BootsnAll Travel Network



Archive for March, 2006

« Home

The Accidental Journalist

Tuesday, March 28th, 2006

From The Korea Herald, March 29, 2006
By Tracey Stark

When Oleg Kiriyanov was ready for college in 1991, the Soviet Union had just celebrated a year of formalized relations with South Korea. This changed not only the course of history, but young Oleg’s life as well.

Almost 15 years later Russian journalist Kiriyanov can say he has been a witness to it all.

“There was a lot of excitement about Korea, so I decided to study the language at St. Petersburg University.” Because of the USSR’s relationship with North Korea to that point, the Korean language was a well-established field of study.


In 1994 he decided to take it to the next level so he came to Korea to study International Relations at Seoul National University. In the six years that followed he collected both a bachelor’s and master’s degree and wrote his thesis entirely in Korean.

If someone had told him when he was a child that he would be in Korea for more than a quarter of his life by age 30, he would have laughed because he had another dream from the time he was 7. “I wanted to be a military officer and was planning to enter Military Academy – nothing related to Korea. But my eyesight was not good enough and I failed the medical check up so I had to change all my life plans.”

After graduating from SNU he had to find a way to put his degree to good use. The business climate in Russia was still very difficult, so he opted to try his hand as a foreign correspondent in Seoul.

“It was kind of an experiment,” Kiriyanov says. Two years later and he says it’s still up in the air.

But the opportunities his life here has afforded him could not have easily been duplicated in Russia.

As a fluent speaker of Korean he’s able to cover the same stories as the Korean press. As a holder of a foreign passport he’s invited on the foreign press junkets, like a recent Gaeseong Industrial Park trip and the first outing for foreigners in recent years to Dokdo Island last April.

Among other things Kiriyanov has been able to do as a fluent Korean speaker and foreign journalist were to train with the Korean Army (including parachute training, though, regretfully, he wasn’t allowed to jump) and to go out for a day’s work with squid fishermen in the East Sea.

Yet the one negative aspect he can find about life in Korea has to do with his job.

“I’m only one man here, so it’s difficult to cover everything I need to cover.” Besides Kiriyanov there is only one other Russian journalist in Korea and he works for a separate news organization.

But he does love his job. “It’s quite flexible. My office is my home,” he says, then adds with a smile, “and the closest bureau chief is 9,000 kilometers away in Moscow.”

His main purpose here, he says, is to bridge the cultural gap between Russia and Korea through his writing.

“Most people in Russia don’t know about Korea. They think I’m here working for Kim Jong-il,” he laughs. “But Koreans don’t know much about Russia either. There is no big picture.”

As Russiskaya Gazeta is a government-run newspaper, his priority is to cover issues that have a direct impact on Russia or involve Russians in Korea.

One such event was the APEC summit. But he wouldn’t end up covering it as a journalist.

“There was a shortage of Korean speakers in Russia, so I was ‘rented out’ to President Putin’s press people,” Kiriyanov says.

Over the years he has seen big changes in Korea.

“Basically I felt the change of the attitude towards foreigners. At the beginning sometimes I felt like a being from another planet, but gradually that changed, more foreigners came,” Kiriyanov says. “At the beginning when I talked to my Russian friends many Koreans thought it was English, but not now.”

After living in Korea for almost eight years, he says he even thinks like a Korean.

“When friends ask me ‘why do Koreans do that?’ I sometimes don’t see any other way,” he says with a laugh.

Of course Kiriyanov misses Russia, he says. His family and friends are there and the country is so vast and beautiful.

“I miss the sense of distance in Russia. I mean, 400 to 500 km is not a distance at all but here it’s the end of the country.” He looks up as if to capture a memory. “And I like enjoying nature without being crowded with people. That’s why I probably like traveling to Siberia.”

Kiriyanov likes his life in Korea. He has a lot of Korean friends, including some he has known for more than 10 years. He has no language problem and an interesting job.

“You know sometimes I have a strange feeling like I have two homes: here I miss Russia, in Russia I miss Korea.”

