What are the capitalists of the world
afraid of?
10.10.17
Today, the whole world can see the naked
hypocrisy of some permanent members of the UN Security Council, who claim to
favour "a peaceful solution to the Korean question" and try to paint
themselves as "neutral intermediaries", but in reality actively
support the US in their very real economic war against the DPRK.
As a result of the latest sanctions against the DPRK – adopted by the Security Council at its 8042nd session on September 11, 2017 (see here) – all UN member countries are prohibited from selling to North Korea a long list of goods, including textiles (!). The sale of gas and oil products is reduced to the absolute minimum needs of the population. A ban has been imposed on DPRK labour, on joint ventures with the country and any investments in it. UN member countries are obliged to inspect all sea vessels if they are suspected of carrying goods from or to the DPRK.
As a result of the latest sanctions against the DPRK – adopted by the Security Council at its 8042nd session on September 11, 2017 (see here) – all UN member countries are prohibited from selling to North Korea a long list of goods, including textiles (!). The sale of gas and oil products is reduced to the absolute minimum needs of the population. A ban has been imposed on DPRK labour, on joint ventures with the country and any investments in it. UN member countries are obliged to inspect all sea vessels if they are suspected of carrying goods from or to the DPRK.
These sanctions would not be possible if
members of the UN Security Council did not openly lend their support to US
imperialism, trying to deprive a small sovereign country of its right to self-defence.
Thanks to them the DPRK has actually lost 90% of its foreign trade.
Until recently, many Russian friends of the DPRK have tried not to comment on the course adopted by the ruling circles of the Russian Federation on the Korean issue in the UN Security Council, where, let's not forget, the Russian Federation still has the right of veto, inherited from the USSR and won with the blood of our fathers, grandfathers and great-grandfathers – the soldiers of the Soviet Army following the great Victory of the Soviet people in the Second World War. Many naively believed that, as the saying goes, "if you don't touch it – it won't stink", especially since numerous pro-Kremlin trolls on the Internet kept insisting that "in fact, Russia supports the DPRK", but, for some reason, it does it "secretly". But, as one of our foreign comrades rightfully remarked, why impose these sanctions in the first place, if they're not to be observed? And how is this support expressed? In the never-fulfilled promise by Russian Railways to help reconstruct the North Korean railroads? In a ferry service from Vladivostok that was suspended as soon as it began operating? In the constant justifications of the Russian authorities to their American "partners", that the trade of the Russian Federation with the DPRK is practically zero?
Until recently, many Russian friends of the DPRK have tried not to comment on the course adopted by the ruling circles of the Russian Federation on the Korean issue in the UN Security Council, where, let's not forget, the Russian Federation still has the right of veto, inherited from the USSR and won with the blood of our fathers, grandfathers and great-grandfathers – the soldiers of the Soviet Army following the great Victory of the Soviet people in the Second World War. Many naively believed that, as the saying goes, "if you don't touch it – it won't stink", especially since numerous pro-Kremlin trolls on the Internet kept insisting that "in fact, Russia supports the DPRK", but, for some reason, it does it "secretly". But, as one of our foreign comrades rightfully remarked, why impose these sanctions in the first place, if they're not to be observed? And how is this support expressed? In the never-fulfilled promise by Russian Railways to help reconstruct the North Korean railroads? In a ferry service from Vladivostok that was suspended as soon as it began operating? In the constant justifications of the Russian authorities to their American "partners", that the trade of the Russian Federation with the DPRK is practically zero?
This is the picture we recently found on
the Internet. It truly reflects reality…
Double
standards? See below
Putin
introduces sanctions against the DPRK
Putin
tells south Korean President sanctions against the DPRK are useless
It is absolutely clear that Russia's
hostile position towards the DPRK in the UN Security Council plays only in the
hands of the United States. What would be the situation on the Korean Peninsula
if the DPRK did not have missiles and nuclear weapons? Any rational person,
observing international events in the past 20 years, will immediately see that
there would be a new Iraq or Libya. So would it be in Russia's interest if US
troops appeared not only in the Baltic and Ukraine, but also at our Far Eastern
borders?
But obviously, those who these days decide the Russian Federation's foreign policy, confuse their personal interests with those of the state. This is the only way to interpret Peskov's claim that "Russia's position on the DPRK meets national interests." "Translated" it means: "The position of the Russian Federation on the DPRK is beneficial to the comprador and semi-comprador financial oligarchy and high officials in Russia, who spit on the interests of the people of Russia, and dance to America's tune because they are trembling for their capitals, deposited in American banks.
By publishing a selection of photos of
daily life in the DPRK, with our comments, we want to show to our readers how north
Korea lives and why it is so hated by the capitalists of the world.
