IV. Administrative Systems in North Korea
At first, North Korea established a ‘people’s republic constitution’ in 1948. In December 1972, they adopted a ‘socialist constitution’ at the first session of the fifth Supreme People's Assembly. In April 1992, they reformed it(old socialist constitution) at the third session of the ninth Supreme People's Assembly. In 1998, they drastically a
NorthKorean Heir Attends Massive Military Parade
The son of NorthKorean leader Kim Jong Il, the anointed successor to lead the country, has made a high profile public debut in the state's largest military parade in years.
Twenty-seven year-old Kim Jong Un appeared with his father Kim Jong Il Sunday presiding over the parade to celebrate the 65th anniversary of the country's ruling communist
Expressing the regret to Chinese government
Accepting all NorthKorean defectors
to comply with international human rights and
refugees law
Granting refugee status is the rights of one nations
UNHRC is in the process of granting refugee status
to NorthKorean defectors
Considering public opinions
Feeling sorry about NorthKorean
defectors but national security
from that of post-1986 Vietnam. For example, Vietnamese and NorthKorean foreign policies have had little in common in the last two decades, and this difference may have been interrelated with the dramatic contrast between Vietnam's economic boom and North Korea's recurrent setbacks. This subject is certainly worth investigating, since many of North Korea's current problems - inflation, high mi
I. Introduction
In the year 612 AD an Imperial Chinese army of more than a million soldiers marched on the northeast Asian kingdom of Goguryeo. Though vastly outnumbered, the soldiers of Goguryeo whom many modern-day Koreans see as their ancestors.
Now, almost 1,400 years later, Chinese scholars are claiming that the ancient kingdom of Goguryeo was a part of China’s "regional government fo