country:north korea

  • Exclusive: North Korea restarts plutonium production for nuclear bombs - U.S. official | Reuters
    http://in.reuters.com/article/northkorea-nuclear-usa-exclusive-idINKCN0YT2IU

    North Korea has restarted production of plutonium fuel, a senior U.S. State Department official said on Tuesday, showing that it plans to pursue its nuclear weapons program in defiance of international sanctions.

    The U.S. assessment came a day after the U.N. nuclear watchdog said it had “indications” that Pyongyang has reactivated a plant to recover plutonium from spent reactor fuel at Yongbyon, its main nuclear complex.

    The latest developments suggest North Korea’s reclusive regime is working to ensure a steady supply of materials for its drive to build warheads, despite tightened international sanctions after its fourth nuclear test in January.

    The U.S. official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that Washington is worried by the new plutonium reprocessing effort, but he offered no explicit word on any U.S. response.

    Everything in North Korea is a cause for concern,” the official told Reuters.

    They take the spent fuel from the 5 megawatt reactor at Yongbyon and let it cool and then take it to the reprocessing facility, and that’s where they’ve obtained the plutonium for their previous nuclear tests. So they are repeating that process,” the official said. "That’s what they’re doing.

  • Details Emerge on Global Bank Heists by Hackers - The New York Times
    http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/14/business/dealbook/details-emerge-on-global-bank-heists-by-hackers.html

    Computer security researchers briefed on the investigation into one of the attacks, on the Bangladesh Bank, raised several theories about the crime, including the possibility that groups from Pakistan and North Korea may have been spying on the bank. Other analysts investigating the attacks said there were striking similarities between the “multiple bespoke tools” used by the hackers in both the banking cases and the attack on Sony Pictures in 2014.

    The latest breach detailed by Swift in a letter to its users on Friday occurred at a commercial bank that appeared, according to a leading online security firm BAE Systems on Friday, to be located in Vietnam.
    […]
    Also on Friday, two forensics investigators at BAE Systems outlined evidence that suggested similarities between the Bangladesh heist and a 2014 attack against Sony Pictures that law enforcement and intelligence agencies in the United States have traced to North Korea. That year, Sony released the farcical movie “The Interview,” which poked fun at North Korea.

    The investigators pointed to specialized, identical tools — including identical encryption keys, file names and a highly unusual data deletion technique — that were used in the attack on Sony Pictures, the Bangladesh central bank and the Vietnamese bank.

    However, people briefed on the actual investigation at the Bangladesh bank, who would speak only on the condition that they not be named, said that while the same tools were present inside Bangladesh’s systems, suggesting any link between that heist and the North Korean hackers would be premature.

  • Link to report by journalist expelled from N.Korea removed | NK News - North Korea News

    https://www.nknews.org/2016/05/link-to-report-by-journalist-expelled-from-n-korea-removed

    A report filed from Pyongyang by the recently expelled journalist Rupert Wingfield-Hayes appears to have been removed from the BBC’s website.

    The link to the report titled “North Korea: Searching for self-reliance and ‘real people’ in Pyongyang,” was previously active on May 9 but currently shows a 404-Error saying the article cannot be found. Several other reports filed by Hayes from Pyongyang remain active.

    While the reasons for the piece’s removal are unknown, the BBC is refusing to comment.

    NK News inquired with the BBC to see when and why the link was taken down but the BBC said that it will not be commenting on the issue.

    #corée_du_nord #bbc

  • North Korea : 10 minutes inside the Workers’ Party Congress - CNN.com
    http://edition.cnn.com/2016/05/10/asia/north-korea-ripley-workers-party-congress

    Even by North Korean standards, this experience was surreal.
    […]
    The whole security process took 90 minutes. Finally, we were allowed inside the Workers’ Party Congress — the first time any Western journalists were allowed to do so.

    The walk to the Congress’ auditorium is lined with ornate marble columns and an extravagant escalator. We were warned not to bump our tripod on the immaculate escalator.
    As we entered the auditorium, we quickly realized we were not the only ones filming. North Korean state-run TV was also filming us, presumably to show how important the Congress was to the rest of the world.

    t’s also possible they wanted citizens to feel less isolated and perhaps more connected to the rest of the world.
    As we walked inside the auditorium, 5,000 heads turned. Some looked bemused. Others, stone-faced.
    The silence was broken only by the familiar tune that plays every time the country’s “supreme leader” is about to enter.

