New N. Korea constitution proclaims nuclear status

  • N.Korean leader stresses Hitler's skills, report claims

    N.Korean leader stresses Hitler's skills, report claims

    N.Korean leader stresses Hitler's skills, report claims

    North Korean ruler Kim Jong-Un has reportedly given copies of Adolf Hitler's "Mein Kampf" to his top officials, urging them to study it as a leadership skills manual. …

  • US reporter who felled Gen McChrystal dies in crash

    US reporter who felled Gen McChrystal dies in crash

    US reporter who felled Gen McChrystal dies in crash

    Michael Hastings, the Rolling Stone journalist who triggered the 2010 downfall of US Afghanistan commander General Stanley McChrystal, died in a car crash, his employer announced. …

  • Rousseff vows to listen to Brazil's young protestors

    Rousseff vows to listen to Brazil's young protestors

    Rousseff vows to listen to Brazil's young protestors

    Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff tried to get ahead of a wave of popular protest, vowing to listen to the complaints of youths angered by the cost of staging the World Cup. …

  • US to open peace talks with Taliban

    US to open peace talks with Taliban

    US to open peace talks with Taliban

    The United States and the Taliban cleared the decks for peace talks even as a deadly attack on US troops underlined the still furious nature of their decade-long war. …

  • Rousseff salutes Brazil protests, cities cut bus fares

    Rousseff salutes Brazil protests, cities cut bus fares

    Rousseff salutes Brazil protests, cities cut bus fares

    By Todd Benson SAO PAULO (Reuters) - President Dilma Rousseff on Tuesday sought to defuse a massive protest movement sweeping Brazil, acknowledging the need for better public services and more responsive governance as demonstrations continued in some cities around the country. Speaking the morning after more than 200,000 Brazilians marched in over a half-dozen cities, Rousseff said her government remains committed to social change and is listening attentively to the many grievances expressed at …

North Korea's new constitution proclaims its status as a nuclear-armed nation, complicating international efforts to persuade Pyongyang to abandon atomic weapons, analysts said Thursday.

An official website seen late Wednesday released the text of the constitution following its revision during a parliamentary session on April 13.

"National Defence Commission chairman Kim Jong-Il turned our fatherland into an invincible state of political ideology, a nuclear-armed state and an indomitable military power, paving the ground for the construction of a strong and prosperous nation," says part of the preamble.

The text was carried by the "Naenara" (My Nation) website.

The previous constitution, last revised on April 9, 2010, did not carry the term "nuclear-armed state".

Following Kim Jong-Il's death last December, the country revised the charter to consecrate achievements of the late leader, who was succeeded by his son Kim Jong-Un.

The North has been developing nuclear weapons for decades. Its official position has been that it needs them for self-defence against a US nuclear threat, but that it is willing in principle to scrap the atomic weaponry.

Under a September 2005 deal reached during six-nation negotiations, Pyongyang agreed to dismantle its nuclear programmes in return for economic and diplomatic benefits and security guarantees.

But six-party talks on implementing the deal have been stalled since December 2008. The North has staged two nuclear tests, in 2006 and 2009.

"This makes it clear that the North has little intention of giving up nuclear programmes under any circumstances," Cheon Sung-Whun of the state Korea Institute for National Unification told AFP.

"If there is a demand at the negotiation table to give up nuclear weapons, the North Koreans would say it would be a breach of the constitution," he said.

North Korea has long been in confrontation with the United States and its allies over its nuclear and missile programmes.

Its April 13 long-range rocket launch, purportedly a peaceful mission to put a satellite into orbit, further dimmed prospects for a diplomatic settlement.

The revised constitution "is certainly bad news for participants in the six-party talks", said Professor Kim Keun-Sik at Kyungnam University in Changwon.

"It will make it harder to persuade the North to give up nuclear weapons through diplomacy."

But Kim cautioned against reading too much into what was intended as part of a eulogy for Kim Jong-Il.

"The North has been touting its nuclear status as one of the key achievements accredited to the late leader and the new constitution factors this in," he said.

"This can hardly be interpreted as a message that it will stick to its nuclear weapons no matter what."

Kim also said the North's constitution can easily be amended once its ruler decides to do so, noting it was revised twice in as many years.

The six-party talks which began in 2003 are chaired by China and also include the two Koreas, the United States, Russia and Japan.

Loading...
  • 'Emong' stronger, now a tropical storm
    'Emong' stronger, now a tropical storm

    “Emong” has further strengthened into a tropical storm on Tuesday noon, the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical, and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa) reported. …

  • China supercomputer world's fastest: report
    China supercomputer world's fastest: report

    A Chinese supercomputer is the fastest in the world, according to survey results announced Monday, comfortably overtaking a US machine which now ranks second. …

  • Two men with international ties added to FBI 'most wanted' list
    Two men with international ties added to FBI 'most wanted' list

    By David Ingram WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The FBI added two people on Monday to its list of most-wanted fugitives: a Mexican laborer accused of killing a woman in Louisiana and a former U.S. university professor charged with committing sex crimes in the Philippines. The FBI is offering $100,000 for information leading to the arrests of the men, who are the 499th and 500th fugitives to be featured on the Ten Most Wanted list. José Manuel García Guevara, 25, is a Mexican national who investigators …

  • The near saint from an Igorot mission school

    By Elizabeth Lolarga, VERA Files Photos from the book The Odyssey of an Igorot Mission Girl For a woman who formally entered school at age 10, Esperanza Daliwa Somebang of Nadatngan, Mountain Province, travelled far and wide, a great believer … Continue reading → …

  • MMDA mulls use of pumps powered by electricity
    MMDA mulls use of pumps powered by electricity

    Manila, Philippines -- The Metropolitan Manila Development Authority is planning to replace the old diesel-powered pumps at its flood pumping stations with new electric-powered pumps as recommended by Dutch consultants from the World Bank, according to MMDA Chairman Francis Tolentino. …

Editor’s note:Yahoo! Philippines encourages responsible comments that add dimension to the discussion. No bashing or hate speech, please. You can express your opinion without slamming others or making derogatory remarks.

