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Saturday, December 15, 2012

Spy agency official grilled over slander against Moon


Published : 2012-12-16 09:28
Updated : 2012-12-16 09:28
A female national intelligence agent appeared for questioning by police Saturday over allegations that she repeatedly made negative comments online about main opposition presidential candidate Moon Jae-in.

The 28-year-old official from the National Intelligence Service (NIS), surnamed Kim, is suspected of having put anti-Moon comments online over the past three months from an office in southern Seoul to influence the race.

With the presidential election only four days away, the allegation has emerged as a major campaign issue.

On Saturday, the intelligence agent, accompanied by her lawyer, entered the Suseo Police Station in southern Seoul at around 3:00 p.m., police officers said. The interrogation lasted about 4 hours.

"The police asked all the questions that needed to be asked and will decide whether to summon Kim again for more questioning after thoroughly evaluating her answers," an official from Suseo Police Station said.

Kim claimed innocence, saying, "I am falsely accused. I have not put anything online slandering Moon."

"It is regrettable that they are trying to drag me and the NIS, who have kept neutral, into the election," she told reporters as she left the police station.

The main opposition Democratic United Party, which raised the allegations in the first place, accused the NIS of interfering with the election by posting slanderous comments on the Internet about the liberal contender.

The NIS has denied the allegations, voicing "strong regret" over what it said was "malicious propaganda" against it and warning that it may take legal action. (Yonhap News)

Gunman kills 27, including 20 kids, at U.S. school



Published : 2012-12-15 10:06
Updated : 2012-12-15 11:13
School children wait for their parents at the Sandy Hook firehouse following a mass shooting at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. on Friday, Dec. 14, 2012. (AP-Yonhap News)





A gunman killed 26 people, including 20 young children, at a U.S. school where his mother worked Friday as youngsters cowered in their classrooms and trembled helplessly to the sound of gunfire reverberating through the building. The mother was presumed among the dead.

The 20-year-old killer, carrying two handguns, committed suicide at the school, and another person was found dead at a second scene, bringing the toll to 28, authorities said.

The rampage in the northeastern state of Connecticut was at least the fourth big shooting spree in five months in the United States. It was by far the deadliest of the year and most heart-wrenching.

The children were among the youngest victims of a mass shooting in recent history. Frightened students who were rushed from the building by police were told to close their eyes.

``Our hearts are broken today,'' President Barack Obama said, wiping his eyes during brief comments to reporters in one of the most emotional public moments of his presidency. The children killed were just 5 to 10 years old, he said. ``They had their entire lives ahead of them _ birthdays, graduations, wedding, kids of their own.''

The national debate over the issue of gun control in America exploded once again. Obama said the U.S. had been ``through this too many times'' with recent mass shootings and that the country has to come together to take meaningful action, ``regardless of the politics.'' He did not give details.

Police shed no light on the motive for the attack. The gunman was believed to suffer from a personality disorder and lived with his mother in Connecticut, said a law enforcement official who was briefed on the investigation but was not authorized to publicly discuss it.

The attack at Sandy Hook Elementary School, just two weeks before Christmas, was the nation's second-deadliest school shooting, exceeded only by the Virginia Tech university massacre in 2007 that left 32 dead.

This time, the victims were far smaller. Photos from the scene showed students, some of them crying, being escorted by adults through a parking lot in a line, hands on each other's shoulders. Children told their parents they had heard bangs and, at one point, a scream over the intercom. Teachers ordered them to hide in closets or corners.

State police said 18 children were found dead at the school and two later were declared dead, and six adults were found dead at the scene. Police said another person was found dead at a second scene, leading to a total death toll of 28. Gov. Dannel P. Malloy said someone who lived with the gunman died.

A law enforcement official said the suspect, 20-year-old Adam Lanza, was dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, and he was the son of a teacher at the school. A second law enforcement official said the mother, Nancy Lanza, was presumed dead.

Adam Lanza's older brother, 24-year-old Ryan, of Hoboken, New Jersey, was being questioned.

The law enforcement official who said Adam Lanza had a possible personality disorder said Ryan Lanza had been extremely cooperative, was not believed to have any involvement in the rampage and was not under arrest or in custody, but investigators were still searching his computers and phone records. Ryan Lanza told law enforcement he had not been in touch with his brother since about 2010.

All three law enforcement officials spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak on the record about the unfolding investigation.

The gunman drove to the school in his mother's car, the second official said. Three guns were found. Three guns were found _ a Glock and a Sig Sauer, both pistols, inside the school, and a .223-caliber rifle in the back of the car. 

The shooting shocked a tranquil community of 27,000 people in one of the wealthiest counties in the U.S., about 60 miles (96 kilometers) northeast of New York City. News items posted before the shooting on the website of the tiny newspaper, The Newtown Bee, lamented cracked headstones at a local cemetery and asked residents to ``share 2012 memories.''

Anguished parents came running Friday morning.

Robert Licata said his 6-year-old son was in class when the gunman burst in and shot the teacher.