    Suddenly, everyone clapped and shouted in perfect unison. They did so for several minutes.
    Then Kim — wearing a suit, gray tie and glasses — made his entrance.
    Our minders gave us 10 minutes to shoot whatever we wanted — except for closeups of the delegates’ notebooks.
    Then we were briskly ushered away.
    We still saw no transparency on how the voting worked. What we do know is that the 3,400 delegates, who were joined by 1,500 or so alternates, always vote unanimously.
    And in this once-in-a-generation Congress, Kim was elected chairman of the Workers’ Party. Somehow, he was given even more power than he already had.

    Et une succession de vidéos tournées par le correspondant de CNN, Will Ripley, dont les quelques minutes dans la salle du congrès.

  • Asian Arms Race Continues – OpEd

    The announcement that Australia has awarded the biggest arms contract in its history ($40 bn) to France provides further fuel to the arms race in Asia. Already last year Asia overtook Europe in terms of defence spending with the total reaching $340bn according to IISS figures. This year the trend is continuing with overall defence expenditure likely to increase by a further 6%. Asian countries are shopping not only for submarines but new generation fighter aircraft, amphibious landing craft and other advanced weaponry. European defence contractors are now looking to Asia to boost falling sales at home.

    The reasons for the rise in defence spending include the increasing tensions in the East and South China seas and the unpredictable nature of the regime in North Korea. China accounts for about 40% of the total spending and has ambitious plans to modernise its armed forces and increase its power projection capabilities. This, in turn, has led to increases in defence spending by India, Japan, Vietnam, the Philippines, Australia and other countries in Asia. South Korea is considering accepting a US missile system following the latest provocations from North Korea.

    http://www.eurasiareview.com/09052016-asian-arms-race-continues-oped

    #transferts_d_armes #armement #asie

  • BBC’s Rupert Wingfield-Hayes and team expelled from North Korea - BBC News

    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-36244994

    Finalement assez pratique, les dictatures (« We are displeased with the report you made, we expell you for life. Full stop. »)

    BBC correspondent Rupert Wingfield-Hayes and his team are being expelled from North Korea after being detained over their reporting.

    Our correspondent, producer Maria Byrne and cameraman Matthew Goddard were stopped by officials on Friday as they were about to leave North Korea.

    He was questioned for eight hours by North Korean officials and made to sign a statement.

    All three were held over the weekend but have now been taken to the airport.

    The BBC team was in North Korea ahead of the Workers Party Congress, accompanying a delegation of Nobel prize laureates conducting a research trip.

    The North Korean leadership was displeased with their reports highlighting aspects of life in the capital.

    Aussi : http://www.nrk.no/urix/bbc-journalist-arrestert-og-utvist-fra-nord-korea-1.12937065

    #corée_du_nord #dictature #relique_vivante__de_la_guerre_froide

  • South Korea Revives GPS Backup Project After Blaming North for Jamming - gCaptain
    https://gcaptain.com/south-korea-revives-gps-backup-project-after-blaming-north-for-jamming

    South Korea has revived a project to build a backup ship navigation system that would be difficult to hack after a recent wave of GPS signal jamming attacks it blamed on North Korea disrupted fishing vessel operations, officials say.

    Global Positioning System (GPS) and other electronic navigation aids are vulnerable to signal loss from solar weather effects, radio and satellite interference and deliberate jamming.
    […]
    The latest jamming campaign from the North began on March 31, lasting nearly a week and affecting signal reception of more than 1,000 aircraft and 700 ships, originating from five locations along the border, South Korean officials said.

    Aircraft traffic was not affected because the GPS system is normally used as a backup, not a primary navigation tool, one of the officials involved in telecommunications policy said.
    […]
    Part of the problem is that it’s not easy to detect a GPS outage caused by jamming.

    When GPS/GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite Systems) fail, transportation is impacted immediately. It slows down, becomes more dangerous, and every mode can carry less capacity,” said Dana Goward, president of the non-profit Resilient Navigation & Timing Foundation.

    As short-term backup clocks start to desynchronize with each other … cell phone towers start to fail, IT networks slow down or fail, financial systems are impacted, management of the electrical grid becomes problematic. That is the really scary part,” said Goward.

    GPS vulnerability poses security and commercial risks, especially for ships whose crews are not familiar with traditional navigation techniques or using paper charts.

