agencies, according to a 2015 report from the national ombudsman.
A 2013 survey by anti-graft watchdog Transparency International also found that the police force was perceived by Filipinos to be the Philippines’ most corrupt institution.

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© Source: http://www.digitaljournal.com/news/world/philippine-police-kidnapped-and-murdered-s-korean-businessman/article/483898
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Korean star rapper Gary returns to ‘Running Man’

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NewsHubAfter recent controversies, a TV official confirmed that Gary is returning to the variety show “Running Man” of South Korea’s national TV-radio network SBS.
According to the reports of K-pop Herald, an SBS official said that Gary would appear as a special guest on January 29.
“There will be dramatic twist[s] and great secret[s] added to the episode,” the official said. “The episode will be airing in two weeks, so we can’t give you any further details about it.”
His sudden appearance was even a secret to other “Running Man” members before the filming of the episode started.
Gary, a former “Running Man” cast member, left the program in November.
Stay updated on the latest episodes of your favorite Korean shows on Viu by tapping this link: http://inq.news/viu-INQnet .

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© Source: https://entertainment.inquirer.net/212842/korean-star-rapper-gary-returns-running-man
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Japan's hi-tech toilets to get standardised symbols

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NewsHubJapanese toilets are set to become easier to use, after manufacturers agreed to standardise the symbols on the control panels.
Japan’s hi-tech toilets famously include features such as lid and seat controls, flush strength, front and back bidets, and air drying,
Different manufacturers all use their own pictograms for each function.
But the Japan Sanitary Equipment Industry Association says this confuses foreign tourists.
The organisation said (in Japanese) that it hoped its eight new pictograms would make things easier for non-Japanese speakers and create « a toilet environment that anyone can use with peace of mind ».
Japan is attracting tourists in record numbers and authorities are focussed on making the country more welcoming for the Tokyo Olympic Games in 2020.
The association includes major domestic toilet giants, including Toshiba, Panasonic and Toto.
They will begin using the new symbols this year, the association said.

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© Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-38660860
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Caroline Kennedy boosted US-Japan ties as US ambassador

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NewsHubTOKYO (AP) – Caroline Kennedy stepped down Wednesday after three years as U. S. ambassador to Japan , where she was welcomed like a celebrity and worked to deepen the U. S.- Japan relationship despite regular flare-ups over American military bases on the southern island of Okinawa.
Appointed by President Barack Obama in 2013, she had been expected to leave with the coming change in U. S. leadership. President-elect Donald Trump’s transition team has also said that all envoys who were political appointees must step down by Inauguration Day on Friday. Trump has not named a new ambassador yet.
Kennedy ruffled some feathers early in her tenure by tweeting her opposition to Japan ’s dolphin hunt, shortly after her embassy issued a statement expressing “disappointment” that Japan ’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe had visited a shrine that memorializes World War II war criminals, among others.
During her time, though, the conservative Abe and liberal Obama found common ground despite coming from opposite ends of the political spectrum.
“She has great skills and authority as a convener, a much needed function in U. S.- Japan relations,” said Kent Calder, the director of the Reischauer Center for East Asian Studies at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies in Washington, D. C. “She has been more of a network builder than a concrete policy initiator, but that is almost an inevitable role for ambassadors these days.”
He said her legacy includes facilitating Obama’s historic visit to Hiroshima last May, one of two Japanese cities devastated by U. S. atomic bombs in 1945. Kennedy was in Pearl Harbor at the end of last year when Abe reciprocated with a visit to the site of Japan ’s 1941 surprise attack that drew America into World War II.
Some will also remember the efforts of the first female U. S. ambassador to Japan to promote literacy and women’s and LGBT rights, and for her visits to the northeast region slowly recovering from a deadly and destructive tsunami in 2011.
“She was true to the Obama administration goals, and she maintained the Kennedy mystique without making it the focal point of her tenure,” said Nancy Snow, a professor of public diplomacy at Kyoto University of Foreign Studies. “I will remember her as a champion of person-to-person exchange and engagement.”
Winning understanding in Okinawa for a reduced but still large U. S. military presence proved an impossible task, and was hampered by a series of incidents from crimes by U. S. base personnel to crashes of U. S. military aircraft.
“In every ambassadorship, there are both enduring issues and unpredictable events,” she told Japan ’s largest newspaper, the Yomiuri, in a farewell interview. “In my case, both were linked to Okinawa.”
The daughter of former U. S. President John F. Kennedy arrived in November 2013 to more fanfare than the typical envoy. Thousands of onlookers lined streets to snap pictures and wave as she traveled by horse-drawn carriage to present her credentials to Japan ’s emperor. The procession was broadcast live on Japan ’s public broadcaster NHK.
Her popularity strained embassy resources, a 2015 U. S. government report found, because of the demands for her participation in events across the country. It noted that the embassy “has now caught up on the backlog of gifts sent to the ambassador in her first six months in Japan.”
Now 59, Kennedy is returning to her Manhattan home with husband Edwin Schlossberg, who split his time between Tokyo and New York. She hasn’t indicated publicly what her future plans are.
___
Online: Kennedy ’s farewell video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vPcI7txv6V0&feature;=youtu.be
Copyright © 2017 The Washington Times, LLC.
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Japan’s NHK Picks Up Netflix’s ‘Hibana: Spark’

