Month: May 2019

Military Family Will Likely Have Adopted Daughter Deported Back to Korea

Here is an update on the military family that has been trying to adopt their Korean niece in order to give her citizenship in the United States:

That was when the former Army lieutenant colonel and his wife Soo Jin were informed by the Federal District Court of Kansas that their adopted daughter Hyebin will be deported back to South Korea due to U.S. immigration law that cuts off the age when foreign-born adopted children can become naturalized U.S. citizens at 16.
The Kansas court ruled that Hyebin must return to Korea after she finishes earning her chemical engineering degree at the University of Kansas, which she will do in December. Schreiber and his wife are appealing through the 10th District Court of Appeals, though they are not optimistic about their chances of winning.
“We have no delusions that everything’s going to come out like a flowing bed of roses,” Schreiber told the Military Times. “We’ve always planned for two courses of action. So it was never something that we thought, ‘Yeah, things are going to work out the way we wish they would come out.’”
The immigration policy that is forcing Hyebin to leave the U.S. is under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. A spokeswoman for USCIS told the Military Times via email that “it is USCIS policy not to comment on ongoing litigation, nor will we speak to individual cases due to privacy concerns.”

Army Times

You can read more at the link, but this is a really tough case because LTC Schreiber missed the cut off date because he deployed to Afghanistan. When he came back to do her citizenship he found out it was too late for Hyebin to receive citizenship.

I am a bit surprised she not able to get a work visa sponsored by an employer considering she is about to graduate with a chemical engineering degree.

What is amazing about this is if she was a child of illegal immigrants she would be allowed to stay, but since she is a daughter of American citizens she will likely get deported.

South Korea Plans to Build Animal Robots

I doubt the Kim regime is too concerned about fighting animal robots:

– South Korea will rev up efforts to develop military robots mimicking animals and other creatures to better brace for evolving future battlefields, the arms procurement agency said Sunday.
In its latest document that outlines blueprints for key defense technologies development, the Defense Acquisition Program Administration (DAPA) rolled out its plan to actively apply the so-called biomimetics to the military’s future weapons systems.
If it proceeds as planned, several kinds of biobots, which replicate humans and insects, are expected to be deployed as early as 2024, DAPA said, adding that robots mimicking birds, snakes and other marine species could be part of the country’s military forces afterwards.
“Biometric robots will be a game changer in future warfare, and related technologies are expected to bring about great ripple effects throughout the defense industry,” agency spokesman Park Jeong-eun said, adding that their roles will range from search and rescue operations to reconnaissance.

Yonhap

Civilian Employee Wins Settlement from the Army for Poor Work Environment in South Korea

This must have been quite a bad work environment to win a settlement from the Army:

An African-American civilian hospital employee “reached a significant settlement agreement” with the Army in late April after a lawsuit filed last year alleging that she was subjected to a racist and sexist command climate while working in South Korea.
Shawlawn Beckford, who served on active duty for 11 years before returning in 2006 as a civilian, had accused the Army of supporting a hostile work environment at Brian Allgood Army Community Hospital at Yongsan, where she was an administrator from 2009 to 2015.
“As a civilian employee it is my duty to represent and uphold the Army’s mission, vision, and leadership philosophy — in or out of uniform,” Beckford said in a May 1 statement from the office of her attorney, Kellogg Hansen in Washington, D.C. “But I am more than a position. I am a person with feelings and emotions, and I was mistreated in a system that failed to protect me.”
Reached for comment by Army Times, Beckford requested to keep the dollar amount of the settlement private.

Army Times

This is something I have seen before, people thinking it is okay to use racial slurs if they are of the race the slur is intended for:

“On a weekly basis during that time period, [the command sergeant major] would visit Ms. Beckford’s office and make belligerent, gendered comments toward her,” according to the lawsuit. “For example, he told her, ‘You’re a single parent. You’re a slut.’ ”
He also made comments about her race, the complaint said, calling her “just a house [N-word],” “dumb [N-word],” “our token Black person” and “ghetto.” (…….)

