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NUKEWARS
China installs alarm system to grab refugees: report
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) March 23, 2012


China has installed a silent alarm system inside every house in a border town as part of its strengthened crackdown on fugitives from North Korea, a report said Friday.

The system is designed to let residents secretly send a signal to police if North Korean escapees come to their houses and ask for help, South Korea's Yonhap news agency said.

It can transmit dialogue between the owner of a house and visitors, and Chinese authorities plan to expand it into other areas bordering the North, the agency said.

"If you push the red button on the wall, a signal goes directly to a police station," Yonhap quoted one man as saying.

The man said he saw the device during a recent trip to his relative in the Yanbian border area in northeastern Jilin province.

Yonhap said China had stepped up a crackdown in border areas since South Korea criticised its repatriation of dozens of North Korean refugees in February and this month.

Almost all those fleeing the North cross first to China, where they face repatriation if caught. Many hide out and then travel on to Southeast Asian nations before flying to the South for resettlement.

Seoul has repeatedly urged Beijing to treat fugitives from the North as refugees and not to send them back, saying they face harsh punishment. China says they are economic migrants and not refugees deserving protection.

The UN refugee agency and rights watchdog Amnesty International have also urged Beijing not to send refugees back. Amnesty says returnees are sent to labour camps where they are subject to torture.

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N. Korea rocket launch could affect aid: UN chief
Singapore (AFP) March 23, 2012 - UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon warned North Korea Friday that any rocket launch could discourage international aid donors and worsen the country's already dire humanitarian situation.

"Such an act would undermine recent positive diplomatic progress and, in its effect on international donors, would likely worsen the humanitarian situation inside the country," he said in a speech in Singapore.

Ban told an audience of government officials, diplomats and academics that he was "very troubled and very deeply concerned" by Pyongyang's announcement to launch a satellite next month.

He said it would be a "clear violation" of UN Security Council resolutions and warned that the North already had a "serious humanitarian crisis" on its hands.

Nuclear-armed North Korea has said it will launch a rocket in April to put a satellite into orbit, a move which the United States and its allies see as a pretext for a long-range missile test.

Washington voiced doubt last week over whether it could provide food aid to Pyongyang if it followed through on its threat to launch the rocket.

On February 29 the United States said it would move ahead on a plan to deliver 240,000 metric tons of food aid to Pyongyang after North Korea agreed to a partial freeze on its nuclear programme, to suspend missile tests and allow UN inspectors.



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NUKEWARS
UN's Ban to raise N. Korea launch at Seoul summit
Kuala Lumpur (AFP) March 22, 2012
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said Thursday he would raise North Korea's planned rocket launch at a Seoul nuclear summit next week, expressing "deep concern" over the issue. "I am going to discuss the issue with the president of the Republic of (South Korea) in Seoul and I will also engage with other leaders attending the nuclear summit," Ban told a press conference in Malaysia. The n ... read more


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