After Korea? Kiriyanov hopes for another assignment in Asia. Maybe Japan, since he speaks a little of that language as well.

The Best of Mexico in Hongdae

Wednesday, March 22nd, 2006
                                                                  
(From The Korea Herald, March 22, 2006)                                                                     
                                                                                 
By Tracey Stark
                                
When Hwang Sung-won returned to his native Seoul from studying in Denver – one of America’s Mexican-food capitals – and decided to open a restaurant, it was a no-brainer as to what he would offer.          

Margarita Mexican Bar and Grill offers the standard Mexican fare of burritos (4,900-5,900 won), fajitas (6,900 won), quesadillas (7,900 won) enchiladas (3,500-6,900 won), nachos and the not-so-Mexican chicken wings.

For the third time this year I sat down amid the cacti and miniature Spanish chandeliers in one of the window seats and tucked into a grilled steak burrito. It’s served in a basket and stares up in a come-hither manner. And thither I went, slowly this time, so I could tell you what keeps me coming back.

Enchiladas at Margarita Bar & Grill

The burrito was packed with Spanish rice, beans, lettuce and small bits of seasoned grilled beef. The jalapeno cream cheese and green chili sauce kept it from being bland. I would have liked shredded cheese too, but that’s not included.

On the side were tortilla chips, sweet mango salsa and sour cream.

When the burrito was gone, I headed for my dinner companion’s plate under the guise of “research.” She was eating the crab and shrimp enchiladas, which consisted of flour tortillas stuffed with mixed seafood and cheese sauce, then topped with cheese, enchilada sauce and green chili sauce. Again, delicious.

I admit I have a more-than-healthy appetite when it comes to Mexican food. So when I see a plate of quesadillas stuffed with chicken and cheese my hunger quickens. And at Margarita I’ve never been disappointed by the quality.

But the portion sizes do disappoint me. The meals don’t come with any sides, unless you count the chips that come with the burritos.

The prices, though, make it affordable to get an extra main dish or appetizer for every two people. For under 15,000 won each you and your friends can have a main dish-and-a-half and a Margarita (recommended) or a beer (Corona for only 5,000 won). Nonalcoholic drinks are 2,000 won.

Before I left, Hwang informed me that he’s changing the menu and adding a new weapon to his kitchen arsenal: French-trained chef Sim Soon-chul, formerly of the Park Hyatt.

Overall, Margarita is a good “cheap eats” value in the heart of one of Seoul’s hippest neighborhoods.

How to get there: From Hongik University subway station (Line No. 2) take exit No. 6, turn left towards Hongdae’s shopping and restaurant district, cross the second street and turn right. Walk 100 meters and look for Margarita on a side street to the left.

Living on the edge: The 53-year Mission of the NNSC

Saturday, March 11th, 2006

 
 

(From The Korea Herald, Feb. 23, 2006)

By Tracey Stark 

Hidden from the view of most visitors to the misnamed Demilitarized Zone at Panmunjom is an enclave of nine soldiers representing the Neutral Nations Supervisory Commission, an important but often overlooked part of the 1953 Armistice Agreement.

Resembling a woodland retreat, surrounded by evergreens and rolling mossy hills, it is the home of the Swedish and Swiss contingents of the NNSC whose jobs are to act as supervisors, observers, inspectors and investigators along the DMZ and, more specifically, in the Joint Security Area. 

Palpable tension

Visitors to the NNSC are ushered into the theater, a building that comfortably seats about 30, and are introduced to five Swiss and four Swedish soldiers. Five of the nine salute and are dismissed. A PowerPoint presentation then begins, describing in detail the work of the NNSC.  

Head of the delegation, Maj. Gen. Gerhard Bruegger of Switzerland explains their mission. It’s his turn to present this week and his Swedish counterpart, Maj. Gen. Lars Frisk, stands at an adjacent podium and only interjects occasionally.

“We see ourselves as a symbol of the armistice, having not been in the conflict,” the 53-year-old Bruegger says.

He explains that the ongoing task of the NNSC is to observe and report troop deployments and rotations, and to conduct special observations and investigations where violations have been reported. Their findings must be reported to the U.N. Military Armistice Commission.