``That's when my son grabbed a bunch of his friends and ran out the door,'' he said. ``He was very brave. He waited for his friends.''

Licata said the shooter didn't say a word.

Stephen Delgiadice said his 8-year-old daughter heard two big bangs, and teachers told her to get in a corner. His daughter was fine.

``It's alarming, especially in Newtown, Connecticut, which we always thought was the safest place in America,'' he said.

Theodore Varga said he was in a meeting with other fourth-grade teachers when he heard the gunfire, but there was no lock on the door.

He said someone turned on the public address system so that ``you could hear the hysteria that was going on. I think whoever did that saved a lot of people. Everyone in the school was listening to the terror that was transpiring.''

Also, a custodian went running around, warning people there was a gunman in the school, Varga said.

``He said, `Guys! Get down! Hide!''' Varga said. ``So he was actually a hero.'' The teacher said he did not know if the custodian survived.

Varga said he tried to kick out an air-conditioning unit in the window so the five teachers in the room could escape, but he only managed to knock out the wood next to it, and the space wasn't big enough for all of them to squeeze through.

He said he smelled gun smoke in the halls as he ran out to escape through a door. Varga then went around to help three other teachers climb out of the window of the first-floor room they had been in.

Mergim Bajraliu, 17, heard the gunshots echo from his home and ran to check on his 9-year-old sister, who was fine. He said she heard a scream come over the intercom at one point. He said teachers were shaking and crying as they came out of the building.

``Everyone was just traumatized,'' Bajraliu said.

Richard Wilford said his 7-year-old son, Richie, said he heard a noise that ``sounded like what he described as cans falling.''

The boy told him a teacher went out to check on the noise, came back in, locked the door and had the kids huddle in the corner until police arrived.

``There's no words,'' Wilford said.

Melissa Makris said her 10-year-old son, Philip, saw what looked like a body under a blanket as he fled the school.

The shootings instantly brought to mind episodes such as the Columbine school massacre in Colorado that killed 15 in 1999.

``I think as a society, we need to come together. It has to stop these senseless deaths,'' Columbine principal Frank DeAngelis said Friday.

Already this year, a gunman killed 12 people at a Colorado theater, and another gunman killed six people before killing himself at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin.

``We have endured too many of these tragedies,'' Obama said. He addressed reporters in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room, named in honor of the former White House press secretary who was shot in the assassination attempt on Ronald Reagan in 1981. Brady and his wife, Sarah, have become activists for gun control measures.

``If now is not the time to have a serious discussion about gun control and the epidemic of gun violence plaguing our society, I don't know when is,'' one member of Congress, Rep. Jerrold Nadler, said in a statement.

Overseas, there was both shock and sympathy.

In a public statement addressed to Obama, French President Francois Hollande said he was ``horrified.''

British Prime Minister David Cameron said ``it is heartbreaking to think of those who have had their children robbed from them.'' Queen Elizabeth II sent a message Obama saying she was saddened by the ``dreadful loss of life.'' (AP)

Friday, December 14, 2012

N. Koreans jubilant over successful rocket launch


N. Koreans jubilant over successful rocket launch

Hundreds of thousands of North Koreans gathered in Pyongyang to celebrate the country's successful launch of what the international community sees as a long-range missile earlier this week, North Korea's state television showed Friday.

(North) Korean Central Broadcasting Station, monitored in Seoul, broadcast live the celebratory mass gathering held in the Kim Il-sung Square starting at 11:00 a.m. The television said about 150,000 North Koreans gathered in the plaza and nearby areas.

Early Wednesday, the North successfully fired off what it claims to be a rocket carrying a "working satellite," a launch which the international community has condemned as a test of rocket technology used to make long-range ballistic missiles.

Neither North Korean leader Kim Jong-un nor his powerful uncle Jang Song-thaek were among the many top officials attending the event presided over by Mun Kyong-dok, a party secretary.

"Accurately orbiting the Unha-3 carrier rocket, a science technology satellite, built with our own ability and technology, is a gift of loyalty to our party, army and comrade Kim Jong-il and a national feat that accomplished the very dying instruction of the general," Kim Ki-nam, a party head for the propaganda bureau, told the crowd.

Another official also claimed in a speech during the event that Kim Jong-un visited the launch site and helped solve problems facing the rocket launch.

Similar mass gatherings were organized following the country's previous rocket launches in April and in April 2009.

The celebratory mood came as the country prepares to mark the first anniversary of late leader Kim Jong-il's death on Dec. 17.

Since the beginning of this month, North Korean media outlets had been carrying commemorative content about Kim Jong-il, but now it has mostly been replaced by the triumphant celebration of the latest rocket launch. (Yonhap)

Moon all out to pull off last-minute upset



Published : 2012-12-14 20:22
Updated : 2012-12-14 20:22
Moon Jae-in of the liberal opposition Democratic United Party on Friday strived to carry, into the election day, his “upward momentum” against rival Park Geun-hye, canvassing in the conservative hotbed of Busan.