The 15-6 investigation found that though he used racial slurs in the office, it wasn’t in a discriminatory manner, because he himself is black. Still, he was relieved of his position and barred from leading a command again, according to the complaint, but stayed working within the office and continued to harass Beckford.

You can read more about the poor work environment at the link, but the hospital at Yongsan Garrison seems to have had some highly unprofessional people working there.

Survey Says Koreans Discriminate Mostly By Nationality

Here is what a survey of 2,500 foreigners living in Seoul has said about Koreans:

Koreans in Seoul discriminate against foreign residents mainly based on their country of origin, a survey by the Seoul Metropolitan Government showed Tuesday.

Many foreign residents said their image of Seoul had improved, but some still face discrimination and disdain.

The city government announced the results of the survey conducted on 2,500 foreign residents in the capital last September, to reflect the findings in its policies.

According to the survey, 57.3 percent of respondents said Koreans discriminate against foreign nationals based on their nationality. When multiple replies were allowed, 41.5 percent also said discriminative responses took place according to their fluency in Korean, 23.9 percent their financial status, 16.6 percent their jobs, 15.6 percent their appearance including skin color, and 1.1 percent their religion.

Korea Times

You can read more at the link, but none of this seems terribly surprising. I have always told people that if you want to improve your experience living in Korea, try to learn some Korean. For example, being able to exchange pleasantries and order food in Korean will likely greatly enhance the service you receive at a restaurant.

Picture of the Day: Food Aid to Reflect Public Opinion?

Seoul to reflect public opinion in deciding on food aid to N. Korea
Seoul to reflect public opinion in deciding on food aid to N. KoreaLee Eugene, deputy spokeswoman of the unification ministry, attends a press conference at the government complex in Seoul on May 10, 2019. South Korea believes it is still necessary to provide food assistance to North Korea despite the North’s recent missile launches but a final decision will be made after the government sufficiently collects public opinion, the unification ministry said. (Yonhap)

Two French Commandoes Killed During Rescue of Korean Civilian in Burkina Faso

A Korean woman is very lucky to be alive after being rescued by the French military in Burkina Faso:

French special forces have rescued a Korean, two French and an American tourist after a military operation in Burkina Faso. The four have been held captive by an armed gang in the West African country located in the Sahel area which has recently seen a rise in violence by al Qaeda- and Islamic State-linked militants.
Kim Bum-soo has more. 

Report:  

[Sound bite: Florence Parly – French Minister of the Armed Forces (French)] ​ 
“The freed hostages will be able to find their freedom and their loved ones again.”
 
French special forces have rescued four hostages, including two of its own citizens, a South Korean and an American, from a militant group in Burkina Faso.

The French military announced on Friday that two of its commandos lost their lives during the operation in the West African country. It said four terrorists were killed while two escaped during combat. 

KBS World Radio

You can read more at the link, but Burkina Faso is under a travel alert to South Koreans because of the Islamic militants. I wonder if this Korean woman was a missionary?

President Trump Says Short Range Missile Test is Not A “Breach of Trust” By North Korea

President Trump continues to be extremely patient with North Korea:

In the wake of a recent series of missile launches in North Korea, U.S. President Donald Trump says he does not consider the military action as “a breach of trust.” Trump hinted, however, that eventually he might lose faith in North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.
Kim Bum-soo has more.   

Report: U.S. President Donald Trump says he doesn’t consider North Korea’s missile launches “a breach of trust.” 

During an interview with Politico on Friday, Trump downplayed the recent series of military exercises in the North, calling them “very standard stuff.”

While noting that he does not regard the short-range missile firings as a breach of trust at all, Trump added that at some point he might.

KBS World Radio

You can read more at the link, but like I have said before if they fire an IRBM or ICBM expect that to get President Trump’s attention.

I don’t expect the Kim regime to fire an Intermediate Range Missile and especially and Inter-Continental Ballistic Missile until talks with the U.S. have basically collapsed. Testing those two weapons is clearly directed at the United States since IRBMs are used to target Guam and ICBMs the US mainland, Alaska, and Hawaii. 

If the North Koreans want to increase tensions further look for them to start firing missiles closer to Japan’s territorial waters or even eventually into them.