2018-06-09

Group of white Australians back the North Korean regime



Group of white Australians back the North Korean regime



NEWS NATIONAL
9:00pm, Jan 7, 2018 Updated: 10:31pm, Jan 7

The Australians who back the North Korean regime


Australian man Raymond Ferguson, centre, at a state-run fruit farm in North Korea with other foreign delegates. Photo: Raymond Ferguson
John Power





For most people, any mention of North Korea is likely to conjure up images of nuclear weapons, a brutal dictatorship and appalling human rights conditions. But as far as Brisbane retiree Raymond Ferguson is concerned, the secretive country officially known as the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea is simply misunderstood.

Drawn to the country by its socialist tenets and ideology of self-reliance known as “juche”, he is on a lonely mission to spruce up the image of the isolated state in Australia and bring the two countries closer together.

“I can assure you that Australians who I know that have been to North Korea have come back with an entirely different attitude and are more enlightened,” Mr Ferguson, head of the Australia-DPRK Friendship & Cultural Society, tells The New Daily.
Raymond Ferguson with Kim Il-suk, president of the Committee of Friendship and
Cultural Relations with Foreign Countries. Photo: Raymond FergusonRaymond Ferguson with delegates from Pakistan and Nepal and a Korean representative of the Committee of Friendship and Cultural Relations with Foreign Countries

Photo: Raymond Ferguson
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Just 12 per cent of Australians trust North Korea to act as a responsible member of the international community, according to a Lowy Institute poll carried out last year, with 65 per cent viewing its nuclear program as a “critical threat”.

In his new year’s address, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un declared that the entire United States was within range of its intercontinental ballistic missiles, warning that the “nuclear missile button is right there on my desk”.

Malcolm Turnbull recently described Pyongyang as a “criminal operation” in remarks condemning its nuclear weapons development and involvement in cybercrime and other illicit activities.

But despite Kim Jong-un’s repeated nuclear and missile tests, the Australia-DPRK Friendship & Cultural Society holds the media and politicians responsible for the country’s negative image in Australia — and blames the United States for the escalating tensions in the region.

“The last thing they want is war,” says Mr Ferguson, whose organisation is mostly made up of white Australians but also includes a number of ethnic Koreans. “No other country suffered so much as a result of the Korean War than the Korean people.”

Mr Ferguson does not accept first-hand reports from North Korean defectors of widespread human rights abuses inside the country. He lauds the regime’s healthcare and education systems and the apparent lack of reported crime.
“I’ve been there 14 times, and I’ve never seen a group of people, a population, that seem to be so relaxed and confident about the way they go about their life.”Mr Ferguson at the International Conference of Solidarity with the Korean People. Photo: Raymond FergusonAustralia-DPRK Friendship & Cultural Society president Neil Fitzgerald presents gifts to the principal of the Friendship Farm kindergarten. 
Photo: Raymond Ferguson

In 2014, a UN Commission of Inquiry, led by former Australian High Court judge Michael Kirby, found that a network of notorious prison camps inside North Korea were the site of human rights abuses “without any parallel in the contemporary world”, including murder, torture, enslavement, rape and forced abortions.

Active since the 1970s, the Australia-DPRK Friendship & Cultural Society is not unique in trying to bridge the gap between Australia and North Korea, neither of which has a diplomatic presence in the other’s country.

The Korea Compatriots Association in Australia (KCAA), based in Sydney, bills itself as an organisation dedicated to promoting solidarity among Korean people and the reunification of the Korean Peninsula, which was divided into North and South by the United States and the Soviet Union after WWII.

The KCAA arranges trips to the North and assists ethnic Koreans trying to locate long-lost family members separated by the 1950-53 Korean War. In addition to general news about Korean affairs, the little-known group also regularly posts propaganda glorifying North Korea’s ruling Kim family on its Korean-language website.North Koreans dance in Kim Il-Sung Square in Pyongyang during celebrations for the 100th anniversary of the birth of late leader Kim Il-Sung. Photo: Raymond FergusonA women’s marching band in Pyongyang. Photo: Raymond FergusonA waterpark in Pyongyang. Photo: Raymond Ferguson

KCAA head Park Yong-ha, an ethnic Korean who immigrated to Australia in the earlier 1990s, is a regular guest of Pyongyang, having attended numerous birthday celebrations for late dictator Kim Jong-il, the current leader’s father, and Kim’s funeral in 2011, according to North Korean state media. The KCAA declined an invitation by The New Daily to explain its rationale for taking part in various events inside North Korea or its stance on the regime.

Leonid Petrov, a North Korea expert at Australian National University, says Pyongyang warmly welcomes such groups as they provide rare external validation for the much-maligned regime.

“Both associations bring people to North Korea partly to develop people-to-people diplomacy, links, to improve the general public image of North Korea among people here who are sympathetic about North Korea, and also to give North Koreans a sense of legitimacy,” Mr Petrov says.

“They try to be apolitical as much as possible but of course by being engaged in these propaganda tool trips, and also advertising trips to North Korea, they are looked upon as agents of the North Korean regime and the money which they bring and pay for the hotels and accommodation and meals goes straight to the North Korean government.”

