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The films not to miss in 2017 Why British success at the Golden Globes does not mean there is Oscars glory ahead

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NewsHubWell, it’s that time of the year again when I write “Well, it’s that time of the year again to look ahead to some of the new movies opening in the UK in the next 12 months.” As usual, January and February are stuffed full of awards season hopefuls. This year, these include the musical La Land , which I’ll be reviewing in next week’s NS , and Manchester By the Sea , a tale of grief and guilt that is the exact antithesis of La Land in terms of mood (both open on 13 Jan). Also hoping for trophies and trinkets are Jackie (20 Jan), in which Natalie Portman plays JFK’s widow, and Moonlight (17 Feb), the lyrical story of a young, gay, African-American boy growing up in Miami. Look out for Cameraperson , in which the documentary cinematographer Kristin Johnson assembles a touching visual memoir using odds and ends from films she has shot. That opens on 27 January, as does the belated sequel T2 Trainspotting , which reunites the cast and crew of Danny Boyle’s 1996 original. The German comedy Toni Erdmann (3 Feb), about the comically fraught relationship between a woman and her prankster father, took home the five top prizes at the recent European Film Awards.
After the first few months of 2017, release dates tend to be fully confirmed only for studio blockbusters, which bagsy their berths many months and even years before opening. A case in point is the Fast & Furious series: not only is the eighth instalment opening in April (with Helen Mirren a surprise addition to the cast) but parts nine and ten are already booked into the schedule — for 2019 and 2021 respectively, in case you want to leave some space free in your diary. Or book a holiday.
Later in the year, though, I’m looking forward greatly to Under the Silver Lake , a kidnapping thriller starring Andrew Garfield and Riley Keough (who was so impressive as the gangmaster in American Honey ); it’s written and directed by David Robert Mitchell, who made the chilling It Follows , and he has had the good sense to retain the services of that film’s composer, Disasterpeace. Armando Iannucci is back with his second comedy, The Death of Stalin , with a killer cast including Jeffrey Tambor, Steve Buscemi, Andrea Riseborough and Michael Palin. The Snowman is a stylish-looking thriller starring Michael Fassbender and adapted by Tomas Alfredson ( Let the Right One In , Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy ) from the Jo Nesbø novel. Another Swedish director, Ruben Östlund, returns with The Square , which stars Elisabeth Moss and Dominic West and concerns a museum installation space where only good things can happen. Knowing this director’s sensibility, the film should become a talking point in the vein of his previous, provocative black comedies Play and Force Majeure.
Let’s hope for good things also from Stephen Frears’s Victoria and Abdul , with Judi Dench as Queen Victoria (for a second time: she first played the part 20 years ago in Mrs Brown ) in the story of the monarch’s relationship with an Indian clerk (Ali Fazal). The screenplay is by Lee Hall, who wrote Billy Elliot. The Turkish auteur Nuri Bilge Ceylan follows his Palme d’Or-winning Winter Sleep with Le poirier sauvage , while Pawel Pawlikowski, director of the highly-regarded Ida , offers the tale of a Polish love affair in Cold War. Other notable filmmakers returning this year include Lynne Ramsay with You Were Never Really Here , starring Joaquin Phoenix as a war veteran rescuing women from sex traffickers; Aki Kaurismäki with a droll new comedy-drama, The Other Side of Hope ; Todd Haynes with the children’s fantasy Wonderstruck ; and Lucretia Martel with Zama , her long-awaited follow-up to the extraordinary psychological drama The Headless Woman.
New Terrence Malick movies were once a cause for breathless anticipation. After the double non-whammy of To the Wonder and Knight of Cups , audiences may well be wary of Song to Song , formerly known as Weightless , though the cast-list is dazzling: Ryan Gosling, Cate Blanchett, Natalie Portman, Michael Fassbender, Christian Bale, Rooney Mara and Benicio del Toro. There is, naturally, a new Woody Allen film, as yet untitled; this one stars Kate Winslet, who was originally lined up as the star of Allen’s Match Point before dropping out at the eleventh hour and leaving the part open for Scarlett Johansson. And who could not be excited by the prospect of another oddball fantasy from Yorgos Lanthimos, director of Dogtooth and The Lobster? His latest, The Killing of a Sacred Deer , stars Colin Farrell and Nicole Kidman. Intentionally blank faces and affectless line readings are to be expected.