The DUP, meanwhile, revved up its assault on Park and her ruling Saenuri Party over illicit campaigning, accusing the conservative camp of attempting to sway voter sentiment through illegal methods.
Presidential candidate Moon Jae-in of the Democratic United Party greets voters during a campaign stop in Changwon, South Gyeongsang Province, Friday. (Yonhap News)

“It turned out that the Saenuri Party established an illegal office and manipulated public opinion in a systematic manner,” said Lee In-young, one of Moon’s campaigning chiefs, on Friday.

“The Saenuri’s act of kicking off an illegal campaign office is a defiance of democracy. The DUP shall not overlook it.”

The National Election Commission decided to indict a Saenuri official identified by his surname Yoon, for secretly running an online campaigning team to post comments in favor of Park.

“Through an all-night investigation, we have confirmed the illegality in Yoon’s organization,” an official of the election watchdog said Friday.

The DUP’s spokesperson Park Yong-jin also demanded that Park apologize, citing the apparent ties between the violator and the ruling party.

The party also accuses the National Intelligence Service of working for the incumbent administration and the Saenuri Party in the election, in violation of laws.

The police and the DUP raided the residence of an NIS employee on Tuesday, suspecting that she had covertly been spreading rumors against Moon. The conservative camp, however, denounced the probe as an exercise of coercion and an infringement of the employee’s human rights.

Moon’s aides also stepped out to counterattack Park, who held an urgent press conference on Friday morning and pledged to root out the DUP’s mudslinging.

“Park should have offered her apology over the scandals but instead, she decided to slander Moon in order to save her own skin,” said Rep. Chung Sye-kyun, the party’s senior adviser and former chief.

Chung also claimed that Moon had turned the tide and that he was gaining the upper hand over Park in their tight two-way race.

The detailed figures, however, may not be revealed as the law bans the announcement of new presidential poll results during the last week before the election.

While his camp officials stepped up their offensive, candidate Moon spent the day in South Gyeongsang Province, or the Yeongnam region, which is considered a key variable factor in next week’s race.

By Bae Hyun-jung (tellme@heraldcorp.com)

Yang, Kim prevent European dominance on first day of Royal Trophy



Published : 2012-12-14 19:47
Updated : 2012-12-14 20:34
BANDAR SERI BEGAWAN, Brunei- Yang Yong-eun and Kim Kyung-tae emerged the sole bright spot for the Asian side, preventing a total route by the Europeans, at the conclusion of the first day of the three-day Royal Trophy golf championship, Friday.

Europe prevailed over Asia 3 1/2 to 1/2, with Henrik Stenson and Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano shutting down Ryo Ishikawa and Bae Sang-moon at the 14th hole, up 5 with 4 holes remaining.

Yang and Kim emerged the sole bright spot for the Asian side out of the four matches in Friday’s foursomes, battling European captain Jose Maria Olazabal and Miguel Angel Jimenez to a draw and earning half-of-a-point for their side, as the day’s play drew to a close and the sun set over the South China Sea at The Empire Hotel and Country Club in Brunei.

Naomichi “Joe” Ozaki said he will rally his players Friday night to prepare them for Saturday’s day of play during a press conference following the game.

"I hope the half of a point Kim and I contributed can inspire our team tomorrow,” Yang said. “We have to inflict on them tomorrow the same sort of damage we suffered today.”

Yang Yong-eun (right) gives Kim Kyung-tae a high five after Kim drives in their ball on to the green of the par-five hole two for a birdie in one of the standout plays of the first day of the Royal Trophy at the Empire Hotel and Country Club in Brunei,Friday. Park Hae-mook / The Korea Herald
East Asia’s first major champion, Yang had confidence that his youthful teammates will not be intimidated by their older and more experienced European rivals.

But age might not have anything to do with it, even though Yang and Indian Jeev Milkha Singh are the only two members of the Asian side that are over 27 years of age.
Four of the younger players are making their Royal Trophy. The youthful Asian Team will be put the test this weekend during the three day tourney’s 6th edition this year.

“I have no worries about my Asian team-mates regarding age or experience – it seems players mature so much younger these days because the amateur and college systems are so good,” Yang said in a Royal Trophy press release on Friday at the start of the tournament.

Teammate Ryo Ishikawa is only 21, but he has already made a name for himself.

Ryo won the Order of Merit in the Japan Golf Tour, and two other members of the Asian team — Bae Sang-moon and Kim Kyung-tae, have done the same thing in their mid-twenties.

Although Wu Ashun of China, Kiradech Aphibarnrat of Thailand and Yoshinori Fujimoto of Japan are young, they all have tournament wins under their belt and have played well in big events.

The new generation of Asian players has seen what Yang and Choi Kyung-ju have achieved, and that makes them hungry for international competition which will help them achieve greater success, Yang said.

The question is whether the young Asian players competing in this year’s Royal Trophy have the right stuff to challenge top tier golfers in the future.