    #GPS #GPS_hack #Loran #eLoran

  • Connectography by Parag Khanna | PenguinRandomHouse.com

    http://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/530058/connectography-by-parag-khanna/9780812988550/#

    signalé par @alaingresh ce livre avec un concept que ne connaissais pas

    About Connectography

    From the visionary bestselling author of The Second World and How to Run the World comes a bracing and authoritative guide to a future shaped less by national borders than by global supply chains, a world in which the most connected powers—and people—will win.

    Connectivity is the most revolutionary force of the twenty-first century. Mankind is reengineering the planet, investing up to ten trillion dollars per year in transportation, energy, and communications infrastructure linking the world’s burgeoning megacities together. This has profound consequences for geopolitics, economics, demographics, the environment, and social identity. Connectivity, not geography, is our destiny.

    In Connectography, visionary strategist Parag Khanna travels from Ukraine to Iran, Mongolia to North Korea, Pakistan to Nigeria, and across the Arctic Circle and the South China Sea to explain the rapid and unprecedented changes affecting every part of the planet. He shows how militaries are deployed to protect supply chains as much as borders, and how nations are less at war over territory than engaged in tugs-of-war over pipelines, railways, shipping lanes, and Internet cables. The new arms race is to connect to the most markets—a race China is now winning, having launched a wave of infrastructure investments to unite Eurasia around its new Silk Roads. The United States can only regain ground by fusing with its neighbors into a super-continental North American Union of shared resources and prosperity.

    #connectographie #géograpie #cartographie #Mondialisation #Monde_connecté #monde_interconnecté #monde_systémique

  • North Korea’s Enigmatic Capital Pyongyang | Worlds Revealed: Geography & Maps at The Library Of Congress

    http://blogs.loc.gov/maps/2016/03/north-koreas-enigmatic-capital-pyongyang

    via Jean-Christophe Fichet sur Twitter

    North Korea’s Enigmatic Capital Pyongyang
    March 22, 2016 by Carlyn Osborn

    Today’s guest post is by Ryan Moore, a Cartographic Specialist in the Geography & Map Division. This is Ryan’s second post for Worlds Revealed and you can read his first one here.

    The North Korean capital city Pyongyang has both a storied and troubled history. Among the reasons it fascinates, plain curiosity rises to the top of list, because the North Korean government has largely closed off the country from the rest of world since the end of the Korean War in 1953. Correspondingly, accurate maps of the city available outside the so-called “Hermit Kingdom” are few and far between.

    Pyongang is located in the western portion of the nation at 39°1′10″N 125°44′17″E Its name means “flat land” and the city and surrounding coastal plains are an exceptional geographic feature in the nearly entirely mountainous country. The city’s origins date back to 1122 BC. It was built along the Taedong River and over time steadily occupied both sides. Sprawling towards the base of mountains on the outskirts, the city has an area of 1,233 square miles, where a municipal population of some 3.2 million reside. Its inhabitants are believed to be persons most favored by the dynastic government that is generally characterized as totalitarian regime. Grand buildings and monuments, such as the 105-story pyramid-esque Ryugyong Hotel and the Juche Tower with its burning eternal flame, celebrate the power of the government are strategically situated throughout the city for the greatest visual impact.

    #corée_du_nord

  • Giant Leak of Offshore Financial Records Exposes Global Array of Crime and Corruption · ICIJ
    https://panamapapers.icij.org/20160403-panama-papers-global-overview.html

    A massive leak of documents exposes the offshore holdings of 12 current and former world leaders and reveals how associates of Russian President Vladimir Putin secretly shuffled as much as $2 billion through banks and shadow companies.

    The leak also provides details of the hidden financial dealings of 128 more politicians and public officials around the world.

    The cache of 11.5 million records shows how a global industry of law firms and big banks sells financial secrecy to politicians, fraudsters and drug traffickers as well as billionaires, celebrities and sports stars.

    These are among the findings of a yearlong investigation by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung and more than 100 other news organizations.

    The files expose offshore companies controlled by the prime ministers of Iceland and Pakistan, the king of Saudi Arabia and the children of the president of Azerbaijan.

    They also include at least 33 people and companies blacklisted by the U.S. government because of evidence that they’d been involved in wrongdoing, such as doing business with Mexican drug lords, terrorist organizations like Hezbollah or rogue nations like North Korea and Iran.