Michael Haneke is reunited with Isabelle Huppert in Happy End — what’s the betting that the title is ironic? — and the brilliant, scrupulous Andrey Zvyagintsev follows Leviathan , arguably his best film to date, with Loveless , about the search for a vanished child.
I’m looking forward also to Get Out , a racially-charged horror film from the production company Blumhouse. And who wants A Cure For Wellness? The trailer for this outlandish thriller suggests that the director Gore Verbinski has climbed Jacob’s Ladder all the way to Shutter Island via Shock Corridor. But Verbinski has a good track record in unusual product ( Mousehunt , Rango ). When he isn’t directing Pirates of the Caribbean films, that is.
Talking of which — there’s a new one of those, directed this time by Joachim Rønning and Espen Sandberg (who made Kon-Tiki ). Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales docks in May, the same month as Ridley Scott’s Alien: Covenant. The good news about this Prometheus sequel/ Alien prequel (delete according to preference) is that the Fass is back. (In other words, Michael Fassbender, easily the best thing about Prometheus , is still in the cast.) Blockbuster fans will be sated in April by Guardians of the Galaxy Vol 2 and in July by Wonder Woman , World War Z 2 , War for the Planet of the Apes , a Mummy reboot starring Tom Cruise (who also turns up in August in the larky, Catch Me If You Can -style adventure American Made ) and Transformers 5. There is also Christopher Nolan’s war movie Dunkirk , with Tom Hardy, Kenneth Branagh and — look away now, Zayn fans — Harry Styles.
October brings the tantalising prospect of Ryan Gosling and Harrison Ford in Blade Runner 2049 while it’s just under 12 months until we feel the Force in time once more in Star Wars Episode VIII (Dec). But I don’t mind saying that the sequel I’m most excited about is Paddington 2 , which should be with us in November. Can you bear the wait?
As the UK papers proudly boasted this morning, “Brits won big” at last night’s Golden Globe awards.
The Hollywood Foreign Press Association awarded accolades to Hugh Laurie, Olivia Colman and Tom Hiddleston for the BBC’s The Night Manager , while Claire Foy was celebrated for her turn in Netflix’s The Crown , which also won Best TV Drama. Aaron Taylor-Johnson surprised audiences by picking up the Best Supporting Actor in a Drama award for his performance in Nocturnal Animals.
So, yes, well done us. But aside from Taylor-Johnson’s unexpected win, all of these awards are for TV, not film, and so they don’t necessarily hint at Oscars glory for UK talent this year.
The US’s interest in British television has grown and grown in the last few years. British TV exports to the US rose 10 per cent to more than $800m in 2014. Downton Abbey became American network PBS’s highest-rated series in history , and Call The Midwife has also been popular on the network. BBC America has scored high ratings with Doctor Who , Sherlock , and Broadchurch, while The Night Manager and Tom Hardy’s Taboo are successful BBC co-productions with AMC and FX respectively.
Meanwhile, the growth of streaming platforms like Netflix and Amazon means British programming is more easily finding an international audience. US Netflix has hosted a number of British shows including Happy Valley , Peaky Blinders , The Fall , Luther , Lovesick , and Netflix originals like The Crown , while Amazon has found American audiences for Fleabag and Ripper Street – the latter was cancelled until Amazon helped fund its recommission.
So it is true that more British television is reaching a wider American audience than ever before – and scooping up more awards as a result.
But in terms of the film industry, Brits like Taylor-Johnson winning at the Golden Globes says nothing at all. As Mark Kermode wrote back in 2011 , “In truth, the movie industries of Britain and America are inextricably intertwined […] Sadly, there’s little that’s newsworthy about that arrangement.”