The Royal Trophy originated from the vision of legendary five-time Major winner, the late Severiano Ballesteros, who intended to build a highly competitive international tournament that can provide the same golf growth impetus the Ryder Cup lent to Europe in the 1980s and 1990s.

The “Spanish wizard,” Ballesteros was simply a sporting genius during his years on the Tour and amassed victories throughout the world.

By Philip Iglauer, Korea Herald correspondent

(ephilip2011@heraldcorp.com)

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

N. Korea put object into orbit: NORAD



Published : 2012-12-12 13:43
Updated : 2012-12-12 13:43
North American Aerospace Defense Command officials said North Korea appeared to have successfully launched an object in orbit on a missile, marking a technological success for the hermit nation.

North Korea had confirmed hours earlier the launch of a long-range rocket on Wednesday and said it had succeeded in its mission of placing a satellite into orbit.

A previous launch of the same Unha-3 rocket in April had ended in failure, with the carrier exploding shortly after take-off.

"North American Aerospace Defense Command officials acknowledged today that US missile warning systems detected and tracked the launch of a North Korean missile at 7:49 pm EST" (0049 GMT Wednesday), the joint US-Canadian agency said in a statement. "The missile was tracked on a southerly azimuth."

NORAD said early indications suggested that the first stage of the rocket fell into the Yellow Sea, and estimated that the second stage fell into the Philippine Sea.

"Initial indications are that the missile deployed an object that appeared to achieve orbit," it added. "At no time was the missile or the resultant debris a threat to North America."

Washington and its allies have long insisted such launches are disguised tests for an intercontinental ballistic missile capable of carrying a nuclear warhead.

Last week, the head of the US Pacific Command said Washington had deployed naval ships equipped with ballistic missile defenses and was monitoring North Korea "very closely" ahead of the anticipated launch.

Two guided missile destroyers, the USS Benfold and the USS Fitzgerald, had been sent to the area ahead of the launch, a Navy official said.

The two ships were moving in to "monitor any potential missile launch by North Korea and to reassure regional allies should a launch occur," said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Both destroyers are equipped with the sophisticated Aegis ballistic missile defense system.

The U.N. Security Council was set to hold consultations Wednesday after the launch, at the request of Japan and the United States, a Western diplomat said.

U.N. resolutions 1718 and 1874 ban Pyongyang from any nuclear or ballistic activity. (AFP)

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Ahn pressed to fully back Moon


Ahn pressed to fully back Moon

Kim Bu-gyeom, second from right, a campaign manager of Moon Jae-in’s presidential election camp, poses with members of “Korea Vision 2050 Forum” after the Ahn Cheol-soo followers announced their support for Moon at the Democratic United Party’s headquarters in Seoul, Wednesday.
                                                                                                                                  / Yonhap

By Yi Whan-woo


Ahn Cheol-soo
Former independent presidential candidate Ahn Cheol-soo is under mounting pressure to fully endorse the remaining opposition challenger Moon Jae-in as increasing numbers of his political support base choose to back the Democratic United Party (DUP) contender.

A number of organizations across the country that supported Ahn have decided to join Moon’s election camp.

The trend emerged Wednesday, a day after the first of three obligatory TV presidential debates took place.

A number of experts said Tuesday’s debate will not greatly influence the approval ratings of Park Geun-hye of the ruling Saenuri Party and Moon. Some 20 percent of the total electorate have not yet decided which candidate to vote for. They added that Ahn is the only factor that could provide a boost for Moon.

Conservative Park leads her liberal rival by nearly 10 percent in some public opinion polls, while other surveys indicate a tight two-way race between the two with the Saenuri candidate taking a slight lead.

“Korea Vision 2050 Forum,” a group comprised of 400 university professors supportive of scholar-turned-politician Ahn, announced it will endorse Moon during its press conference in Yeongdeungpo, Seoul.

“Political reform is only possible if Moon is elected as president and prevents conservatives from retaining the country’s most powerful office,” it said in a statement.

A group of Jeolla Province-based research institutes named after Ahn that focus on his political policies also threw their support behind the DUP contender.

In Busan, the members of “Tomorrow Forum,” an organization to study Ahn’s political strategies, announced they will join the DUP election campaign office in the port city where Moon served as a lawmaker.

An alliance group tentatively named “The people’s alliance for new government and new politics,” will be launched on Thursday and is expected to attract a number of undecided voters.

“Every one of us, including rational conservatives, liberals, and politically-moderates should be united if we want a new government (under Moon),” said Cho Guk, a liberal law professor of Seoul National University. He will lead the group with Ahn Kyung-hwan, his colleague and a DUP election campaign official.

However, some experts speculate that Ahn will not be able to influence the Dec. 19 election in favor of Moon.

“Ahn may be able raise the ratings by three to five percent, but that’s all,” said Ham Saung-duk, a political science professor at Korea University. “What is required is Moon’s effort to absorb more support to beat Park.”