    One of those companies supplied fuel for the aircraft that the Syrian government used to bomb and kill thousands of its own citizens, U.S. authorities have charged.

    #paradis_fiscaux #corruption

  • The True Story of the Pentagon Spies Who Posed as Christian Missionaries to Surveil North Korea
    http://m.democracynow.org/stories/16067

    JUAN GONZÁLEZ: I wanted to ask you—-we just have a few minutes—on your fascinating story late last year on missionaries in North Korea.

    MATTHEW COLE: Yeah, so last year we published a story about a Pentagon program that ended in—at the end of 2012, about a espionage effort that the Pentagon started in 2004, 2005, using and funding an NGO, an NGO out of Colorado run by evangelical Christians, who were doing humanitarian work around the world. And what it was, was the Pentagon funded this group in an effort to get the head of the group legitimacy in the NGO world, so that they could then get him into North Korea, so that they can move materiel, so that they could collect intelligence.

    And so, for about a eight-year period, the Pentagon funded this organization that—by the way, the organization did—90, 95 percent of their work was legitimate. You know, nearly everyone in the company—or, the organization, had no idea that they were acting as a front for the Pentagon. And it’s important to remember that, because they were missionaries who were doing really important work all over the world. And they did very good work. And it was really sad, actually, to interview people who had worked there who were completely distraught about the—upon discovering that they were, in fact, being paid by the Pentagon secretly. And it goes to show the danger of U.S. intelligence agencies or the Pentagon trying to get in under the cover of humanitarian auspices.

    #espionnage #Etats-Unis #missionnaires #Corée_du_Nord

  • Death penalty statistics, country by country in 2012 | visualisation and data | World news | The Guardian

    http://www.theguardian.com/news/datablog/2011/mar/29/death-penalty-countries-world

    Ça date de 2012 mais je référence pour l’exemple et la méthodo carto.

    After the execution of Kim Jong-un’s uncle, the brutality of North Korea’s regime has once again come under the international spotlight. In a broader context, is the attention warranted? Find out who uses the death penalty today - and see how it compares to 2007

    #droits_humains #peine_de_mort

  • North Korea sentences US college student to 15 years’ hard labour | World news | The Guardian

    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/mar/16/north-korea-sentences-us-student-to-15-years-hard-labour

    C’est cher payé pour avoir voulu piquer un panneau de propagande (et peut-être un pari stupide ?).

    North Korea has sentenced an American college student to 15 years’ hard labour after finding him guilty of “crimes against the state”, in a ruling that is certain to increase tensions with Washington.

    #corée_du_nord

  • China orders ’blacklist’ of 31 North Korean vessels : document | Reuters
    http://www.reuters.com/article/us-northkorea-nuclear-sanctions-china-idUSKCN0W61PI

    Chinese maritime authorities must “blacklist” 31 boats operated by a North Korean firm that came under U.N. Security Council sanctions this week, according to a Ministry of Transport document reviewed by a signal that China is enforcing tough new curbs aimed at Pyongyang’s banned nuclear program.

    The notice, dated March 3, says maritime safety agencies must “urgently” determine whether 31 vessels belonging to Ocean Maritime Management Co (OMM) are in Chinese harbors or waters, and notify the ministry.

    The latest U.N. sanctions, drafted by the United States and China, blacklist the vessels. The ministry’s notice says authorities must not allow the vessels to enter Chinese harbors, adding the measures were part of the “exceedingly sensitive” work of enforcing the U.N. sanctions.
    […]
    Authorities this week also restricted how many vehicles could cross into North Korea each day via a bridge to the coastal Chinese city of Dandong, from 300-400 earlier to about 100, shopkeepers there said - a sign that sanctions are having some early impact.

