Monday 20 May 2013

Information about recruitment for internship




- Target: Students completing their degrees (Undergraduate: 3rd/4th year, Graduate: 3rd/4th Semester)

Africa (Nigeria, South Africa, Angola, Zambia, Kenya, etc.)

Eastern Europe (Romania, Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungary, etc.)

Central and South America (Mexico, Colombia, Panama, etc.)

Southeast Asia (Malaysia, Myanmar, Vietnam, etc.)

- Period: July - August 2013 (6 weeks) - the exact period will be announced later

- Job Title: Sales / Marketing

- Eligible to be hired as a regular employee in the oversees branch based on the internship
performance.

B. Application Information

- Documents to be submitted: Resume (form attached)- Submission deadline: untill 23 May 2009 (Thursday)- Submission: isfkorea@hanmail.net (Person in charge: Im Hyeon-gyeong (임현경) Administration Team Leader)


Please check attachments for Resume form and more information.


 

Korea Water Resources Corporation (K-water) summer vacation internship programme for foreign students




Korea Water Resources Corporation (K-water) is conducting a summer vacation internship programme for foreign students. Through this programme students will be able to gain work experience. Interested students are welcome to apply.

- Number of people to be selected: 10 people
- Areas of recruitment: Management, Green Energy, Water Supply, Water Resources
- Internship period: 24 June (Mon) ~ 26 July(Fri) 2013, 5 weeks
- Application requirements: undergraduate students of 3rd or 4th year or graduate students attendind the school
- Application period: 16 May 2013 (Thu) - 29 May 2013 (Wed) untill 18:00
- Method of application: Internet application on K-water Homepage (www.kwater.or.kr)

Friday 17 May 2013

Are you interested in trip to Dokdo?

Are you interested in trip to Dokdo?

The Korean National Council for Conservation of Nature(Knucn) invites foreign students to experience Korean ecological environment and culture as people-to -people diplomacy. Don't miss the chance to visit Dokdo island for FREE!

○ Applicant : foreign students studying in Korean domestic university
who registered this semester including May, 2013.
(who can speak Korean, no interpreter)

○ Date : 24th(Mon)~26th(Wed) June, 2013, 2nights 3days

○ Expense : Free (Fully supported by Knucn)

○ Requirement : one Application form, one certificate of studentship

○ How to submit : e-mail(knccn@daum.net), FAX 02)757-1629
※ Title (2013 dokdo trip)
File Name (Your school_Name, ex: oo university_PSY)

○ Deadline : 16th May(Thur) ~ 10th June(Mon), 2013

○ Final Participant : 100 people

○ Announcement : 14th June(Fir), 2013, notice on Knucn Homepage or personal call

○ Sponsored by Dong-A Ggumnamu Foundation, Ministry of Environment,

○ Program
- Special lecture
Nature and history of Dokdo(Knucn President, Lee Su Kwang)
- Experience the ecological environment
Ulleungdo tour(Including tracking)
Dokdo tour
- Recreation game
- submit the note about what you think and feel during visit.
after trip, publish a book with all participant's note.

* Schedule to be arranged.
* You can't apply this trip if you have already participated in previous.

Wednesday 10 April 2013

Hisory of Post Korean War North Korean attacks on South Korea

Timeline: North Korean attacks


A crane lifts the Cheonan from the seabed (12 April 2010)

Amid rising tensions on the Korean peninsula, and multiple threats from North Korea of attacks on US and South Korean targets, the BBC looks at some of the major attacks and incursions which have been blamed on Pyongyang.

January 1967


North Korean artillery targets a South Korean vessel, the Dangpo, patrolling in the Yellow Sea with 70 sailors on board. The ship sinks, killing 39 of the crew.

January 1968


A team of 31 North Korean commandos crosses into South Korea and breaks into the presidential palace, the Blue House, in an attempt to assassinate President Park Chung-hee. The attempt is crushed by South Korean security forces, Mr Park survives but seven South Koreans and most of the commandos are killed.

January 1968


The research ship the USS Pueblo is captured by North Korea while on a surveillance mission. One crew member dies during the capture and the remaining 82 are taken to prison camps in the North.

The prisoners are released 11 months later after the US gave an apology and assurances the vessel had not been spying - both were later retracted. The Pueblo remains in North Korea as a museum - the only US warship in captivity.

December 1969


A South Korean airliner is hijacked and forced to fly to North Korea. Dozens of passengers are taken hostage. In January, 39 of the hostages were released but the remaining 12 are not known to have been freed.