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© Source: http://www.newstatesman.com/culture/film/2017/01/films-not-miss-2017
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Trump revives familiar role: Provocateur

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NewsHub(CNN) It’s been nearly six months since Donald J. Trump has been at the podium taking questions from reporters. But his bravado, tart taunts of reporters, and his creative use of the facts were as dominant as they were throughout his campaign.

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Why Elijah Page is the best folk singer you've never heard of Why British success at the Golden Globes does not mean there is Oscars glory ahead

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NewsHubSurely you’ve heard of Elijah Page? A voice from the past, yes, but a voice you remember: he played guitar and stood up alone to sing about injustice and heartbreak in the days when it still seemed possible to change the world. Dylan, Guthrie, Seeger, Page – performing in clubs and at festivals, for ­audiences that took those voices to heart, that shaped their lives according to the songs they heard.
In reality, you are unlikely to have heard of Elijah (or Eli) Page, because W B Belcher invented him for his debut novel – but Page is a pretty convincing concoction. A compelling performer in his day, he vanished from the scene and, it seems, disappeared completely, as the narrator, Jack Wyeth, relates. Wyeth is a Page-obsessed folkie, a millennial with father issues (his guitar-playing dad left when he was five) who drops girlfriends and dead-end jobs like so much change from his pocket, never able to settle, never knowing what he wants.
One day, out of the blue, he gets a call from Eli Page’s manager. Page is ready to write a memoir; all he needs is a ghostwriter. Wyeth takes the job and goes to upstate New York but when he gets there he discovers, perhaps unsurprisingly, that his task is not as straightforward as he’d hoped.
The American folk scene offers a good canvas for the shattering of youthful illusions. It is hard to avoid comparing this novel to the Coen brothers’ haunting 2013 film, Inside Llewyn Davis , in which Oscar Isaac plays a 1960s folk musician based on a singer called Dave Van Ronk. Van Ronk gets a namecheck in Belcher’s book and, for those who love conspiracy theories, it may be worth noting that the writer who helped Van Ronk put his posthumously published memoir together was called Elijah Wald.
There’s more. Albert E Brumley’s 1929 spiritual “I’ll Fly Away”, which you can find on the soundtrack of the Coens’ O Brother, Where Art Thou? , also gets a mention here. This is the kind of knitting together that is intrinsic to folk on both sides of the Atlantic, where old tunes and new tunes circle each other and bind until it becomes hard to tell them apart.
Folk is – let’s be frank – always on the margins. If it weren’t, it wouldn’t be a place for rebellion and protest. Both Eli and Jack are marginal figures – even in their own lives, it seems. What brings them together is a need to escape from the confines of the present day, though that desire takes different forms. Eli has become a crank, a near ­recluse: imagine Bob Dylan crossed with J D Salinger and you’ll start to get the picture.
Belcher’s portrait of small-town life and the dark currents running under any surface is well done, and it’s clear that the author knows the drill. He lives along the same river, the Battenkill, that winds through the book; he is also on the board of directors of Caffe Lena in New York, the most venerable folk venue in United States.
Perhaps, at times, the material is a little too close to his heart. One of the strengths of Lay Down Your Weary Tune is its sense of mystery, but that mystery is stretched out just a little too long. What is going on with Eli? Who is responsible for the strange spate of crime in town? The story is a good one – laced with lost fathers and vanished daughters – but like those long, long Child ballads, it wouldn’t have suffered by losing a verse or two. And sometimes the similes get out of hand: wine glasses that “chirped like falsetto birds” when they clinked; a spine curved “like a lazy creek”. It’s lovely, but occasionally distracting.
The characters, however, are vivid and true. Jack becomes enamoured of Jenny, whose connection to Page is a puzzle right to the end of the book. Jenny is soft and strong and real, and her attachment to her ex-fiancé, a bullying local police officer called Cal, perfectly convincing. Eli stays just out of focus – but by design, dimmed to himself as well as to the people who try to get close to him. In the final pages, Jack finds a moment in which he sees: “Everything was perfect and everything was perfectly broken.” That may be the vision he has to live by. I’ll be happy to listen to the next song Belcher chooses to sing.
Lay Down Your Weary Tune by W B Belcher is published by Other Press, 408pp, £13.99
As the UK papers proudly boasted this morning, “Brits won big” at last night’s Golden Globe awards.
The Hollywood Foreign Press Association awarded accolades to Hugh Laurie, Olivia Colman and Tom Hiddleston for the BBC’s The Night Manager , while Claire Foy was celebrated for her turn in Netflix’s The Crown , which also won Best TV Drama. Aaron Taylor-Johnson surprised audiences by picking up the Best Supporting Actor in a Drama award for his performance in Nocturnal Animals.
So, yes, well done us. But aside from Taylor-Johnson’s unexpected win, all of these awards are for TV, not film, and so they don’t necessarily hint at Oscars glory for UK talent this year.
The US’s interest in British television has grown and grown in the last few years. British TV exports to the US rose 10 per cent to more than $800m in 2014. Downton Abbey became American network PBS’s highest-rated series in history , and Call The Midwife has also been popular on the network. BBC America has scored high ratings with Doctor Who , Sherlock , and Broadchurch, while The Night Manager and Tom Hardy’s Taboo are successful BBC co-productions with AMC and FX respectively.
Meanwhile, the growth of streaming platforms like Netflix and Amazon means British programming is more easily finding an international audience. US Netflix has hosted a number of British shows including Happy Valley , Peaky Blinders , The Fall , Luther , Lovesick , and Netflix originals like The Crown , while Amazon has found American audiences for Fleabag and Ripper Street – the latter was cancelled until Amazon helped fund its recommission.
So it is true that more British television is reaching a wider American audience than ever before – and scooping up more awards as a result.
But in terms of the film industry, Brits like Taylor-Johnson winning at the Golden Globes says nothing at all. As Mark Kermode wrote back in 2011 , “In truth, the movie industries of Britain and America are inextricably intertwined […] Sadly, there’s little that’s newsworthy about that arrangement.”