Ahn only offered lukewarm support for Moon during a campaign closure ceremony Monday.

Regarding his overall stance toward the liberal candidate, he only reiterated his statement on Nov. 23 when he made a bombshell announcement to withdraw from the presidential race following disharmony between the two over talks to select a unified liberal candidate.

“I told my supporters to endorse Moon back then and I believe you who have made calls for political reform with me will accept my sincere heart,” he said.

Ryu, Dodgers reach 6-year, $36m deal



Published : 2012-12-10 09:03
Updated : 2012-12-10 18:09
S. Korean baseball pitcher Ryu Hyun-jin. (Yonhap News)

South Korean All-Star pitcher Ryu Hyun-jin has signed with the Los Angeles Dodgers in Major League Baseball (MLB), the Los Angeles Times reported Monday, Korean time.

The Times said the Dodgers "expect him to be part of the rotation next season" but added terms of the deal weren't immediately known.

Ryu and the Dodgers had a 30-day window to sign a deal after the LA-based club earned the exclusive negotiating rights to Ryu in November, and the deadline fell at 7 a.m. Monday, Korean time, or 2 p.m. Pacific Standard Time Sunday in Los Angeles. The Dodgers submitted a bid of $25.7 million in a league-wide silent auction, as part of the player posting process. It was the fourth highest bid by a major league club for a foreign player.

The negotiation period began after Ryu's South Korean club, the Hanwha Eagles of the Korea Baseball Organization (KBO), accepted the Dodgers' bid.

With this signing, the Eagles will take the $25.7 million bid as a transfer fee for Ryu.

Had Ryu failed to sign a deal by the deadline, he would have been forced to return to the Eagles for 2013 and wouldn't have been eligible for posting until November next year. The Dodgers, in that case, would have retrieved their bid money.

Ryu, who completed his seventh KBO season in 2012, was posted by the Eagles in November. When he makes the major league roster, Ryu will become the first South Korean to jump directly from the KBO to the majors.

The Dodgers have been home to three South Korean players before Ryu, including right-hander Park Chan-ho, who became the first Korean to play in the majors in 1994.

Before Ryu, some Japanese stars have joined the majors via posting, and they have signed for packages similar to their posting fees. Ahead of the 2007 season, the Boston Red Sox signed right-hander Daisuke Matsuzaka to a six-year deal worth $52 million, after posting $51 million. Last year, Yu Darvish, also a right-hander, drew a bid of $51.7 million from the Texas Rangers and reached a six-year deal for $60 million.

The contract talks between the Dodgers and Ryu appeared to have hit a snag last week, with both sides playing hard ball through the local media. The Dodgers had said Ryu once rejected their offer of a long-term contract. The player's agent, Scott Boras, pressured the Dodgers that Ryu could play in Japan in 2013 and test free agency later without going through posting. Boras, who's built a reputation as a hard-nosed agent, had also argued that Ryu deserved to be paid like a No. 3 major league starter and cited Matsuzaka as an example.

Ryu will have to crack a deep Dodgers rotation with at least six established big league starters, including the 2011 Cy Young Award winner Clayton Kershaw and former 20-game winner Josh Beckett. The Dodgers are reportedly closing in on signing yet another former Cy Young winner, right-hander Zack Greinke, and they have other established big-league starters such as Chris Capuano, Aaron Harang, Chad Billingsley and Ted Lilly.

Ryu has been one of the KBO's most dominant starters since his sensational debut in 2006, when he became the first player to win both the MVP and the Rookie of the Year honors in the same season.

He was 18-6 with a 2.23 ERA and a rookie-record 204 strikeouts.

This year, as the Eagles staggered to the KBO's worst record, Ryu went 9-9 with a 2.66 ERA and a league-leading 210 strikeouts in 182 2/3 innings.

The thick-bodied lefty, listed at 187 centimeters and 98 kilograms, has averaged more than 181 innings per season and led the league in strikeouts five times, mixing in his fastball with slider and changeup

He can reach up to 150 kilometers per hour (93 miles per hour) with his fastball, and can also throw a changeup and slider as his out pitches. (Yonhap News)

Kim Yu-na victorious in season debut in Germany



Published : 2012-12-10 09:41
Updated : 2012-12-10 09:41
Kim Yu-na, grabbed the title with a total of 201.61 points at the NRW Trophy on December 9th, 2012. (Yonhap)
Kim Yu-na, grabbed the title with a total of 201.61 points at the NRW Trophy on December 9th, 2012. (Yonhap)
Kim Yu-na, grabbed the title with a total of 201.61 points at the NRW Trophy on December 9th, 2012. (Yonhap)

South Korean figure skater Kim Yu-na overwhelmed her competitors en route to a resounding victory in her season debut in Germany on Sunday after sitting out the past one and a half years.

Kim scored 129.34 points to top the day's free skating event at the NRW Trophy, and grabbed the title with a total of 201.61 points. On Saturday, she earned 72.27 points in the short program, creating a 12.72-point lead over Ksenia Makarova of Russia.