August 1974


President Park's wife dies during a second attempt on his life - she is hit by stray bullets after a suspected North Korean agent opens fire at a public function.

October 1983


North Korea bombs a hotel in Rangoon, Burma, during a visit by President Chun Doo-hwan. He survives but 21 people, including some government ministers, are killed.

November 1987


A bomb, allegedly planted by North Korean agents, explodes on board a South Korean airliner travelling to Seoul from Baghdad. All 115 passengers and crew are killed.

September 1996


A North Korean submarine runs aground near Gangneung, off the east coast of South Korea, while allegedly conducting a spy mission. The crew of 26 escape to the shore, sparking a manhunt.

Eleven of the crew are found dead, apparently shot by their compatriots, but the rest go on the run for nearly two months. One alleged spy escapes, one is captured by South Korean security forces and the rest are killed. Several South Koreans also die in the operation.

March 2010


A 1,200-tonne Corvette, the Cheonan, goes down near the disputed maritime border with North Korea - the Northern Limit Line. Many of the crew members escape but 46 are killed. After an extensive investigation, Seoul rules that a torpedo explosion directly beneath the vessel sank it and that the only "plausible explanation" is that North Korea was to blame. Pyongyang denies any involvement.

November 2010


North Korea shells a South Korean border island, Yeonpyeong, killing four South Koreans, including two civilians. It says it was responding to military exercises in the South.

Source:BBC

Saturday 3 November 2012

Sohar Bigha



Sohar Bigha is a village in Gaya district of Bihar. It comes under Tekari Block. It is a very least developed village. No infrastructure here.  Indian Governemnt must look after this village which has no basic infrastructure. No electricity, No Roads, No literacy here. If there are villages like this is existing in India, it is a shame.


 

Sunday 26 August 2012

North Korea: What Next?

North Korea: What Next?
Vyjayanti RaghavanAssociate Professor, Korean language and culture studies, JNU
email: jayantiraghavan@yahoo.co.in
Kim Jong-il died, unfortunately, just a few months before the centenary celebrations of his father, the late ‘Supreme Leader’ and ‘Founder Father’ Kim Il-Sung, were to take place. The whole nation was gearing up to making North Korea a ‘strong and prosperous nation’ by the centennial year 2012. There were no clear answers as to how they proposed to do this, at least not to the outside world. North Korea had also publicly declared its desire to become a fully functional nuclear weapons state by 2012.

Was it this sort of pressure that resulted in Kim Jong-il’s fatal myocardial infarction, as speculated? Unlikely, North Korean leaders - only two so far – have not really had to deliver on their promises to their people. Indeed, they have always been able to magically turn even dung into flowers for the North Korean people by merely shifting the angle of focus.

However, this has begun to gradually change in the last few years, with globalization leading to a trickling in of information about their well-to-do southern half brethren. As a result, people started becoming savvy by reading between the lines in the information doled out to them about the world outside.

Kim Jong-il, therefore, might have felt the pressure of having to deliver on some count or the other, whether it was on the nuclear front or on the economic front. His hold on his people was not as total as his father’s and he would not have been able to fool the people all the time.

This raises the question of the credibility of the designated heir apparent, Kim Jong-eun. Will he be able to hold the country together? No one knows anything about him. In fact it is his father’s death that has catapulted him into some prominence. The topmost question on many peoples’ minds when the news of Kim Jong-il’s death broke was this: will the people of North Korea use this opportunity to rise against the establishment as people elsewhere in the world have done recently, fighting for justice?

This thought might have been triggered by the fact that of late, the people of North Korea have been engaging in exercising their will in a small way through some amount of non-state directed buying and selling of goods. The answer came via the outpouring of the people in their praise of the heir apparent.

Many other issues too have to be settled now. For instance, what happens to the six party talks? Whom will the negotiators henceforth represent during talks?

If the military continues to wield power, who will be their frontman? Kim Jong-eun may be a four-star general in the Korean People’s Army (KPA) but he is not even a member of the National Defense Commission (NDC) of which Kim Jong-il was chairman and which is the main organization that takes important decisions regarding the ‘military first’ regime. Also, what is the future of the nuclear weapons and missiles programme in North Korea?

Kim Jong-eun is too young and inexperienced. He has not been built up sufficiently yet to have been indoctrinated into the psyche of the people, nor has he himself had enough time to take over the nuclear weapons programme. His father Kim Jong-il had been handed over the weapons programme by his father Kim Il-sung to raise his standing in the eyes of his countrymen long before he died, and Kim Jong-il inherited the power of the state. Kim Jong-eun has had no such luck.