They would conduct an investigation for the KPA – North Korean People’s Army – if they were asked, but that hasn’t happened in more than a decade.

As times have changed, so have their tasks. In 1995 all formal contact with the DPRK ended. Now they engage in confidence-building measures to try to bring the North back to the table.

They are also developing new tasks, such as validating the nature of any military exercises engaged in by the United States Forces Korea, the ROK – Republic of Korea, and the United Nations Command as well as the verification of helicopter flights between Camp Bonifas and the Joint Security Area.

The latter task was a result of complaints by the KPA about the flights, which were subsequently suspended from 1991 to 1997.

“We aren’t tasked by the UNC to do these things. It is entirely up to us,” Frisk, 55, interjects.

From time to time the NNSC will interview a defector, most often a soldier, who has crossed to the South through the DMZ. But these interviews are purely for humanitarian purposes, Bruegger insists.

“We don’t do intelligence work.”

In the NNSC’s earliest incarnation, the Swiss and Swedes – chosen by the Republic of Korea and the U.S., were accompanied by Polish and Czechoslovakian contingents – selected by the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea – or North Korea – and China.

In 1993 the Czechoslovakians left, as their country in its previous form no longer existed. In 1995 the Poles were asked to leave by the DPRK. The Poles continue to participate in annual plenary meetings.

Additionally, the NNSC engages in public relations work and gives tours to media, VIPs, and government and military officials. In 2005 more than 2,000 people visited.

Last Wednesday the two major generals attended the elementary school graduation of Koo Je-won, the only sixth grader this year in Taeseong-dong, a farming village in the DMZ.

Palpable tension

Despite the availability of office and conference space in their own camp, the Swiss and Swedes hold weekly meetings at the JSA, a short ride down a narrow road. This is part of the protocol according to the Armistice Agreement.

They lead the way to building T-1, an aging, tin-covered structure straddling the North-South border. (The T stands for “temporary.”) On the center of the conference table sits the flag of the NNSC. It is blue, yellow, red and white – the colors in the flags of the original four members.

North Koreans have an entrance at their end of the building and although they are welcome to attend, they don’t sit in on the meetings.

Just inside the North Korean entrance are cubbyholes for exchanging papers. The Swiss and Swedish boxes are empty. The North Korean box is filled with summaries of the weekly meetings left by the NNSC. They date back to Aug. 2, 2005.

Frisk says they occasionally clear out the box and start over again.

Outside the windows of T-1 stand two KPA soldiers in their brown uniforms and Russian-style winter hats looking in at the delegation and guests. When a camera is raised to take their picture they scurry away.

On the South Korean side, the ROK soldiers stand in the ‘ROK Ready’ stance, which is a modified Taekwondo pose with one half of their body behind the cover of a building’s edge and the other half in the open, facing the North.

Bruegger and Frisk are unfazed by the hostility and tension that is palpable in the air at the JSA.
They are neutral, after all.

Living on the edge

Outside the theater is a reminder of the war that never officially ended.

A rusty yellow sign reading ‘Military Demarcation Line’ marks the border 50 meters away, a few feet to the other side of a chain link fence topped with barbed wire. The fence curves around the camp and away from the border proper, partially enclosing the dozen or so acres with a false sense of security. In the event of an invasion, it could be likened to a “stop” sign – more suggestion than deterrent.

They say they occasionally see North Korean soldiers near the fence collecting firewood, but not too often.

Despite their ranks and uniforms these neutral soldiers have no weapons in their encampment, located half a kilometer east of the JSA.

Bruegger leans back in the soft blue sofa and unwraps a chocolate from a bowl on the coffee table in the Swiss Club. He looks out the window toward North Korea 20 meters away and says, “You cannot do diplomacy with a gun.”

Frisk looks equally at ease sipping his coffee in what has been described as “the scariest place on earth.”

“Security is an issue, of course,” Bruegger says, “but we don’t feel that we’re unsafe.”