We know this country firsthand; we have many real friends there. We have seen with our own eyes how the country has been changing, how it has developed economically, scientifically, and culturally over the past decade. And we have seen that the changes taking place are not made in the interests of a handful of compradors – as it happens in Russia – but in the interests of the overwhelming majority of the people of People’s Korea. That is why the capitalists of all countries – the US, Russia, China and others – are so fearful of the DPRK. And the stronger its economy, its science, its technology, the higher the living standards of its population, the stronger that fear grows. After all, if the realities of life in the DPRK cannot be hidden, slandered, ridiculed, then perhaps the people of these and other countries will also start demanding socialism!
Several years ago, many foreigners, sadly, used to laugh at the DPRK. Today people no longer laugh. As information about real life in the DPRK filters through, people start to wonder why all the lies about this country. Tired of the empty words and demagoguery of Russian politicians, people in Russia start to admire the fact that in the DPRK words translate into deeds that it does not bend under US threats. Many people start to speak out loud in response to the imposition – in our name – of the shameful "UN" sanctions: "Leave the Koreans alone! They have the right to live as they want; they have the right to self-defence, especially since they can only rely on themselves in today's world."
Pyongyang at night...
…and in the morning
Pyongyang is one of the world's most beautiful, pleasant, greenest
and safest cities. But those who have
never been to North Korea can be excused for not knowing anything about it. The
president of the Russian Federation has visited the DPRK, although that was a
while ago. Judging by his recent comments about "the grass they eat there",
he is not aware how much the country has changed, how far forward it has moved and
is moving. (By the way, Koreans do it grass, it's a Korean tradition. Even
Koreans working in Russia collect fern in the forest and eat it after special preparation).
Chollima is a legendary
winged horse that could fly 1000 "li" a day. No one was man enough to
tame it, so Chollima flew into the sky. The DPRK's Chollima Movement is
associated with the mythical horse. Chollima is a symbol of progress and the
nation's movement forward. Today, Chollima is being superseded by Mallima: that
winged horse is 10 times faster. The country is developing now at the
"pace of Mallima", as the DPRK's currently most popular song tells
us.
April, in Pyongyang. April, when the
country celebrates its biggest holiday – the birthday of its founder, President
Kim Il Sung – is one of the most pleasant months.
Winter in Pyongyang. The Triumphal Arch
commemorates the Korean people's struggle for Independence from the Japanese
occupiers.
Pyongyang celebrates. Not all celebrations
are marked with fireworks – only the most important ones.
A view of the Triumphal Arch from the Park
of Culture and Recreation, one of Pyongyang's favourite leisure spots. The fun
rides here are very modern, in no way inferior to European or Chinese ones, and
the prices for them are purely symbolic.
"Okryu", one of Pyongyang's most popular restaurants. Much of the DPRK's architecture is inspired by traditional models.
The Juche Tower. As our Korean comrades say, it is the only monument in the world dedicated to ideas. It was erected in the early 1980s. At the top is an observation deck for visitors. It offers a wonderful panoramic view of the city, and the monument itself is exactly opposite the main square of the capital - Kim Il Sung Square.
View of the Taedong River.
The new Pyongyang International Airport terminal, built according to the latest technology. Without the sanctions imposed by the UN Security Council under false pretexts, airplanes from many more countries would land here. But, of course, this day will come.
Mirae Street (Future Scientists Street) is one of the newest and most beautiful streets in Pyongyang, built in record time.
Moving into a new apartment (note the
door!). It is common when people move into a new apartment for government
officials to pay a visit to the new occupants to get their opinion on the new
housing. The average apartment is about 100 sq. meters per family. The
apartments are free of charge and already furnished. Among the tenants of these
new houses are representatives of different professions, many workers and
scientists.
In April 2017, at the celebration marking
the 105th anniversary of President
Kim Il Sung's birth, the many foreign
reporters gathered in Pyongyang were told to expect "an important
event". They informed the world that the DPRK must be preparing a new
missile test or a nuclear bomb. Imagine their surprise when the next day they
were invited to the opening of a new street in Pyongyang, Ryomyong Street. The
opening ceremony was attended by Marshal Kim Jong Un. The Korean comrades
laughed and said to the foreign media: "Tell the world that this street is
our response to US sanctions!"
The construction of this street was timed
to coincide with the anniversary. But it had to be suspended for almost two
months because of floods in North Hamgyeong Province. Workers had to be
urgently transferred there. Nevertheless, the new Pyongyang street was
delivered on time!
After last year's floods in North Hamgyeong
Province, almost 40,000 new houses for the affected rural residents were built
in just two months. The whole country helped to build them. Naturally, all
houses were provided to people fully furnished free of charge.