The first few weeks after the funeral on 28 December will be crucial. Kim Jong-il’s 65 year old brother-in-law Jang Song-T’aek was the vice-chairman of the NDC and the second-in-command before Kim Jong-il died. Now it remains to be seen whether Kim Jong-eun is inducted into the NDC, and if so at what level. In any case, internally, it is this uncle who will be the crucial kingpin, as Uncle Jang could play Shakuni and either become his mentor or take charge completely. Externally, the fact that North Korea possesses nuclear weapons creates an imperative on China to ensure stability. So as long as Kim Jong-eun manages to retain China’s support he should be alright, for the time being.


                                   Cosmopolitan view a key to success
 
 
Many perceive globalization as a fairly modern trend, but an expert of 6th-century Korean history said it is not a new concept, a foreign expert on the 6th century Korean history.

In fact, it has existed ever since the Silla dynasty.

“The Silla dynasty’s cosmopolitan world view had led to the reunification of the three dynasties ― Goguryeo, Baekje and Silla ― and the world approaches of the Silla dynasty much resemble the modern Korea’s world view ―- which made both successful,” Pankaj Mohan, Silla expert and professor at the Academy of Korean Studies, told The Korea Herald.

The Indian professor, who has devoted two-thirds of his life to Korean studies and Korean history, said his research about Korea was inspired by a poem by an Indian poet, Rabindranath Tagore, the first Asian to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature.

The enlightening passage he read goes like this: “In the golden age of Asia/Korea was one of its lamp-bearers/and that lamp is waiting to be lighted once again for the illumination in the East.”
Pankaj Mojan says “I just want to make Korea accessible in many ways to the outer world.”
(Ahn Hoon/The Korea Herald)

Since then, he has focused on Korea’s influence on other Asian countries and discovered intriguing similarities between the 6th-century Silla dynasty and modern Korea’s development.

“Silla scholars studied the outer world, where they got their guiding principles that gave them both originality and creativity. Likewise, in contemporary society, Korea is also prosperous, because they are out in the world learning foreign ideas and creativity while keeping their traditional values at the same time.”

“Silla, too, became one of the most advanced and formidable powers in the Korean peninsula because of such traits. A country can become strong by opening the door to the world ― by learning from the experience of other cultures and countries.”

As an example, he cited the Silla settlement in the Shandong area of China - much like Koreatowns in other countries these days, “A large number of Silla people settled in Shandong area and had their own temples too,” he said.

When he began Korean studies back in 1976 in the Jawaharlal Nehru University, his parents were skeptical about learning the Korean language as a way to build a career. “My parents thought that if I studied English literature or other languages such as French or German, I would have better job prospects.”

“But I was encouraged to study this field after meeting with a very good master, Seo Kyung-soo, from Dongguk University, who had established Korean history for the first time in New Delhi.”

Through Seo, he had developed a firm belief that Korea would prosper, just as Tagore foresaw in his poem.

“The lamp has been lit up,” he said.

“I was convinced at that time that Korea is the country of the future. Small as it may be, it is a dynamic economy with lot of potential.”

He also found the study of the Korean history insufficient. “It was like a well kept secret, not properly explored, I wanted to be the frontier.”

Many scholars in the west tend to study Chinese or Japanese history rather than Korean history, he said but pointed out that by understanding Korea, one can understand China and Japan with clarity. “Korea’s influence and transformation have greatly affected their histories.”

“I want to highlight the role of Korea in introducing the Buddhist culture to Japan and the ways in which the Koreans adopted the Chinese culture to their situation.”

In recognition of his contribution to the development of Korean studies at home and abroad, Seoul City recently gave him honorary citizenship.

“When you see a well, you should think about people who worked hard to dig that well. Likewise, the honorary citizenship makes me think about ancestors of Seoul, those past leaders who worked hard to make the capital a beautiful city. I feel a great responsibility to do something to add to its dynamism and to make Korea and Seoul better understood to the outside world.”

Currently, Mohan is a faculty head at the academy and also a professor at Sydney University in Australia. He is on a three-year leave from the university, which he is spending in Korea.

By Hwang Jurie (jurie777@heraldcorp.com)

हम केवल प्रवाह का अनुसरण कर रहे हैं।

हम चिंताओं, युद्धों, वैश्विक सुरक्षा दुविधा, विचारविहीन राजनीति, चरम स्तर पूंजीवाद, बहुध्रुवीय विश्व, अविश्वास और अवसरवाद से भरी दुनिया में...