Kim's total was the highest score by a female figure skater this season. Before Kim's performance Sunday, Mao Asada of Japan owned the best score this season with her winning total of 196.80 at the International Skating Union (ISU) Grand Prix Final in Sochi, Russia, on Saturday.

The second place went to Makarova, who won 159.01 points in total that included 99.46 points in free skating and 59.55 in the short program.

Kim, the 2010 Olympic gold medalist, also earned the required technical scores to qualify for the 2013 World Figure Skating Championships to be held in the Canadian city of London in Ontario from March 10-17.

This was Kim's first competitive skating since the 2011 world championships in April of last year. After sitting out the entire 2011-12 season to mull over career options, Kim, 22, announced in July that she would return to competitive skating with an eye on the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia.

Kim performed her free skating program to a compilation of songs from the popular musical "Les Miserables," and started the routine with a clean triple lutz-triple toe loop combination and then a triple flip. She followed up with flawless spins and step sequences.

Midway through the program, Kim under-rotated her double axel and later fell on the second jump of a triple-double combination. These miscues, though, didn't prevent Kim from surpassing 200 points total for the fourth time in her career.

The NRW Trophy is a minor competition for skaters needing to score points to qualify for the world championships. And since she has missed major events, such as the past two International Skating Union (ISU) Grand Prix competitions as well as the 2012 world championships, Kim had to earn enough technical points to qualify for the 2013 World Championships in Canada.

Under the ISU rules, Kim needed at least 28 points in her technical element score (TES) in the short program and 48 points in the free skating.

She easily eclipsed those marks, earning a 37.42 TES in the short program and 60.82 in free skating.

Under the ISU judging system introduced in 2004, TES evaluates technique while the program component score (PCS) assesses artistry and overall performance.

In her short program, Kim set a new career-high with 34.85 in PCS and in free skating, she earned 69.52 in PCS.

Except for corporate ice shows, Kim had been out of action for nearly two years, but she erased any lingering doubt about her form with an excellent short program Saturday. Her score of 72.27 points was the fifth-highest of her career, almost seven full points better than her short program score at the 2011 world championships.

Kim holds three world records with 78.50 points in the short program, 150.06 points in free skating and 228.56 points in total score. All three marks were set at the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics.

Kim, also the 2009 world champion, has never finished off the podium in her senior career, which began in 2006. (Yonhap)

Ex-P.M. Chung declares support for Moon


Moon Jae-in on Tuesday, saying he believes he and the liberal contender can share his vision that bigger and smaller firms should seek shared growth.

Chung held the country's No. 2 post in 2009-2010 under President Lee Myung-bak before serving as head of the National Commission for Corporate Partnership until earlier this year, a post that promotes "shared growth" between conglomerates and smaller businesses.

The decision was unexpected as Chung served as prime minister under the current conservative government.

"After reading candidate Moon's campaign pledges and meeting him in person, I determined that he can share the value of shared growth with me," Chung said in a statement.

Chung said he has traveled around the country in the last several months to help promote shared growth, but he felt a limit to what he can do alone and wanted to cooperate with those sharing his shared growth vision and willing to promote the value.

"There is no future for small- and medium-sized enterprises with creativity and passion in the current South Korean economy over which chaebol cast thick clouds," Chung said, emphasizing the massive influence of big conglomerates. "We need to make the economic ecosystem a virtuous circle and I agreed with Moon that the only way toward it is shared growth."

Chung, an economics scholar and professor emeritus of Seoul National University, made up his mind to support Moon of the main opposition Democratic United Party after meeting him in person on Sunday and again Tuesday morning, sources said.

Ahead of the 2007 presidential election, Chung had once been considered a potential opposition presidential candidate, but he later joined the Lee administration before leaving the job after the parliament rejected his proposal to revise a project to build an administrative city in central South Korea. (Yonhap News)

Nearly 80% of voters to cast ballot in presidential election: poll

Nearly 80 percent of all voters in the country said they will vote in this year's presidential race, a poll conducted by the state election watchdog said Tuesday.

   The survey carried out by Korea Research Center on behalf of the National Election Commission on 1,500 people nationwide late last week showed 79.9 percent of all respondents saying they will definitely vote on Dec. 19.

   By age group, 74.5 percent of people in their 20s, 71.8 percent in their 30s and 78.3 percent in their 40s said they want to cast ballots. Numbers rose to 82.8 percent for people in their 50s and 91.5 percent for people over 60.

   The NEC said the turnout forecast this year is 12.9 percentage points higher than numbers predicted ahead of the 2007 presidential race.

   In that race, 67 percent of all people polled said they would vote with the actual turnout hitting 63 percent.

   The nationwide survey with a margin of error of plus or minus 2.5 percentage points with a 95 percent level of accuracy, showed 48.7 percent of the respondents saying they will vote for a candidate who offers the best policy pledges, followed by capability of the contender and political experience.