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© Source: http://www.newstatesman.com/culture/books/2017/01/why-elijah-page-best-folk-singer-youve-never-heard
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‘La La Land’ Inspires Newcomers To Lace Up Their Dancing Shoes

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NewsHubSMITHTOWN, N. Y. (CBSNewYork) — The film “La La Land” is inspiring even those with two left feet to get up and dance.
Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone dance effortlessly like Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, bringing movie buffs in for lessons.
“We specialize in teaching people who have never danced before,” said Kimberly Parker, of Fred Astaire Dance Studio on Long Island.
“She says, ‘what would you like to do?’ I said, ‘I want to do what he does, I want to whirl around the floor. I don’t want to stand still, I want to move around,’” said Farmingdale resident Robert Marin.
Marin, a retired police officer, and his wife, Carol, just celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary, doing the foxtrot and rumba, thanks to recent twice-a-week training.
“Love that movie and we keep telling our friends to go see the movie,” Carol said. “Want to take dance lessons with us?”
Since the film’s release, dance teachers at Fred Astaire studios report a new set of first timers strapping on their dancing shoes.
“It’s always something I’ve wanted to do, and now I’m doing it,” said Smithtown resident Joy Sepe.
“I am a kid with learning disabilities, I have ADD, so I want to inspire other people with ballroom. And ‘La La Land’ is a joyous film, you can’t help but get up and dance,” said 19-year-0ld Madison Sepe.
“I think it’s bringing a lot of people to the field or to the sport that weren’t in it before,” said Smithtown resident A. J. Caro.
Would the Marins say it’s keeping them young?
“Yes it has, and it’s brought us together,” Carol said.
“If you don’t challenge yourself once in a while, why get out of bed in the morning?” Robert agreed.
Some studios in the area have renamed some classes “La La Land,” and say those lessons are the first with waiting lists.