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NewsHubIn a first of its kind deal, Japanese public broadcaster NHK will broadcast the Netflix original drama series “Hibana: Spark” starting in February. The 10 episodes about the struggles of a comedy duo, of 45 to 50 minutes each, will air on Sunday evenings.
A Netflix original series produced in collaboration with the Yoshimoto Kogyo talent agency and Dentsu Digital Holdings, “Hibana: Spark” debuted in June last year. Based on a prize-winning bestseller by comedian Matayoshi Naoki and made under the supervision of veteran director Ryuichi Hiroki (“Kabukicho Love Hotel”,) the series was simultaneously streamed in 190 countries and territories.
Netflix has made the Japanese market a priority, offering a range of programming targeted at local viewers, though millions of overseas fans also stream the more popular Japanese shows. Among Netflix’s Japan -produced titles are: “Terrace House: Boys & Girls in the City” and its follow-up “Terrace House: Aloha State,” and drama series “Atelier,” “Good Morning Call,” “The Midnight Diner: Tokyo Stories,” and “Underwear,” and anime pair “One Piece” and “Naruto: Shippuden.”

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© Source: http://variety.com/2017/tv/asia/japan-nhk-picks-up-netflixs-hibana-spark-1201962263/
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Hiking in a Forest Born Out of Mount Fuji’s Lava