  • 3月4日のツイート
    http://twilog.org/ChikuwaQ/date-160304

    RT @Kitri1: He doesn’t know Swiss cheese. Just clichés. twitter.com/ajplus/status/… posted at 15:16:39

    RT @ISUTA_JP: 毎日通いたい⁉︎ドバイにオープンした「昼寝バー」のおもてなしがスゴいisuta.jp/83048/ pic.twitter.com/GtcsQ8gsri posted at 15:13:48

    twitter.com/jranck/status/… posted at 14:49:26

    twitter.com/ipagination/st… posted at 14:47:35

    Top story: Donald Trump defends size of his penis - CNNPolitics.com edition.cnn.com/2016/03/03/pol…, see more tweetedtimes.com/ChikuwaQ?s=tnp posted at 14:45:49

    Top story: North Korea: Kim Jong-un orders nuclear weapons readied for use ’at … www.theguardian.com/world/2016/mar…, see more tweetedtimes.com/ChikuwaQ?s=tnp posted at 13:00:37

    My Tweeted Times tweetedtimes.com/ChikuwaQ?s=rgp posted at 12:00:05

    RT @ishiyama8: 【大事なモノ】 # #猫写真 #猫マンガ #猫好きさんと繋がりたい #田代島 pic.twitter.com/jfa2uHL8j1 posted at 12:00:01 (...)

  • Operation Blockbuster | Novetta Threat Research & Interdiction Group
    https://operationblockbuster.com

    In Operation Blockbuster, a Novetta-led coalition of private industry partners joined together to identify, understand, expose, and aid industry in degrading the Lazarus Group, the malicious threat actors behind multiple cyber campaigns, including the November 2014 Sony Pictures attack. Our story demonstrates private industry’s new role in ensuring the balance of global cyber defense.
    ...
    The attack against Sony Pictures Entertainment
    (SPE) was unprecedented in its media coverage
    and overt use of malicious destructive capabilities
    against a commercial entity. The SPE attack broke
    new ground not only as a destructive malware
    attack on a U.S. commercial entity but also due
    to the fact that the U.S. government attributed
    the attack to North Korea and enacted small
    reciprocal measures.
    1
    While the debate over who
    was responsible – North Korea, hacktivists, or SPE
    employees – was the primary subject played out
    in the media, the attack presented much larger
    implications, such as how little resistance a modern
    commercial enterprise is able to provide in the
    face of a capable and determined adversary with
    destructive intent.

    Further, Novetta’s analysis of the observed tooling and TTPs

    suggests that the group has executed numerous successful
    attacks due in large part to their organization and determination, more so than due to any highly sophisticated malware
    such as those reportedly used by similar classes of threat actors reported in the last few years, e.g., HDD malware
    2
    and
    Satellite Turla.
    3
    Through careful analysis outlined in this report and other associated reverse engineering technical reports, Novetta has
    been able to link the malware used in the SPE attack to a widely varied malicious toolset. This toolset includes malware
    directly related to previously reported attacks, suggesting that these malicious tools have been actively developed and
    used over a span of at least 7 years, and that the attackers responsible for the SPE attack have a much larger collection
    of related malware outside of the set of reported SPE destructive malware. Due to this, we strongly believe that the SPE
    attack was not the work of insiders or hacktivists. Instead, given the malicious tools and previous cyber operations linked
    to these tools, it appears that the SPE attack was carried out by a single group, or potentially very closely linked groups
    sharing technical resources, infrastructure, and even tasking. We have dubbed this group the Lazarus Group.
    Although
    our analysis cannot support direct attribution of a nation-state or other specific group due to the difficulty of proper
    attribution in the cyber realm, the FBI’s official attribution claims
    4
    could be supported by our findings.
    While the SPE attack occurred over a year ago, we are releasing this report now to detail our technical findings, clarify
    details surrounding the SPE hack, and profile the Lazarus Group, who has continued to develop tools and target victims
    since then. Most importantly, Novetta continues to work with our public and private partner organizations in this
    Operation to ensure that Novetta’s signatures and other data will have a meaningful impact on the Lazarus Group’s
    abilities to function, as well as help potential victims understand in great detail not only the technical but also the
    operational methods. Novetta feels that this combination of sharing highly technical analysis with both the public and
    private industry is the best way to interdict these types of actors.

    https://operationblockbuster.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Operation-Blockbuster-Report.pdf

    #sécurité #internet

  • 2月22日のツイート
    http://twilog.org/ChikuwaQ/date-160222

    RT @zim2918: Raven’s secret. Pen and Ink pic.twitter.com/8oBG5R2nTO posted at 08:50:26

    RT @HistoryFoto: Дайверы. 40-е pic.twitter.com/D3EquCXFzb posted at 08:36:02

    Top story: U.S. Agreed to North Korea Peace Talks Before Latest Nuclear Test - … www.wsj.com/articles/u-s-a…, see more tweetedtimes.com/ChikuwaQ?s=tnp posted at 05:24:09

  • North Korea signs Svalbard Treaty

    http://www.adn.com/article/20160202/north-korea-signs-svalbard-treaty

    The North Korean Government on January 25 signed the Svalbard Treaty, the Korean Central News Agency reports.

    http://www.adn.com/sites/default/files/styles/full_width_850/public/NKorea-The%20Sanctions%20_DeGe.jpg?itok=a060U8js

    Signing the Svalbard Treaty gives North Korea the right to conduct economic and scientific activities on the Arctic archipelago.