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Thursday's TV Highlights: 'Taking the Stage' on ABC

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NewsHubCustomized TV Listings are available here: www.latimes.com/tvtimes
Click here to download
TV listings for the week of Jan 8 – 14, 2017 in PDF format
This week’s TV Movies
Casey Affleck talks about the way Kenneth Lonergan uses everyday language to convey deep emotion in « Manchester by the Sea.  »
For her role as Jackie Kennedy, Natalie Portman says, « It’s not a fashion story, » but the clothes do tell a story.
Joel Edgerton talks about staying truthful to the real-life story of « Loving.  »
Director Nicolas Winding Refn and composer Cliff Martinez discuss their « Neon Demon » collaboration.
« Manchester By the Sea » director Kenneth Lonergan discusses writing a quiet character and working with actor Casey Affleck to bring him to life.
« Manchester By the Sea » director Kenneth Lonergan discusses writing a quiet character and working with actor Casey Affleck to bring him to life.

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© Source: http://www.latimes.com/la-et-st-0112-tvhighlights-20170112-story.html
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The moon might be much older than scientists suspected

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NewsHubThat’s the newest estimate, thanks to rocks and soil collected by the Apollo 14 moonwalkers in 1971.
A research team reported Wednesday that the moon formed within 60 million years of the birth of the solar system. Previous estimates ranged within 100 million years, all the way out to 200 million years after the solar system’s creation, not quite 4.6 billion years ago.
Stunning images of the perigee moon, or « supermoon, » around the world
The scientists conducted uranium-lead dating on fragments of the mineral zircon extracted from Apollo 14 lunar samples. The pieces of zircon were minuscule – no bigger than a grain of sand.
“Size doesn’t matter, they record amazing information nonetheless!” lead author Melanie Barboni of the University of California, Los Angeles, said in an email.
She noted that the moon holds “so much magic… the key to understand how our beautiful Earth formed and evolved.”
Some of the eight zircon samples were used in a previous study, also conducted at UCLA. Barboni said she is studying more zircons from Apollo 14 samples, but doesn’t expect it to change her estimate of 4.51 billion years for the moon’s age, possibly 4.52 billion years at the most.
“It would be more a double-checking than anything else,” she explained. She and her colleagues – whose work appeared Wednesday in the journal Science Advances – are eager to learn more about the moon’s history and, in turn, the evolution of early Earth and the entire solar system.
Apollo 11’s Alan Shepard and Edgar Mitchell collected 92 pounds of rocks and used tubes to dig up soil while exploring the moon’s Fra Mauro highlands in February 1971. They conducted two spacewalks, spending nine hours altogether out on the lunar surface.
It’s the second major moon study this week.
On Monday, Israeli scientists suggested our Earth’s constant companion may actually be a melting pot of many mini-moons. Rather than one giant impact that shaved off a chunk of Earth and formed the moon, a series of smaller collisions may have created multiple moonlets that eventually merged into one, according to the researchers.
Barboni said regardless of how the moon came to be – one big strike at Earth, many smaller ones or even none at all – “you still end up at the end solidifying the moon as we know it today.”
The giant impact theory holds that the resulting energy formed a lunar lava ocean that later became solid. It’s this solidification age that Barboni and her team have now ascertained.
“We finally pinned down a minimum age for the moon formation,” she said, “regardless of how it formed.”

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Japan coast guard rescues flooded North Korea cargo ship