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NewsHubA thick forest thrives on hardened lava that once flowed down Mount Fuji’s northwestern flank into lakes that reflect the volcano’s snow-capped cone like rippling mirrors. Within it, the roots of hemlock and cypress trees snake out over the ground through a blanket of moss, and trails lead to deep caverns filled with ice.
The Aokigahara forest , as this tangle of woods is called, was born on 12 square miles of lava from an eruption in the year 864, the biggest in 3,500 years. The event left Japan’s rulers awe-struck and its countrymen inspired to worship the volcano as a god. A walk into this isolated place, where nature’s power to rebound from cataclysm is so clearly on display, can be intensely spiritual.
Perhaps because of that, the woods inspire an almost reverential fear in Japan and, increasingly, beyond it. In the past year alone, three North American movies have opened with plots based on the woods’ reputation as a suicide destination and warren of paranormal activity: “The Sea of Trees” with Matthew McConaughey, “The Forest” and “The People Garden.” Those films come six years after “ Suicide Forest ,” a Vice documentary that has gotten more than 15 million views on YouTube and has furthered the idea that the forest is a place where people end their lives.
I decided I would hike from Lake Shoji, the smallest of Fuji’s five lakes, for about six miles to the site of the eruption that created Aokigahara. But first, I hired a guide to take my wife and me to an area on the forest’s western edge that is popular with tourists.
A train painted with Mount Fuji cartoons took us on the last leg of the two-hour trip from Tokyo to Kawaguchiko Station on a drizzly Friday last spring. From the station, a gateway to Fuji and its lakes, we rode a bus for 30 minutes to the Fugaku Wind Cave parking lot.
Takaaki Abe waited for us at the trailhead in a baseball cap and hiking boots. He told us he was 65 and had guided in the forest for 15 years, which made me feel better about paying 12,000 yen (about $103) to a company called Fuji Kanko Kogyo for a two-hour nature walk and visit to two caves.
Mr. Abe pointed his trekking pole into the forest as we started on the trail, which was crowded with families and children. The moss covering the trees retained water, allowing them to thrive without traditional soil. The ground we stood on certainly was anything but: In some places, the lava is more than 440 feet deep. There were holes, caused by violent emissions of steam, lurking in spaces between the hinoki trees, or Japanese cypress, and goyo matsu, or five-needle pines.
At the cave, we descended stairs into a broad hole that funneled into a cavern. Backlit ice pillars glowed in hues of translucent purple, and placards said the cave was once used to refrigerate seeds and silkworm cocoons. As we left, crouching and ducking our heads, Mr. Abe clapped his hands. Tiny holes in the lava absorbed the sound. “If you yell for help, nobody will hear you,” he said.
That comment prompted me to ask Mr. Abe if he had ever seen a ghost.
“No,” he said with a chuckle. “But I want to.”
I wanted to learn more about the forest, so on Wednesday I took a bus from my wife’s hometown, Kofu, about 17 miles north of Aokigahara, to the Fujisan Museum in Fujiyoshida. Headphones told me in English that after the Jogan eruption, the one that created Aokigahara, Japan’s imperial court thought it had divined the cause. The court determined that “Shinto priests’ negligence in performing religious rights” had angered the volcano, and it ordered provinces nearest Mount Fuji to increase worship of the volcano’s deity, Asama no Okami.
“It was the biggest eruption on record, so it had the biggest impact on people,” Takeru Shinohara, the museum’s curator, told me. Construction of the Kawaguchi Asama Shrine northeast of the volcano, a site now part of Fuji’s Unesco World Heritage designation, started in 865. Today there are more than 1,000 such sacred places, known as Asama or Sengen shrines.
I told Mr. Shinohara that I planned to hike through the forest on the route starting at Lake Shoji. He said most tourists didn’t know about the path, which is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park, because few traveled beyond the more developed banks of Lake Kawaguchi and Lake Sai.
“It’s become a forgotten trail over time,” he said.
Two days later I was on a bus from Kawaguchiko Station to the Akaike stop at Lake Shoji. I crossed Route 139 and found the trailhead on a dead-end road behind a fire station, then followed the paved path onto the lava.
Take just one step into Aokigahara alone and you will understand how it got its reputation. Once-molten terrain swells and dips into the distance like a petrified ocean. Vines dangle from trees and moss partially hides deep crevasses. Sadly, there is also evidence that it is a suicide forest: I saw shiny blister packs that once held pills scattered amid the leaves, and fluorescent ribbons tied to trees by either thrill seekers or people who never returned. The Vice documentary followed these ribbons to locate human remains.
I came upon a guided group at a junction after only a few minutes.
“Whoa, are you alone?” one of the men asked me in English. “Don’t get lost.”
I told him not to worry, but I could understand his warning. The lava’s mineral content has a reputation for making navigational devices go haywire, and the forest looks the same in all directions. I had reached out to two Japanese geologists, Masato Koyama at Shizuoka University and Akira Takada of the Geological Survey of Japan, who said that holding a compass to the lava could move the needle, but that the device should work properly when held higher. My compasses worked fine, as did my hand-held GPS device.
I didn’t see anyone for the next hour, until the trail crossed a road and a man wearing a helmet and kneepads stood by a red scooter. He said his name was Yoshihide Yamazaki, he was 50 and he had come from Tokyo.
“My hobby is taking pictures of insects,” Mr. Yamazaki said. He held out laminated business cards with bug photos on them, and I took one. He said he came to Aokigahara to photograph the kamikiri mushi, or long-horned beetle.
I asked if he became scared wandering by himself.
“It’s dangerous if you go off the trail,” he said, holding up a plastic bag and an elastic band he wrapped around trees to avoid losing his way. “You can get lost very quickly.”
I asked if he had ever seen a ghost. He shook his head and said, “I wouldn’t mind seeing a good ghost.”
“What about an onryo?” I asked, using the Japanese word for a vengeful spirit.
“Dame,” he said. No way.
Mr. Yamazaki packed his camera into a storage compartment. “Now it’s light,” he said, looking into the forest. “But when it gets darker, it’s very scary.”
As I approached the site of the eruption, an area where magma oozed from fissure vents near a cone on Fuji’s slope called Mount Nagaoyama, the trail cut deeper into the lava flow. Black volcanic rock rose above my head. Then the lava gradually grew sparse, grass began to line the pathway and the twisted trees of Aokigahara faded into taller pines.
I spent the next hour trying to find a more dramatic transition, a steep drop from a lava flow or a fissure. But I never did. Aokigahara simply blended into the mountain.
I later went to the Kawaguchi Asama Shrine. I walked under the towering red gate and toward a group of ancient cedar trees. A shrine worker handed me a pamphlet, which had a picture of a waterfall inside of it. I asked him how to get there.
An hour later, on a trail above the waterfall that continued on to the summit of Mount Mitsutoge, the clouds pulled back like curtains and Mount Fuji appeared across the valley. I had never seen the volcano like that before, straight on and from an elevation, like a view from an airplane, and it was breathtaking.
Beneath the snow on the upper cone, the slopes broadened upon the land for miles. I looked at the forest on the northwestern flank and tried to imagine what the Shinto priests from the shrine below me would have seen over 1,150 years ago, long before the moss and the trees and the movies.
Incandescent rivers of lava lighting up the sky.

