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		<title> - Latest Popular Stories, Instablogs Community  by Brian-h</title>
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				<title>The 'hostile racket' that comes with North Korea’s human rights season</title>
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				<dc:creator>Brian</dc:creator>
								<description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.instablogsimages.com/images/2009/11/05/mb_the-hostil_Q4XQO_12257.jpg" align="right" /><p>	Once a year, North Korea’s often vitriolic rhetoric machine fires up with special intensity to attack those who attack its human rights record. The exchanges usually come toward the end of the year when the U.N. General Assembly approves what has...</p>]]></description>

				<content:encoded><![CDATA[	<p>Once a year, North Korea’s often vitriolic rhetoric machine fires up with special intensity to attack those who attack its human rights record. The exchanges usually come toward the end of the year when the U.N. General Assembly approves what has become an annual measure criticising North Korea for having one of the worst rights records in the world.</p>
	<p>Reclusive North Korea is a member of only a few international organisations so the annual rebuke at the United Nations stings particularly hard for the state that bills itself as a workers’ paradise, or as it said in a state media report on Tuesday: “the best socialist state in the world as it is centred on the popular masses”.</p>
	<p>North Korea comes under special scrutiny this year because it will be subject to official international questioning of its human rights record at the United Nations in December, which could provide even more embarrassment for the North’s thinned-skinned leaders as the prickly state is put on the defensive.<br />
North Korea has prepared for this event by changing its Constitution earlier this year and adding clauses about human rights protections.
</p>
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				<pubDate>Thu, 05 Nov 2009 11:36:07 +0000</pubDate>
				<category>North Korea</category><category>Military</category><category>Economic steps</category>								
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				<title>Saga of de-nuclearising North Korea</title>
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				<dc:creator>Brian</dc:creator>
								<description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.instablogsimages.com/images/2008/10/12/mb_saga-of-de_APxGA_12257.jpg" align="right" /><p>	Negotiations with the DPRK to reverse its nuclear weapon program changed character in 2008 with the bilateral US-DPRK channel overshadowing the 6-party forum.  US negotiator, Christopher Hill, secured new freedom from President Bush to secure a...</p>]]></description>

				<content:encoded><![CDATA[	<p>Negotiations with the DPRK to reverse its nuclear weapon program changed character in 2008 with the bilateral US-DPRK channel overshadowing the 6-party forum.  US negotiator, Christopher Hill, secured new freedom from President Bush to secure a positive outcome, ideally before the administration left office in January 2009.  Hill appears to have exploited this freedom to the full.
</p>
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				<pubDate>Sun, 12 Oct 2008 23:32:32 +0000</pubDate>
				<category>Christopher Hill</category><category>DPRK</category><category>Kim Jong Il</category><category>North Kore</category>								
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