    #insolite et on se demande pourquoi.

  • 30,000 North Korean children living in limbo in China | World news | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/feb/05/north-koreas-stateless-children

    Up to 30,000 children born to North Korean mothers who have fled the regime are living in China without access to schooling, health care or citizenship, MPs have heard.

    North Korean human rights advocate Sungju Lee, a defector from the DPRK, said many of these children were born to women who had been sold to Chinese men by traffickers.

    “These children, with no basic human rights, live as if they are not existing,” he told the parliamentary group on North Korea.

    He described the life of a seven-year-old boy in Jilin province. “The child was supposed to start going to school like other kids, but he wasn’t able to because he had no citizenship. He had no eduction and no friends.”

    #enfants #enfance #apatridie #Chine #Corée_du_Nord

  • Eight countries. 2,055 nuclear tests. 71 years – mapped - Washington Post

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/world/nuclear-tests

    Signalé par Jean-Christophe Fichet sur Twitter

    Eight countries. 2,055 nuclear tests. 71 years.

    In the name of national security, eight countries have tested nuclear weapons all over the world since 1945, frequently near populated places. North Korea’s claim of hydrogen bomb test draws skepticism, condemnations.

    #armement #nucléaire #cartographie #visualisation #cartographie_dynamique

  • Four ways the U.S. is already banning Muslims
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2015/12/17/four-ways-the-u-s-is-already-banning-muslims

    Delaying and denying Muslim immigrant petitions
    There is a little-known, formerly secret, but sweeping federal program that results in delays or outright denial of citizenship or immigration benefits for otherwise eligible Muslims, apparently based on their religion or national origin, among other things. That program, known as the “Controlled Application Review and Resolution Program” or “CARRP,” has been in place since at least 2008. One of our clients likely subjected to this program is a religious leader, prominent in his community, who had been in the United States for over 20 years. He was never alleged to present any security threat, and his children are all U.S. citizens. While he is eligible to become a resident, he has been waiting for 12 years for his petition to be processed. Another client, in the United States since he was a young boy, had his naturalization petition first “held” for years by the FBI and eventually denied on a pretext. While we ultimately prevailed in challenging that denial, it took considerable resources, many years and a significant toll on him and his family. With these unpredictable delays and denials, life becomes impossible to plan. And the promise of American citizenship or residency becomes elusive.

    “Proxy denaturalization” through passport confiscation
    This is an even less well-known practice with strikingly Trumpian characteristics. Around 2013, our organization, along with a number of civil liberties organizations, began receiving complaints from more than a dozen U.S. citizens of Yemeni origin, all describing the same peculiar pattern: They went to the U.S. Embassy in Sanaa, Yemen, for a routine consular matter such as registering a newborn. Once there, they were subjected to lengthy and coercive interrogation by State Department officials, at the end of which they were forced to sign statements and had their U.S. passports seized without any explanation. Some were only told after months — or sometimes a year — that they would be allowed to fly back to the United States and go through an opaque process to argue that they should get their passports back. The arbitrary character of this entire process has led many advocates and scholars to argue that this program amounts to proxy-denaturalization: allowing the government to strip a subset of citizens — all Muslim — of all the benefits of citizenship without having to go through appropriate procedures. To date, an unknown number of Americans are likely stuck in Yemen. Or if they have now fled current violence there, they are stuck in neighboring countries, unable to return to their families or businesses in the United States. The State Department, which claims it is acting pursuant to “reasons set forth in federal law and in federal regulations,” has not issued any apologies and has doubled down on its position in individual administrative hearings.