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26 Comments
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Luke Allan · 
With a leader that kills DEAD any one close to him that disagrees or opposes him. North Korea is a death trap for any outsiders, go there at your own peril and don't expect the tax payer to bail you out. Amazing how some people can come up with total bs and others swallow without chewing.
Like821w
Philippe Dupuy · 
Have you been there?
Like221w
Luke Allan · 
Philippe Dupuy
Guess the simple answer is I'm alive.
Like21w
Allan Milnes · 
Luke, as someone who's visited the north a couple of times and supplied half the photos in the article I suggest you visit the country and find out for yourself what it's like.
Like221w
Robyn Perkins
Raymond is onto something.
Like221w
Annette Scott · 
More likely he is on something
Like821w
Just 12 per cent of Australians trust North Korea to act as a responsible member of the international community, according to a Lowy Institute poll carried out last year, with 65 per cent viewing its nuclear program as a “critical threat”." Hardly surprising given the daily drumbeat of propaganda directed at them by the MSM. This is not a pleasant regime at all, but their actions re the US are entirely understandable and logical given that it was the US that slaughtered over 20% of their population.
Like1521w
Colin Robinson
Denis McCarthy You think it's convenient to forget who started the war. I think it's convenient for western demonisers to push a simplistic narrative about how it started. North Korea gets blamed for sending forces across the de facto border (the 38th parallel) in June 1950, BUT there was serious armed conflicts between the two rival states going on before that, from at least August 1949, and happening north of the 38th parallel. What were forces from the South doing there, Denis, do you think?
Like621w
Les Macdonald · 
Denis McCarthy Actually the latesr academivc research suggests quite the opposite. Syngman Rhee had been carrying out a series of oover the border raids on North Korea in which the villagers in a number of villages were massacred as a deliberate ploy to start the war. The North, without the knowledge or consent of the USSR, then invaded.
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Les Macdonald · 
Denis McCarthy There are a number of studies that set out pretty clearly the circumstances of the beginning of the war including ones from Global Research and Noam Chomsky that are extensively footnoted. The interesting thing about any slaughter in South Korea is that Syngman Rhee and the US, with the active assistance of the Facist Japanese who had occupied Korea, had slaughtered over 100,000 South Koreans who had formed the resistance against japanese occupation, as the vast bulk of them were Leftists who would have won any fair election in the South had they been held. All of that experience of the South has of course been coneniently written out of history.
Like421w
Denis McCarthy

" “The bombing was long, leisurely and merciless, even by the assessment of America’s own leaders. ‘Over a period of three years or so, we killed off — what — 20 percent of the population,’ Air Force Gen. Curtis LeMay, head of the Strategic Air Command during the Korean War, told the Office of Air Force History in 1984. Dean Rusk, a supporter of the war and later secretary of state, said the United States bombed ‘everything that moved in North Korea, every brick standing on top of another.’ After running low on urban targets, U.S. bombers destroyed hydroelectric and irrigation dams in the later stages of the war, flooding farmland and destroying crops.”

Specifically, “the U.S. dropped 635,000 tons of explosives on North Korea, including 32,557 tons of napalm, an incendiary liquid that can clear forested areas and cause devastating burns to human skin,” Tom O’Connor wrote recently in Newsweek. This is more bomb tonnage than the U.S. dropped in the Pacific Theater during World War II.

He quoted historian Bruce Cumings: “Most Americans are completely unaware that we destroyed more cities in the North then we did in Japan or Germany during World War II.” (The Washington Post)
Like321w
Mirjana Durovic · 
Works at Logitel
Les Macdonald Some people conveniately do not read history or they do not want to know about it. They still coment on it. Btw, thanks for these details from US themselfs.
Like121w


Les Macdonald · 
Incidentally a major poll carried out by the US Pew Group in 2013 found that 24% of people in 65 countries around the world regarded the US as the greatest threat to world peace whereas only 5% saw North Korea as the greatest threat. They carried out a not dissimilar, but smaller poll in 2017 in a group of countries that were almost entirely US allies, and the results also shows the US out in the lead with views about the US threat increasing over that period.
Like1121w
Fenwick Melville · 
Washington always tries to achieve peace through violence.
121w
Colin Robinson
Raymond Ferguson's statement: "“No other country suffered so much as a result of the Korean War than the Korean people.” At least on that point, he's right. In September last year, President Trump threatened to "totally destroy North Korea". In what circumstances? If "forced to defend itself or its allies"... The move towards direct negotiations between North and South Korea is a hopeful development, but it isn't helped by demonisation of NK in the western media.
Like721w
Fenwick Melville · 
Korean people of Seoul or Pyongyang?
21w
Ted Pawlowski · 
What do we really know about NK? For instance has the chief critic Justice Kirby ever visited this country. Are we to rely exclusively on reporters and politicians that have never been there: Me, I simply don't know the truth and therefor reserve my opinion.
Like721w
Mark Robinson
Must be a slow news day! This silly old bugger couldn't find the shithouse without a compass
Like221w
Peter White · 
Well this man come from Queensland and they elected Peterson, Palmer, Hanson and the list goes on. Why do the papers give voice to these very right wing extremist.
Like421w
Dovienya Luck
Yeah and the right wingers will call him a commie.
21w
Ronda Green · 
Remember it is possible to totally dislike the leaders of the regime but not blame the rest of the population for them - same as for many countries.
Like421w
Doug Warren · 
He would only ever see what they allow him to see.
Like321w
Ivan Oceans · 
If the West had accepted the referendum immediately after WW2 for a national govt. to be formed, there would have been no Korean war and the country would have remained the unified nation it had always been pre-Japanese invasion. But, no, the US had to deputise Japanese POWs still in the country, giving them USMC armbands and re-arming them in order to put down the nationalists. The West is wilfully responsible for everything that has happened in Korea ever since.
Like221w
Fenwick Melville · 
Because the Koreans elected democratic socialists to power. Washington preferred corporatists to run the show as this was what the Rothschilds dictated.
21w
Philippe Dupuy · 
Well done John Power for another perspective. Watch your back!
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