Rural houses built in North Hamgyong
Province after the devastating floods.
Massive construction is under way not only
in Pyongyang, but throughout the country. These, for example, are new houses
for farmers – not "mansions for the elite".
Songdowon International Children's Camp
This cable car was built quite recently,
together with the new railway connecting the camp. Everything is made in the
DPRK. Switzerland and other Western countries refused to sell cable cars to the
DPRK under the pretext of "UN sanctions" – which Russia supported. It
is very embarrassing to read how medicine, sports equipment (including, for
example, hockey sticks, skis and bows for archery), medical equipment and even
chocolate fall under international sanctions.
The DPRK has found an expert on
international law who is ready to contest the legality of sanctions. But this
Irish lawyer charges 5000 Euros per hour. And the sanctions recently imposed by
the UN Security Council are aimed at completely depriving the DPRK of the
opportunity to earn foreign currency. And so the DPRK leadership reasonably decided
that it was better to spend whatever funds are available to develop the
national economy.
The DPRK government appealed to the UN
Secretariat with a request to convene a forum of experts in the field of
international law to assess the legal basis and legitimacy of the UN Security
Council "resolutions", but it has not received any response from the
Secretariat, although nine months have already passed.
The DPRK has also repeatedly appealed to
the UN Security Council to discuss the serious threat to international peace
and security posed by the aggressive and provocative large-scale military
exercises conducted jointly by the United States and south Korea. But these
requests were never included in the agenda of the UN Security Council, they
were simply ignored.
Korean kids in winter
In the DPRK, the academic year starts on 1
April and the longest hollydays are in winter. This is partly due to energy
shortages. But recently the energy industry has been successfully developing,
despite the sanctions. Alternative sources of energy – especially solar energy
– are widely used. The use of solar panels, including for street lighting, is
greater than in many European countries.
As the Korean song says, "peace is at
the end of our bayonets…" How true!
Recently opened rest home for war veterans.
Naturally, everything here is also free. In the DPRK, the care for veterans is
real, not just on paper.
During military parades, Pyongyang residents
warmly welcome their defenders, spontaneously give them flowers and even let
off firecrackers when the procession stops for a minute! By the faces of the
soldiers, one can tell that this day is truly special for them. Preparations
for the parade usually last a whole year. Some even suffer injuries while
rehearsing the "dance marching" unique to the Korea People's Army.
But time invested in rehearsals guarantees a flawless performance!
The "Juche" tank developed by
North Korean engineers.
Not many people know that the DPRK produces
its own cars and trucks. And recently, it began production of its own light
aircraft.
The Korean People's Army Choir is one of
the most popular musical groups in the country.
"In four years there will be a garden
city here."
The Korean People's Army is a working army.
While defending the country, soldiers also work hard at its construction sites,
unlike NATO idlers and thugs...
After a hard day's work, it's time to
party! KPA soldiers relaxing.
Koreans celebrate the successful launch of
a new ICBM. In today's world, only strong defence and modern weapons can
guarantee the people of the DPRK a peaceful life.
The people of Pyongyang greet the hero rocket
men, who arrive in the capital for a rest after the successful tests.
The missile industry is the pride of the
Korean people. North Korean youth are now dreaming of exploring outer space.
Instead of hailing the scientific successes of the Korean people, the so-called
"international community" is trying by every means to hamper them.
And yet the peaceful exploration of outer space is the legitimate right of
every sovereign state.
The Samjiyon Ice Sculpture Festival is held
every year in February.
Ri Se-Gwang, gold medallist in gymnastics
at the Rio Olympics, was labelled by the media "the saddest Olympic
champion." But those familiar with Koreans know that they are naturally
reserved.
Mass dances are a typical North Korean way
of celebrating. They are uniquely beautiful and every foreigner is welcome to
join in.
A concert by the recently formed
"????" ensemble.
Korean musicians are familiar with the
entire world's classics, as well as modern music. For example, you can hear
them sing Italian popular songs, Rossini operas or arias from Tchaikovsky's
"Eugene Onegin". And, of course, the DPRK has its own operatic genre –
the revolutionary opera, with works like "Sea of Blood", "The
Flower Girl" and "True Daughter of the Party". In the photo, one
of the DPRK's leading tenors.
In the DPRK, socialist development also
means respect for traditions.
State Duma Deputy from the Communist Party
of the Russian Federation, Kazbek Taysaev presents a collection of scientific
and technical literature to DPRK diplomats. (We note that he hasn't yet been
accused of violating "UN Security Council sanctions", like some other
friends of the DPRK in Russia...)
The DPRK has many friends in all parts of
the world, despite US efforts to intimidate developing countries, demanding
that they break diplomatic and economic relations with the heroic people of
Korea.