    The no-fly list
    Another tool disproportionately affecting Muslims is the “no-fly list,” a database of individuals who are denied boarding any commercial flights to or from the United States. In 2013, there were reportedly 468,749 names on the watch list. Based on all the publicly known examples that I am aware of, and all of my clients, the no-fly list is almost entirely populated by Muslims or individuals assumed to be Muslim. Federal courts have ruled that the process to challenge one’s placement on this list is constitutionally inadequate, and there have been some recent, limited revisions to this process. But it remains arduous and unpredictable, the criteria for placement on the list remains too broad and the list — which likely continues to grow — is riddled with errors. At CLEAR, I represented a dozen clients who were on the no-fly list, a mix of U.S. citizens and permanent residents. Those stranded overseas were ultimately allowed to return to the United States while they went through the lengthy process of trying to get off the list. But they had to make difficult choices of leaving parents, grandparents, spouses and young children, not knowing when they would be able to reunite. Some decided to remain overseas to avoid being separated from their loved ones, who had no way of joining them in the United States. And the process remains a looming threat to many others who have not been denied boarding, but fear the possibility of being put on the list — a surprisingly common concern among many young Muslims I regularly met with. When the possibility of an arbitrary ban on travel colors decisions about where to live, where to raise families and what jobs to take, access to citizenship or legal status becomes moot.

    "Special registration” for Muslims
    And let us not forget another very recent historical precedent for Trump’s proposal: The National Security Entry-Exit Registration System program, implemented after the 9/11 attacks, mandated that all non-immigrant males from 24 Muslim-majority countries (and North Korea) register with the government. Though the program did not yield a single terrorism-related prosecution, it resulted in widespread deportations and exclusions, and its effects on thousands of families remain to this day.

    None of these programs quite amount to the outright ban that Trump has called for. But they are all variants on a theme — a theme that has been alive and well for some time.

    #Etats-Unis #discrimination #musulmans

  • La Corée du Nord s’attaque aux femmes avec une loi anti-avortement
    http://blogs.piie.com/nk/?p=14651
    North Korea’s New Pronatalist Policy

    “North Korea Forbids Doctors to Perform Abortions, Implant Birth Control Devices.” An unnamed source, this time in Yanggang province, told the RFA Korea service that the order came down on 8 October making birth control procedures (typically the implantation of an intra-uterine device) and abortion illegal with unspecified penalties for doctors who violated the new law.

    This turn in policy, if true, is reminiscent of the ban on abortions and IUDs, imposed initially in 1966 in Romania after Nicolae Ceausescu took power, and subsequently extended to other forms of birth control. Initially the crude birth rate soared, but after two years began converging back toward its previous level. The policy was a public health catastrophe: maternal mortality exploded, 87 percent of which was accounted for by illegal abortions which had become one of the principal methods of birth control. At its peak, “Romania had the highest maternal mortality in all of Europe by a factor of ten.” After 1983, birth rates were no longer published, and beginning in 1986, “a 30 day delay was imposed on birth registration to avoid acknowledging infant deaths in the first month of life, a statistical ruse designed to reduce the infant mortality rate which had soared to 25.6 infant deaths per 1,000 births in 1985.”

    Thousands of abandoned children warehoused in derelict orphanages were a byproduct of the policy.

  • Suspicious boats with decomposed bodies found drifting off Japan - Yahoo News
    http://news.yahoo.com/suspicious-boats-decomposed-bodies-found-drifting-off-japan-134707754.ht

    Japan is investigating nearly a dozen suspicious boats recently found drifting off the country’s coastline, some with decaying bodies aboard, officials said Friday, as media speculated they came from North Korea.

    At least 11 cases involving wooden boats — some badly damaged — with 20 bodies on board have been reported during October and November, a coastguard spokesman told AFP.

    Many of the boats have been towed to Japanese ports, but the bodies are yet to be identified, he said, adding that investigations were ongoing.

    On Tuesday, one of the boats was pulled ashore at Fukui port after three sets of remains were found inside when coastguard personnel spotted it some 100 kilometres (62 miles) offshore in the Sea of Japan, private TV channel Tokyo Broadcasting System reported.

    The body of water is known as the East Sea in North and South Korea.

    TBS said the remains were badly decomposed and partially skeletonised, while Japan’s public TV broadcaster NHK said Korean writing was visible on the boats as well as clothes left inside the vessels.

    Experts suspect the vessels are fishing boats from North Korea as the impoverished state prone to poor harvests is trying to expand its fishing industry to bolster food security, NHK said.

    But a number of North Korean fishing boats have been lost due to a lack of modern equipment, including the Global Positioning System capability, it added.