Odd Stories

  • 'Drunk' claims upset Ukraine parliament budget hearing

    'Drunk' claims upset Ukraine parliament budget hearing

    Reuters - 12 hours ago
    'Drunk' claims upset Ukraine parliament budget hearing

    KIEV (Reuters) - A parliamentary hearing on Ukraine's budget was suspended for several hours on Tuesday after opposition deputies alleged that a deputy finance minister presenting the budget report was drunk. Anatoly Myarkovsky, first deputy finance minister, spoke for 10 minutes on the government's budget performance in 2012. But when questions were invited, deputies from Ukraine's rowdy opposition called out "He's drunk". One shouted: "Anyone within five meters can tell he reeks like someone …

  • Mexican politicians: going to the dogs, er, cats?

    Mexican politicians: going to the dogs, er, cats?

    Reuters - Tue, Jun 18, 2013
    Mexican politicians: going to the dogs, er, cats?

    By Luc Cohen MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Fed up with politicians they call "rats," a group of friends in the eastern Mexican city of Xalapa have put forward their ideal candidate for mayor: a cat named Morris. Xalapa resident Sergio Chamorro, who adopted the cat in August, said the plan began as a joke between friends borne out of their frustration with the Veracruz state government over freedom of speech. "Fed up of voting for rats? Vote for a cat," reads one campaign poster featuring the black …

  • Royal baby to give almost $400 million bump to British economy

    Royal baby to give almost $400 million bump to British economy

    Reuters - Mon, Jun 17, 2013
    Royal baby to give almost $400 million bump to British economy

    By Belinda Goldsmith LONDON (Reuters) - From Union Jack booties to "Born to Rule" sleepwear, the British royal family has joined retailers in offering baby products to mark the arrival of the royal heir. Analysts estimate the baby fever could boost the economy by 240 million pounds ($380 million). A baby sleepsuit modeled on a guardsman's outfit is one of the gifts on sale at palace shops by the Royal Collection Trust, which uses all profits for the upkeep of the royal palaces. ... …

  • Famed Milwaukee tavern rehangs bras on ceiling

    Famed Milwaukee tavern rehangs bras on ceiling

    Reuters - Sat, Jun 15, 2013
    Famed Milwaukee tavern rehangs bras on ceiling

    By Brendan O'Brien MILWAUKEE (Reuters) - Standing on a foot ladder, Jeff Scanell bent down, pinched his girlfriend's red lace brassiere between his thumb and index finger and gently lifted it out of the front of her shirt as a cowbell wildly rang and a raucous crowd roared. The 37-year-old Milwaukee tool and die worker then reached above and added the undergarment to the dangling array of colorful bras of various shapes and sizes that hung from the scarlet tin ceiling. ... …

  • Long-lost diary of top Hitler aide offers window into Nazi soul

    Long-lost diary of top Hitler aide offers window into Nazi soul

    Reuters - Fri, Jun 14, 2013
    Long-lost diary of top Hitler aide offers window into Nazi soul

    By Myles Miller WILMINGTON, Delaware (Reuters) - U.S. officials on Thursday unveiled the 400-page diary of Alfred Rosenberg, a top aide to Adolf Hitler, who oversaw the genocide against Jews and others during World War Two. The diary disappeared after the Nuremberg trials in 1946, sparking a nearly 70-year hunt that ended on April 5 in the upstate New York town of Lewiston, at the home of an academic named Herbert Richardson. ... …

  • The theater odyssey of Nonon Padilla VERA Files - The Inbox

    By Pablo A. Tariman, VERA Files Everyone in the theater circuit agree that the Philstage Gawad Buhay life achievement award in theater for Felix “Nonon” Padilla was well-deserved. Padilla started in Philippine Educational Theater Association (PETA) in the company of … Continue reading → …

  • The near saint from an Igorot mission school VERA Files - The Inbox

    By Elizabeth Lolarga, VERA Files Photos from the book The Odyssey of an Igorot Mission Girl For a woman who formally entered school at age 10, Esperanza Daliwa Somebang of Nadatngan, Mountain Province, travelled far and wide, a great believer … Continue reading → …

  • The evolution of the Filipino teleserye VERA Files - The Inbox

    By Pablo A. Tariman, VERA Files Friday night last week, it seemed everyone who owns a TV set was glued on the final airing of the Channel 2 teleserye, “Ina, Kapatid, Anak” directed by Don M. Cuaresma and Jojo A. … Continue reading → …

  • Quezon City courts go digital; more transparent system seen VERA Files - The Inbox

    By Mikha Flores, VERA Files The Supreme Court launched on Friday an electronic filing system that will digitize judicial processes in trial courts in Quezon City. Dubbed as “eCourt”, the system uses case management software that will allow judges and … Continue reading → …

  • LGBT Pride Month—more than just about street parties VERA Files - The Inbox

    By Patrick King Pascual, VERA Files Festive street parties, parades and marches usually mark the annual celebration of Pride month in June by the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) community in the country and elsewhere. “But Pride Month is … Continue reading → …

POLL
Loading...
Poll Choice Options