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NewsHubTOKYO, Jan. 11 (UPI) — Japan’s coast guard rescued passengers on a flooded North Korean cargo ship, according to a local television network.
NHK reported Thursday, local time, a Japanese patrol boat rescued the passengers stranded on the ship in the Sea of Japan.
The 6,555-ton cargo ship sent a distress signal on Wednesday evening from a location about 37 miles southwest of Fukue Island, the southernmost of the Goto Islands in Nagasaki Prefecture.
All 26 passengers were taken on lifeboats by dawn on Thursday. No casualties were reported, according to NHK.
Japan’s coast guard said the vessel was carrying rice while sailing from Nampo on North Korea’s western coast to Wonsan on the eastern side of the peninsula.
The cause of the ship’s sinking is unknown, local authorities said.
The ship has stayed anchored about 6 miles from Fukue Island. The hull of the ship is leaning to one side but there is no immediate danger of further sinking, according to the report.
North Korea is currently under heavy sanctions, and North Korea cargo ships are completely banned from docking at Japanese ports.
Pyongyang wants the sanctions lifted, but it has also refused to give up pursuing the development of nuclear weapons.
Kim Jong Un recently raised the stakes in his New Year’s speech while touting a readiness to launch an intercontinental ballistic missile at an arbitrary time and place.
The provocations have prompted the United States to mobilize sophisticated radar, to monitor any incoming North Korea missiles, CNN reported Wednesday.
The sea-based X-band radar can detect long-range launches and collects intelligence, according to the report.
The technology is based in Hawaii and can only be deployed at sea for a limited amount of time.
Defense Secretary Ash Carter had said on Tuesday a missile would be intercepted only if it is « threatening.  »
« It may be more to our advantage to, first of all, save our interceptor inventory, and, second, to gather intelligence from the flight rather than do [shoot it down] when it’s not threatening, » Carter has said.

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KCNA: North Korea builds water park in Russia

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NewsHubSEOUL, Jan. 11 (UPI) — North Korea has taken its expertise in the construction of water parks to neighboring Russia, according to Pyongyang’s state-controlled media.
KCNA reported Wednesday that North Korean engineers completed work on an amusement facility, located in the Kamchatka region of Russia’s Far East.
« The dedication ceremony was held on Dec. 30, » 2016, the state news agency said.
Under Kim Jong Un , the relatively isolated country has built a water park east of Pyongyang, declaring it open to visitors in 2013.
Both the North Korean and Russian flags were raised during the latest event. Russian officials and North Korean diplomats based in Vladivostok were in attendance, according to Pyongyang.
North Korea also said the president of a Kamchatka-based construction company said he « sincerely appreciated the North Korean engineers, » while adding « the water park, symbolic of the goodwill between Russia and North Korea, would actively contribute to the promotion of the welfare of the people.  »
The building dedication comes at a time when North Korea is planning to raise a monument dedicated to the three generations of the ruling Kim family on Mount Paektu, Yonhap reported Wednesday.
The monument’s objective is to reinforce the idolization of Kim and his father and biological grandfather, and emphasize their connections to the « sacred » Paektu bloodline, South Korean news service Newsis reported.
According to a statement from North Korea’s international preparatory committee for the praise of Paektu’s great men, the three Kims are the « symbol » of North Korea and the three Kims are the « sun of mankind.  »
The North Korean leader has purged more than 300 people since assuming power in order to consolidate his rule in a rapidly changing country.

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North Korea incurred $200M revenue loss due to economic sanctions

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NewsHubSEOUL, Jan. 11 (UPI) — Economic sanctions are taking their toll on North Korea , and Pyongyang may have incurred a $200 million revenue loss in 2016, according to a South Korean study.
The estimate from Seoul’s Institute for National Security Strategy comes at a time when North Korea is asking the United Nations Security Council to arrange a forum that would verify the « legality » of U. N. sanctions.
According to Seoul’s analysis, North Korea has lost $200 million in export and other revenue in nine months owing to heavy economic embargoes, Yonhap reported Wednesday.
The figure was included in the institute’s report that evaluated the impact of U. N. sanctions Resolution 2270. It covers the period from March to November 2016.
As a result of the March sanctions that passed with support from China and Russia, North Korea’s foreign currency earnings dropped precipitously. A loss of $200 million in revenue is equivalent to 7.4 percent of total North Korea exports for 2015, which was about $2.7 billion, according to the report.
But the greatest loss for North Korea came following South Korea’s decision to shut down a jointly operated factory park in Kaesong. Sanctions have also made it difficult for North Korea to engage in arms sales or send forced laborers overseas.
The North Korean trade environment is deteriorating due to pressure from China and the United States, the report added. Examples cited in the study include U. S. sanctions imposed against Chinese firm Hongxiang Industrial.
Other U. N. member states in the Middle East and Southeast Asia have been cooperating with sanctions. States have authorized the termination of North Korea-related bank accounts or detained North Korea cargo ships at ports, according to the South Korean analysis.
The sanctions have been repeatedly condemned by Pyongyang, which has claimed its weapons of mass destruction are for defense purposes.
North Korea’s Ambassador to the U. N. Ja Song Nam recently requested an international forum that could investigate the legality of the sanctions, Kyodo News reported Wednesday.
Ja told United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs Jeffrey Feltman the United States is welcome to participate in the forum, a sign Pyongyang is trying to initiate talks with the incoming Trump administration, according to Kyodo.