The most beautiful and touching side of the
DPRK is human relations and the way people care about each other and about the
country, and the country, in turn, cares about the people. Of course, to
experience this, you need to visit there and perhaps more than once. In order
to understand North Korean society, you need time and a desire to learn and
think.
Before the UN Security Council approved the
latest round of sanctions against the DPRK – aimed at strangling its economy
and sending it economically, scientifically and technologically back to the
Middle Ages – President Putin said the following about the DPRK's self-defensive
nuclear missile program:
"Yes they [the citizens of North Korea]
will eat grass, but will not give up this program."
From this, many people – both in Russia and
abroad – concluded that the Russian president not only understands, but also
recognises the futility and cruelty of the sanctions. But they were wrong. That
was on the 5th of September. And on September 11, the UN Security Council,
including the Russian Federation with its right of veto, voted for new
sanctions against the DPRK. Those same, useless and cruel sanctions.
So what logical conclusion can be drawn
from this? Does the Russian president want the Koreans to eat grass?
In early Soviet times, the famous literary character
Ostap Bender said: "I have lately had serious differences with the Soviet
authorities. They want to build socialism, I don't."
The Soviet Union no longer exists. But
these words do come to mind. Except everything is reversed.
President Putin wants north Koreans to eat
grass.
And we, friends of the DPRK, don't want
this. Not because we are "bored", like Ostap Bender was. But because
we are ashamed. We are ashamed of what Russian diplomats in the UN Security
Council are doing in our name, contributing to the economic strangulation of a
small neighbouring country that has always been friendly to us. Yet they pretend
to support "a peaceful solution to the situation on the Korean
peninsula."
A spokesman for the Institute for US
Affairs at the DPRK Ministry of Foreign Affairs recently stressed the following
in connection with unfair comments circulated recently:
"European countries, and other
surrounding countries, with no independent opinion of their own, by supporting US
declarations that present the sanctions and pressure as diplomatic means for
solving the problem of the Korean peninsula, are merely trying to justify their
dastardly actions. They say they support the sanctions and pressure in order to
bring a peaceful solution to the problem of the Korean peninsula.
The risk of political and economic sanctions
and pressure aimed at the total strangulation of sovereignty, the right to
exist and the right to develop of a sovereign state is no different from the
military action of a war of aggression. And this cannot be justified as
peaceful and diplomatic action." (KCNA, 30 September, 2017)
Anyone who has observed the economic
development of the DPRK with their own eyes for the past five years, has seen
that this development is not just in words – not in slogans about what will be
"by 2020" and then postponed to "by 2025" etc. – but in
facts. Its aim is to improve the life of all the people, not just self-serving
elites.
We want to share with you, our readers,
what we saw in the DPRK. So that you understand what you are really trying to
prevent and what the so-called "great" bourgeois powers are trying to
disrupt.
We hope that we have shown this to you.
In
conclusion
An ancient Korean fairy tale recorded in pre-revolutionary times by the Russian writer Garin-Mikhailovsky goes like that:
- "Such is the law, and by law you are illegal."
- "Or maybe it's not me, but the law that's illegal?"
- "Everything is possible."
- "Who writes the laws?" the boy
asked.
- "People" they answered.
- "Are you people?" the boy asked.
- "We?" The guests consulted each other and answered: "We are the People".
- "Then it's up to you to change the unjust law" said the boy.
- "People" they answered.
- "Are you people?" the boy asked.
- "We?" The guests consulted each other and answered: "We are the People".
- "Then it's up to you to change the unjust law" said the boy.
We are people, ordinary people. And it
depends on us to change the unjust law. And even if we can't change it, we can
refuse to comply with it.
We do not have capital in US banks, any
property in the USA. And we, unlike Russian compradors, cannot be intimidated
by American sanctions.
In 1950, a Frenchwoman, Raymonde Dien, lay across railway tracks to stop trains carrying weapons sent by the imperialists to fight the war in Indochina. She was not a revolutionary; she simply did not want more war, any war.
And if we don't want war, if we don't want
our own country to be devastated by war, we must now stand in the way of a new
war, a war that is now being waged by economic means by the united capitalists
of the world against the heroic people of the DPRK. Because the pattern is
obvious, and proven repeatedly by history: first shamelessly impudent economic
sanctions, and then an armed clash; at first many small, "local"
wars, and then a great war, into which the entire capitalist world will be
drawn.
It is easier to stop this great war now, by
fighting against all economic sanctions, against the right of certain countries
to impose them on other countries. What's more, such a struggle would also
benefit bourgeois power in Russia: its comprador capital is itself under
sanctions imposed on the Russian Federation by the United States.
R. Oboyev
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