Since June of 2011, visitors to this page have come from:

free counters

Followers

1 June 2012

Two spies that have no Seoul

A New Zealand citizen has been arrested in South Korea accused of spying for North Korea. Seoul based Yonhap news agency reports the man, named only as Kim and aged 56, was arrested along with a 74-year-old earlier this month on charges of collecting military intelligence. He is accused of taking instructions from a man believed to be a North Korean agent in Dandong, a Chinese city along the North Korean border, in July last year, South Korean police said in a statement. Those two are a threat to South Korea and they need to be put in their place. They have been playing with very hot fire indeed and they'd better start praying to their god or gods because espionage can carry a maximum penalty of death in South Korea. In other news, a junior football coach who allegedly threatened to kill a volunteer referee has been banned from coaching for the rest of the season. Jan Chmielewski allegedly launched the verbal attack after tensions boiled over during a game featuring 10 and 11-year-olds, between Island Bay United and Waterside Karori at Wellington's Sinclair Park on May 12. Children were left crying and the ref, David Adams, abandoned the game because he feared for his safety.

No comments:

Post a Comment