He adds with a chuckle, “There are probably more ways to get killed in Seoul than here.”

The Swiss club is a cozy building with a pool table, bar, fireplace, soft chairs, highly-polished coffee tables and a satellite TV.

“You can learn a lot from watching North Korean television,” Bruegger says earnestly.

On the top shelf of the club’s bookcase sit 32 volumes of “Kim Il Sung: Works.” Other books about the two Koreas, war, diplomacy and history fill the shelves and appear a bit more worn than Kim’s tomes.

The walls of the club are lined with plaques and photos illustrating a five-decade-long NNSC history.

One black and white photo shows a barren landscape, covered with tents and temporary structures. It is the NNSC camp in 1955, at its largest. There were 400 members from the four nations stationed in either the camp or the 10 designated points of entry in both North and South Korea.

But when the points of entry were abandoned by the NNSC later in 1955 the need for so many members was gone as well. What remains today is a camp that Frisk estimates could comfortably hold “five more people” on top of its population of nine.

The Swedish club across the grounds is equally comfortable and contains the same collection of works by “The Great Leader,” but lacks a pool table. (The Swedes keep theirs in a separate building.)

To get to the Swedish side of the camp one must walk along a concrete path and across a bridge over a dry creek bed, then up a flight of stairs on a small hill. Today it’s slightly misty and the colors of the evergreens are muted and dull. But in the summer, they say, the place explodes with life and color.

Frisk says that he has seen wild boar, deer and foxes, along with some stray dogs that roam freely throughout the DMZ.

Down the hill, next to the dining room, stands a metal sculpture of a winged bull. It would look aggressive were it not for its silverware wings made of knives, forks and spoons. Perhaps another symbol of the members’ neutrality.

While the two delegations have separate camps, they are equal in size and design. The members each have single rooms and adjoining offices – larger than the average Korean apartment.

With Seoul close by, most of the Swedes keep an apartment at Yongsan as well, provided free of charge by the U.S. military, where they spend up to two days a week with their wives.
Only one member of the Swiss delegation is married.

The right stuff

Becoming a member of the NNSC is no easy task. Surprisingly, it’s a very popular assignment.
“It is totally voluntary,” Frisk says.

Both the Swiss and Swedes sign one year contracts to work on the DMZ and have the option to extend. The heads of delegation have longer contracts; four years for the Swiss and two years for the Swedes.

But not everybody can cut it for a year.

“We need people who can cooperate, who are settled,” Frisk says. “They are not only representing the camp, but also their country.” He says it requires a lot of self-discipline.

People have dropped out in less than a year for various reasons, but it’s rare, Frisk says.

Each member is trained as a military observer. The course is run by the United Nations and lasts three weeks.

“We are basically put through all of the situations that could be encountered,” says Lt. Col. Marc-Andre Ryter of the Swiss delegation.

This includes being abducted in the dead of night. “But the abduction is not for an extended period of time,” Ryter explains. “Remember, the course is not very long.”

They are also subjected to rigorous psychological tests to assess their ability to cope amid such tension.

While Bruegger rejects the notion that they are to be considered elite, he concedes with a laugh that they are at least “mentally stable.”

The future of the NNSC

“When the Armistice Agreement was signed, nobody thought 53 years later it would still be the only valid document governing, technically, the war that is still there,” Bruegger says.

Frisk explains that there are really only two ways for the NNSC to leave the DMZ.

The first possibility is when the NNSC’s status is reviewed annually by the UNC. If it is agreed that their mostly-symbolic neutral presence is no longer needed, then it may be suggested that they leave.

The second is if a formal peace agreement is signed.

If there is a contradiction in pursuing a diplomatic mission while wearing a military uniform, Bruegger is the first to acknowledge it.

“It was the second secretary general of the United Nations, a Swede, who said, ‘Peacekeeping is not a job for soldiers, but only soldiers can do it.'”

(traceystark@heraldm.com)

Night Scene

Friday, March 10th, 2006


A small alley off the main street of Insa-dong in Seoul. These alleys are usually the best places to find good Korean food in small, family-owned restaurants.