Thursday, January 13, 2011

South Korean Man Arrested for Using Twitter to Support North Korea

A first of its kind.  Beware what you post on your twitter or facebook accounts.  The South Korean government has set the precedent that people can and will be arrested for being supportive of North Korea or at least critical of the South Korean government's handling of the North.

Source:
In what is believed to be the first case of its kind, the South Korean authorities have arrested and filed charges against a man for posting Twitter and other internet messages praising North Korea.
The 54-year-old South Korean man, identified only as Cho, is said by the South Korean government-affiliated Yonhap news agency to have posted 100 messages and video clips in support of the regime in Pyongyang.
Mr Cho's alleged offences took place between 2009 and October last year and involve content on his own blog, Twitter and other websites.
Postings said the sinking in March of the South Korean naval vessel Cheonan, which killed 46 sailors and was widely blamed on North Korea, was faked by South Korea and the United States. Messages also blamed South Korea for provoking the shelling in November of Yeonpyeong Island by North Korea, in which two marines and two civilians died.
That makes me nervous... I posted on my own blog to a degree something similar.  In July I posted about the Cheonan Conspiracies and felt myself that the Korean government was deliberately misleading the public in some way about the sinking (or were just being incompetent with their investigation).  At the time, 20% of Koreans did not believe that North Korea was responsible for the sinking.  That number is probably much lower now after North Korea admitted to the November artillery attack.
Mr Cho, who had 3,000 followers on Twitter, is said to have posted material from the official North Korean Uriminzokkiri website. He also praised the likely transfer of power from the current leader, Kim Jong-il, to his son and heir apparent, Kim Jong-un.
Okay... that is where it comes in that he is crazy.  But is he a criminal?  How do you arrest him for just being delusional?  Was he making threats?  Was he advocating violence?  If not, then he should not have been arrested.
Activity such as this, which falls foul of South Korea's national security law banning activities or the publication of material supporting Pyongyang, is viewed as "subversion", said Alan Chong, an associate professor in the S Rajaratnam School of International Studies at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore.
Under the previous government, which promoted a "sunshine policy" of engagement with North Korea, similar offences might have been dealt with by a "stern warning", suggested Mr Chong.
However, under the current conservative administration of the president, Lee Myung-bak, despite there being "a very vibrant opposition", pro-Pyongyang material "cannot be tolerated", said Mr Chong, especially following the Cheonan and Yeonpyeong incidents.
"Those voices who might take a more left-wing view - 'Let's be nice to them, hopefully they will be nice to us' - this has become politically risky in the current climate," he added.
Charges were pressed against Mr Cho on Monday, two days after a separate incident in which North Korea's official Twitter account was hacked.
Messages posted on Saturday, Kim Jong-un's birthday, did not contain the usual praise for the country's leaders, but instead accused them of living comfortable lives and said they should be killed "with a sword", Yonhap reported. The official YouTube account was also reportedly hacked.
Pyongyang set up Twitter, YouTube and Facebook accounts in August last year, apparently to attract international support, since internet access within North Korea is heavily restricted. About 1,300 messages have been posted on the North Korean government Twitter account – @uriminzok – which has more than 10,000 followers.
It never ceases to be ironic that North Korea would setup internet propaganda channels and then have no way for any of their people to access it.  It might be designed for foreigners, but probably more people follow and read it as a joke or out of curiosity than as a real source of news or propaganda.

If Mr. Cho loves North Korea so much, then the South Korean government should fly him up there, give him a parachute, and push him out of an airplane.  If he wants to join them, let him go.  If he doesn't want to join them, then he must know it is all a lie, and he is just doing all this because he is either crazy or seeking attention.  He is not a criminal either way.
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