   Of all the media used to gather information about candidates, 37.5 percent said they got their knowledge from televised debates and campaign commercials followed by newspapers, TV news, and social networking services.

   Higher turnout at the polls has generally favored the liberal camp, while lower numbers have generally helped conservatives in past presidential races.

   The ruling Saenuri Party predicted earlier that overall turnout will reach the mid-60s range while the opposition Democratic United Party is aiming for more than 70 percent.

   Meanwhile, the NEC said it will carry out absentee voting nationwide on Thursday and Friday for 1.08 million voters. The total represents a 34 percent increase compared to the last presidential election when 810,755 people registered to vote ahead of the election date.

   The agency said people wanting to cast their ballots must visit designated polling booths from 6 a.m. to 4 p.m. (Yonhap News)

Rivals clash over chaebol reform



Published : 2012-12-10 22:40
Updated : 2012-12-11 18:08
Presidential candidates Park Geun-hye of the Saenuri Party and Moon Jae-in of the Democratic United Party participate in the second television debate hosted by the National Election Commission at a KBS studio in Yeouido, Seoul, Monday. (Yonhap News)



Three presidential candidates squared off over the conglomerate-led Korean economy in the second television debate Monday, as their campaigns revolve around economic democratization and government accountability, which are considered key to helping low-income citizens.

Park Geun-hye of the Saenuri Party and Moon Jae-in of the Democratic United Party locked horns over whether the worsening polarization, growing household debt and squeezing of livelihoods were the result of the former Roh Moo-hyun administration or the incumbent Lee Myung-bak government.

Park, a former chairwoman of the ruling party, continued to distance herself from the Lee administration, while Moon, former chief of staff to Roh, said he accepted the shortcomings of the past government but that he was ready to do a better job this time.

Lee Jung-hee of the left-wing Unified Progressive Party butted heads with both Park and Moon with her radical policies, headlined “dissolution of chaebol,” and also took repeated shots at the nation’s conglomerate owners, including Samsung Electronics chairman Lee Kun-hee and Hyundai Motor Group chairman Chung Mong-koo, as a source of corruption beyond the control of the law.

The mood started off on a calmer note than the first debate on Dec. 4, with each candidate sticking more closely to the subject matter and keeping to the allotted time.

Apparently aware of the controversy that the previous debate entailed due to bold attacks deviating from the designated subject of the debate, the moderator repeatedly urged the candidates to stick to the topic.

But their free discussion session toward the end grew more heated as Park and Moon unleashed attacks against each other over their plans to fund their welfare pledges. Park and Lee also exchanged barbs over Lee’s demand that Park clarify her tax records and Park’s denouncement of Lee’s pledge to increase taxation as unrealistic.

The 100-minute debate organized by the National Election Commission as the second installment of three invited the candidates from the three political parties with at least five seats in the National Assembly. The next debate ― on the low birthrate, aging society and science and technology ― will be held on Sunday.

The candidates opened with two-minute keynote speeches, in which the three vowed to prop up people’s livelihoods and expand the middle class.

The question and answer session between the candidates concerned the economic slowdown, economic democratization and job creation and stability.

“The real estate price surged to record highs as polarization aggravated and (college) tuition also surged to record highs during the Roh administration. The problems faced by the Lee administration were mostly the extension of such problems,” Park said to Moon’s question on whether she should be responsible as the ruling party candidate for the “failed policies” of the current administration.

Appearing prepared for Lee’s bold offensives, Park struck back when she was prodded to spell out the current and next year’s minimum wage, criticizing Lee for her approach to the debate.

“You come to a debate and ask me questions as if you’re playing a game of 20 questions, hoping to embarrass me if I happen not to know something. Such way of questioning is not a desirable way of debating,” Park said.

Moon emphasized his readiness to deliver a better administration.

“The Roh administration has already been judged for its shortfalls. It is also commonly understood that the problems intensified during the Lee administration. This year’s election in 2012 is the judgment of the five years under the Saenuri Party,” Moon said to Park’s question on Moon’s pledges that she said was a repeat of the Roh government.

Moon, in the meantime, criticized Lee’s pledge as “idealistic,” suggesting a rapid increase in taxation could negatively impact the economy.



Macro economics


Regarding measures to tackle the global slowdown, Moon focused on reviving the domestic market by supporting people on low and moderate wages and small- and medium-sized enterprises.

“The effect of the government’s economic policies should be spread all around. That is the way to create a positive feedback loop in which spending is stimulated, leading to a revival of the domestic market and then to revival of the economy,” Moon said.

The DUP candidate also said that the financial burden placed on low-income groups needed to be reduced through measures including an interest rate ceiling and repayment period extensions.

Park said that economic policies should be divided into short- and long-term measures, with the main focus of the short-term plans being placed on addressing the increase of household debt, which stands at about 938 trillion won. Under Park’s plans, a 18 trillion won fund will be set up to reduce the burden on the 3.2 million people who are unable to pay back their loans.

