Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
International

North Korea defends racist slurs against Obama

Darpan News Desk IANS, 12 May, 2014 10:41 AM
    North Korea Monday defended recent racist slurs, including "evil black monkey", fired off at US President Barack Obama through its state media.
     
    The racist comments on Obama "was an adequate reaction against the one who insulted and defamed PRNK (People's Republic of North Korea)", a spokesperson for the external affairs ministry said in comments carried by the country's official Korean Central News Agency.
     
    The North Korean spokesman criticised the US president for calling North Korea an "isolated state" that "condemns its citizens to hunger" by having a "reckless and irresponsible government" during his last visit to Seoul in late April.
     
    According to the Pyongyang spokesperson, it was an "unpardonable insult against the people of PRNK who are leading a happy life under the benevolent socialist system".
     
    On May 2, after Obama's visit to South Korea, the KCNA carried a lengthy Korean-language diatribe against Obama calling him "evil black monkey" who "even lacks basic features of human beings".
     
    The attack on the US President prompted an angry reaction from the White House and the State Department in Washington, which described it as "disgusting", "ridiculous" and "disrespectful" among other adjectives, and asked North Korean leader Kim Jong-An to "improve the lives of its people" instead of insulting others.
     
    North Korea has recently raised the tone in its official statements, recently launching a diatribe against South Korean president Park Geun-hye calling her a "prostitute".
     
    Although the two Koreas began earlier this year an apparent reconciliation process, Pyongyang's relations with both Seoul and Washington have taken a big blow since the joint military drill conducted this spring in South Korea. 

    MORE International ARTICLES

    British kids poison teacher's coffee 'innocently'

    British kids poison teacher's coffee 'innocently'
    A British teacher narrowly escaped being poisoned when two of her pupils, aged 10, put a "bleach-like liquid" in her coffee.

    British kids poison teacher's coffee 'innocently'

    SHOCKING: Boko Haram Leader Vows To Sell Abducted Nigerian Schoolgirls

    SHOCKING: Boko Haram Leader Vows To Sell Abducted Nigerian Schoolgirls
    I am the one that took your girls. Are you the one that created the girls? I will sell them in the market. I have my own market of selling human beings. It is Allah, the owner that instructed me to sell. I will sell the girls.

    SHOCKING: Boko Haram Leader Vows To Sell Abducted Nigerian Schoolgirls

    Woman's body found in 'crucified' position

    Woman's body found in 'crucified' position
    A prostitute's body was found Monday in the Italian city of Florence in a "crucified" position.

    Woman's body found in 'crucified' position

    Russia issues report on Ukrainian human rights violations

    Russia issues report on Ukrainian human rights violations
    The Russian foreign ministry Monday published a report on human rights violations in Ukraine, mainly targeting Kiev authorities and the West.

    Russia issues report on Ukrainian human rights violations

    'Pakistan Army chief's Kashmir comment highly provocative'

    'Pakistan Army chief's Kashmir comment highly provocative'
    BJP prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi has termed the comments on Kashmir by the Pakistani Army chief as "highly provocative" and wished the outgoing UPA government took a "stronger stand on this uninvited interference".

    'Pakistan Army chief's Kashmir comment highly provocative'

    The persistence of Myth: Greek Gods in Modern Fiction

    The persistence of Myth: Greek Gods in Modern Fiction
    What attracts us to mythology? Is it the human fascination for tales, particularly those personifying natural phenomenon, or explaining the creation of the world and humankind in a way that is easily understood and without going into the big bang theory and evolution?

    The persistence of Myth: Greek Gods in Modern Fiction