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© Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/18/travel/hiking-aokigahara-forest-japan-mount-fuji-lava.html?partner=rss&emc=rss
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Japan lowers permanent residency requirements, will favor foreign workers

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NewsHubNew rules will be implemented with regards to getting permanent residency in Japan and these will be in favor of the country’s foreign workforce.
The proposal to amend the residency rules is said to be planned for enactment as early as March, based on the decision by the Ministry of Justice last Tuesday, reports Nikkei.
Within the proposal, the required number of years to live in Japan before a foreigner can apply for permanent residency will be reduced from 10 years to three years. Individuals who accumulate 80 points based on various factors, including academic background, career history, and income will be put on a one-year fast track for residency. The current rules require five years.
New criteria will also be added that will contribute to the point system, such as employment in technology and other growth industries, graduating from a top university, and a career as a big-money investor.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and his government is hoping to attract foreign talent that would be beneficial to invigorating Japan’s economic growth. Revising the rules for permanent residency will begin after a public comment period, beginning Wednesday. Alfred Bayle

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Киевский патриарх проведет освящение воды в Гидропарке на Крещение

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NewsHubЗавтра, 19 января, в 14:00 состоится освящение днепровских вод возле часовни в честь Крещения Господня.
Чин освящения воды по соответствующим регламентированным и установленным канонам осуществит предстоятель Украинской православной церкви Киевского патриархата, Патриарх Киевский и всей Руси-Украины Филарет. Хорошее настроение присутствующим подарит Киевский академический театр украинского фольклора « Берегиня ».
« На Крещение вода приобретает особое значение – она становится целебной и заряжает здоровьем на следующий год. Призываем киевлян и гостей столицы освящаясь водой ответственно относиться к своей жизни и здоровью и не входить в воду в необорудованных для этого местах, без присутствия представителей Службы спасения и медицинских работников « , – сообщила заместитель председателя КГГА Анна Старостенко.

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ЦРУ рассекретило документы об НЛО

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NewsHubЦРУ рассекретило и опубликовало более 12 млн страниц документов за период с 1940-х до 1990-х годов. Среди них – данные о холодной войне и наблюдения за НЛО.
Как говорится на сайте американской разведки, рассекречены также документы о работе ЦРУ во время войны во Вьетнаме, проект тоннеля в Берлине, как потерпел крушение американский секретный самолет-разведчик U-2 над Советским Союзом, а также о программе Звездные врата, которая исследовала возможные психические способности человека.
ЦРУ анонсирует рассекречивания и других документов.
Читайте также: Разрежьте лимон и оставьте его в спальне. Это спасет Вашу жизнь!
К слову, рассекречивание архивов проводится по закону о свободе информации.
Отметим, по мнению физика из университета Манчестера Брайана Кокса, человечество не доживет до встречи с инопланетянами.
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