News about Moon Jae-in

Report: Kim Jong-un was 'desperate to get rid of his nuclear weapons'

www.dailymail.co.uk, May 22, 2024
Moon Jae-in's memoir, 'From the Frontier to the Center,' sparked outrage and strong criticism from the South Korean Minister of Unification and top official on North Korea Kim Yung-ho.

Kim Jong-un was 'desperate to get rid of his nuclear weapons and did not want his daughter's generation to 'live with the burden' of nukes'

www.dailymail.co.uk, May 22, 2024
Kim Jong-un was reportedly 'desperate to get rid of his nuclear weapons and did not want his daughter's generation to live with the burden' of nukes,' claimed South Korea 's former leader. Moon Jae-in, who facilitated the historic summits between Kim and former US President Donald Trump , revealed in a new memoir that the North Korean leader 'repeatedly' and 'desperately' made clear that Pyongyang did not plan to use its weapons and expressed frustration over the global mistrust. Moon also added that the tyrant dictator surprisingly 'mentioned that he has a daughter and doesn't want her generation to live with the burden of nuclear weapons. 'He sincerely explained his commitment to denuclearisation'. Moon's memoir, entitled 'From the Frontier to the Center,' included a passage stating that Kim Jong-un 'repeatedly said that he had no intention of using nuclear capabilities.'

According to a human rights study, North Korea executed pregnant women and carried out human experiments

www.dailymail.co.uk, March 30, 2023
According to a South Korean survey, North Korea has committed horrific human rights abuses, including murdering children and pregnant women, performing animal experiments, and forcibly sterilizing disabled people. According to the South's Ministry of Unification states, the pariah state has sentenced citizens to death for being gay, for their faith, and for attempting to flee the region. The regime also coerced nurses to draft "a list of dwarfs" and perform hysterectomies on a woman with dwarfism, as well as human experiments. The extensive 450-page paper explores egregious human rights abuses in North Korea, including the right to life and liberty, as well as freedom from slavery, torture, and other cruel treatment. It's based on derogatory testimony from over 500 North Koreans who migrated from their homeland and was collected from 2017 to 2022. At a camp, a North Korean soldier emerges from behind barbed wire at a camp. Right: At the Korean War exhibition in Seoul, a South Korean soldier, left, experiences what it is like to be held in a North Korean cell. Inset: Inmates in a North Korean prison camp.

In February, Squid Game actor O Young-su, 78, will face accusations of indecent assault

www.dailymail.co.uk, December 1, 2022
Last week, O Young-su, 78, was charged with the allegations. In December 2021, the woman, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, lodged a lawsuit against O. During a meeting in 2017, she accused him of inappropriate physical contact. However, O denied wrongdoing by telling a reporter from JTBC that he held the woman's hands to'show her the way' as they walked around a lake. According to JTBC, he had offered the woman an apology not because he denied the charges against him, but because the woman allegedly told him she 'wouldn't raise an issue' if he did not.