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South Korea’s unification minister resigns when Korean tensions rise

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South Korea's unification minister resigns when Korean tensions rise

SEOUL, South Korea – South Korean President Moon Jae-in on Friday accepted the resignation of an important person in North Korea, who had asked to stop after North Korea destroyed a liaison office while increasing pressure on Seoul amid a stalled nuclear negotiations with the Trump administration.

Kim Yeon-chul, who was appointed Moon as unification minister in April last year when talks between the Trump and Pyongyang governments began to fall apart, left the job without holding a meeting with North Korea. He said he wanted to resign to take responsibility for the tension between rivals.

North Korea in recent months has completely severed all cooperation with South Korea while expressing frustration at Seoul’s reluctance to break away from Washington’s allies and restart inter-Korean economic projects held by US-led sanctions over its nuclear weapons program .

Kim offered to resign after North Korea in a demonstration made for TV Tuesday using explosives to destroy buildings in the border city of Kaesong. North Korea also said it would cut off all government and military communication channels and abandon the main military agreement reached in 2018 to reduce conventional threats, which experts say increases the risk of small skirmishes in border areas on land and sea.

It was not immediately clear who Moon considered as Kim’s successor. There are calls that Moon must overhaul his foreign policy and national security personnel amid worsening relations with North Korea and Seoul’s fading role as a mediator in nuclear talks between Washington and Pyongyang, which have been shaken by disagreements in the exchange of sanctions and disarmament measures.

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The Moon government has been credited for coordinating diplomatic efforts to defuse the nuclear standoff with North Korea, with its envoys going back and forth between Pyongyang and Washington to help arrange the first meeting between North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and President Donald Trump in Singapore in June 2018.

But there is criticism that South Korean officials are overly optimistic about the signs they see from Pyongyang and experiencing credibility problems so clearly that Kim has no intention of voluntarily handling nuclear which he might see as a strong guarantee for survival.

While taking provocative steps to South Korea this month, North Korea has also unleashed cruelty to activist-defector who for years flew anti-Pyongyang leaflets across the border condemning Kim’s nuclear ambitions and human rights record.

North Korea, which is sensitive to criticism of its leadership, has mobilized massive demonstrations in recent weeks condemning defectors who have been described by the state media as “human waste.” It has also announced plans to support North Korean civilians from flying anti-South Korean propaganda leaflets in areas near land and sea borders, which experts say could potentially create security problems for South Korea.

Desperate to prevent tensions out of control, South Korea has promised to stop activists and threaten to press charges against two North Korean-born brothers who for years have led campaigns to drop leaflets on the border and float bottles of rice into North Korea. By sea.

But both Park Sang-hak and Park Jong-oh have promised to continue their campaign despite warnings and accuse Seoul of giving up on the North Korean threat.

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“The (South Korean) government will coordinate closely with the police and local authorities to strengthen response and security at the site,” to prevent the border campaign, Unification Ministry spokesman Cho Hye-sil said on Friday.

Although Seoul sometimes sends police officers to block activists from silence during sensitive times, Seoul has previously rejected North Korea’s call to completely ban them, saying that they use free speech.

Experts say North Korea can use the activities of defectors as an excuse to increase pressure to the South because they seek to build internal unity and divert public attention from the bleak diplomatic and economic failures that may worsen under the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Portuguese historical films will premiere on 29 December.

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Portuguese historical films will premiere on 29 December.

Method Media Bermuda will present the documentary FABRIC: Portuguese History in Bermuda on Thursday, December 29 at the Underwater Research Institute of Bermuda.

A spokesperson said: “Method Media is proud to bring Bermuda Fabric: Portugal History to Bermuda for its 5th and 6th showing at the Bermuda Underwater Observatory. In November and December 2019, Cloth: A Portuguese Story in Bermuda had four sold-out screenings. Now that Bermuda has reopened after the pandemic, it’s time to bring the film back for at least two screenings.

“There are tickets Ptix.bm For $ 20 – sessions at 15:30 and 18:00. Both screenings will be followed by a short Q&A session.

Director and producer Milton Raboso says, “FABRIC is a definitive account of the Portuguese community in Bermuda and its 151 years of history, but it also places Bermuda, Acors and Portugal in the world history and the events that have fueled those 151 years.

“It took more than 10 years to implement FABRIC. The film was supported by the Minister of Culture, the Government of the Azores and private donors.

Bermuda Media Method [MMB] Created in 2011 by producer Milton Raposo. MMB has created content for a wide range of clients: Bermuda’s new hospital renovation, reinsurance, travel campaigns, international sports and more. MMB pays special attention to artistic, cultural and historical content.

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CRISTANO RONALDO CAN MAKE UP A GIANT IN CARIOCA AND PORTUGUESE TECHNICIAN SAYS ‘There will be room’

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CRISTANO RONALDO CAN MAKE UP A GIANT IN CARIOCA AND PORTUGUESE TECHNICIAN SAYS 'There will be room'

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Maestro de Braga is the first Portuguese in the National Symphony Orchestra of Cuba.

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Maestro de Braga is the first Portuguese in the National Symphony Orchestra of Cuba.

Maestro Filipe Cunha, Artistic Director of the Philharmonic Orchestra of Braga, has been invited to conduct the Cuban National Symphony Orchestra, as announced today.

According to a statement sent by O MINHO, “he will be the first Portuguese conductor to conduct this orchestra in its entire history.”

In addition to this orchestra, the maestro will also work with the Lyceo Mozarteum de la Habana Symphony Orchestra.

The concerts will take place on 4 and 12 March 2023 at the National Theater of Cuba in Havana.

In the words of the maestro, quoted in the statement, “these will be very beautiful concerts with difficult but very complex pieces” and therefore he feels “very motivated”.

From the very beginning, Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2 will be performed by an Italian pianist (Luigi Borzillo), whom the maestro wants to bring to Portugal later this year. In the same concert, Mendelshon’s First Symphony will be performed.

Then, at the second concert, in the company of the Mexican clarinetist Angel Zedillo, he will perform the Louis Sfora Concerto No. 2. In this concert, the maestro also conducts Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony.

“This is an international recognition of my work. An invitation that I accept with humility and great responsibility. I was surprised to learn that I would be the first Portuguese member of the Cuban National Symphony Orchestra. This is a very great honor,” the maestro said in a statement.

“I take with me the name of the city of Braga and Portugal with all the responsibility that goes with it, and I hope to do a good job there, leaving a good image and putting on great concerts. These will be very special concerts because, in addition to performing pieces that I love, especially Rachmaninov and Tchaikovsky, I will be directing two wonderful soloists who are also my friends. It will be very beautiful,” concludes Filipe Cunha.

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