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Samsung boss questioned in South Korea corruption probe

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NewsHubSamsung chief Lee Jae-yong is being questioned at the prosecutor’s office in Seoul as a suspect in South Korea’s biggest political corruption scandal.
The firm is accused of giving donations to several non-profit foundations operated by Choi Soon-sil, a confidante of President Park Geun-hye.
The donations were allegedly made in exchange for political support of a controversial merger.
The scandal has led to President Park being impeached last December.
« I deeply apologize to the people for failing to show a positive image because of this incident, » Mr Lee told reporters upon arriving on Thursday morning.
Earlier this week two other Samsung executives were interviewed by the special prosecutors, but were treated as witnesses rather than suspects.
The claims against the company circle around a merger between the electronics giant’s construction arm, Samsung C&T, and an affiliate firm, Cheil Industries.
Prosecutors allege that Samsung gave €2.8m euros ($3.1m; £2.5m) to a company co-owned by Ms Choi and her daughter, in return for Ms Park’s support for the deal.
Lee Jae-yong, also known as Jay Y. Lee, has already given evidence to politicians over the scandal, but this is the first time he has been quizzed as a suspect by investigators.
Connoisseurs of the apology will study this case for years to come. There has now been a string of important people saying they are deeply sorry, even as they profess their innocence of wrong-doing.
On his way into the investigator’s office, Jay Y. Lee said he was sorry for portraying a bad image. In the past, President Park said she was sorry – for being too trusting.
And her mentor, Choi Soon-sil, also apologized, saying she had « committed an unpardonable crime ». What crime that was though remains unclear – since she also said she was innocent!
Incidentally, Mr Lee has a record of apologies. Four years ago, he took his son out of a school after it was revealed that the boy had a space there meant for the underprivileged (which the son of the acting-head of Samsung clearly is not – in the land where the son always rises, the lad may well end up as the head of the company himself).
There will be more apologies before the current saga is over.
At the parliamentary hearing in December, Samsung admitted giving a total of 20.4bn won (£16m; $17.46m) to the two foundations, but denied seeking favours.
And Mr Lee also confirmed the firm gave a horse and money to help the equestrian career of Ms Choi’s daughter, Chung Yoo-ra, something he said he now regretted.
Mr Lee is currently vice-chairman of Samsung Electronics. But since his father, Lee Kun-hee, suffered a heart attack in 2014, he is considered de facto boss of the entire Samsung Group conglomerate.
Politicians voted on 9 December to impeach President Park over the scandal – a decision South Korea’s constitutional court has six months to uphold or overturn .
Until then she remains formally president but stripped of her powers, which are handed to the prime minister, a presidential appointee.
Ms Choi is on trial for charges including corruption and coercion.
Ms Park’s position began to unravel in October last year when details of her friendship with Ms Choi began to emerge.
They included revelations that the president had allowed her old friend – who holds no government role – to edit political speeches.
Since then, hundreds of thousands of protestors have gathered every weekend in Seoul to demand Ms Park stands down.
Ms Park denies wrongdoing but has apologised for the way she managed her relationship with Ms Choi, who also denies committing criminal offences.

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© Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-38591931
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