“In the long term, the economy’s fundamentals need to be changed. One method is to apply science and technology, information communication technologies to all industries,” Park said.

“By making large scale investments, (I will) transform the economy from being a follower to becoming a leader.”

During the time allocated for debate between the candidates, however, the two main candidates scrapped over the failures of past and current administrations. Park attacked Moon, placing the blame for the current slowdown at the feet of the Roh Moo-hyun administration, while the DUP candidate returned fire, saying that related developments seen during the previous five years would be judged in the upcoming election.



On economic democratization


The three candidates each championed their own versions of economic democratization.

Park described her version as a way to create a transparent and fair market where anyone who tries hard can receive due compensation and realize one’s dream and purpose.

She also mentioned that she would strictly curb conglomerates’ unfair trade, advancement into businesses better fit for smaller merchants and illegal activities.

“As one newspaper judged, my policy may appear to be the weakest among the candidates, but it is the most effective and realistic,” Park said.

Moon described his vision as a way to reform chaebol and to fight an unfair market economy, and to maximize the benefits of a market economy for the economic community as a whole to grow together.

“I believe that chaebol must be reformed, but not to an extent where it would hurt the proper function of conglomerates and their global competitiveness. My purpose of chaebol reform is to ensure that they can be loved by the people,” Moon said.

The two also butted heads over the investment ceiling, which Moon pledges to revive, and how to deal with existing cross-shareholding, which Moon vows to start dissolving after a three-year grace period.

Moon also targeted Park over her reported discord with her key economic democratization policymaker Kim Chong-in, saying that her tax-cut pledges favored the conglomerates.

Park, in response, said economic democratization was not only about dissolving cross-shareholding, which she said would require huge investment that may negatively affect the economy.

Lee, in her part, said her economic democratization would be realized if Lee Kun-hee and Chung Mong-koo “returned from their throne that is placed beyond the Constitution to become ordinary citizens that are equal before the law.”



On employment and labor conditions


On boosting employment and stabilizing labor conditions, the DUP candidate took the lead in the talks, underlining his slogan of “employment president.”

“Good jobs are the best welfare plans and sustainable growth engines for the nation,” Moon said.

“Only by creating high quality jobs can we increase income, promote consumption and stimulate the domestic economy.”

He went onto say that he would create 400,000 new jobs and that the working hours will be reduced as part of the efforts to improve the labor environment.

Moon also pledged to gradually halve the number of irregular workers during his five-year term.

“I will set the example in the public sector by starting with public organizations, and also reinforce the legal requirements for layoffs,” he said.

The opposition candidate moved on to blast his conservative rival’s employment policies saying that Park’s chaebol-centric policies were not viable when 88 percent of the country’s jobs were provided by SMEs.

Park, on the other hand, underlined the importance of employment training and a punitive system to stop corporations from job discrimination.

“To solve the issue of youth unemployment, I suggest a system which focuses on the employee’s passion and capabilities,” she said.

“I will also provide the older generations with an education system so that they may prepare themselves for re-entry to employment before retirement.”

The right-wing candidate, too, agreed that the initiative should be taken in the public sector, before being expanded to the private sector.

She then criticized Moon’s plan to halve the number of irregular employees, claiming that it would create a vicious circle in employment.

“Companies, when faced with reinforced regulations, will reduce new employment or even fire their employees,” Park said.

Moon, however, refuted that the changes would be made through the government’s financial and systematic support, not through punitive regulations.

“My plan is about offering benefits such as tax cuts to firms, based on their rate of converting irregular jobs to regular ones,” he said.



On welfare


On welfare issues, Moon reemphasized that inclusive growth was key to rebuilding the middle class and job creation.

“Investment in welfare is the state’s duty and a growth policy for all. We should focus on welfare policy at a time when the economy faces risks,” he said. The liberal politician pledged to increase state subsidies and halve the costs of child care, education and medical services for the elderly.

His welfare package would create 400,000 jobs including day care teachers, caregivers and social workers, Moon added.

Park stressed that she would introduce a comprehensive welfare system tailored to all age groups and build stable welfare financing system.

“I will secure 60 percent of (welfare) resources by reducing the government’s inefficient spending and the rest by expanding tax revenue,” she said. Her government would create 27 trillion won a year or 135 trillion won over the next five years to implement comprehensive welfare policies, she said.

Park criticized Moon’s plan to expand insurance coverage for all inpatients by 90 percent would increase taxpayers’ financial burden.

Moon fought back, criticizing her plan to cover costs for people receiving treatment for only four classes of illness including cancer and cardiovascular disorders. He said it abandoned patients suffering from other serious diseases.

Moon said her plan would cover only 15 percent of 3.5 million patients those who pay more than 5 million won of medical costs a year.

Park argued that she would gradually expand insurance coverage for other diseases by checking the government’s capability to cover additional expenses.




By Lee Joo-hee
(jhl@heraldcorp.com)

Cho Chung-un, Choi He-suk and Bae Hyun-jung contributed to this article.