Asian Media - New South Korea president closer to U.S., Japan
Asian Media - New South Korea president closer to U.S., Japan
David Armstrong

Asian Media - New South Korea president closer to U.S., Japan

Ugliest South Korean presidential election, remembering Myanmar, Xis virtual tip-off and racial profiling of scientists in America

South Korea has elected a new president, with Yoon Suk-yeol of the conservative People Power Party beating Lee Jae-myung of the ruling Democratic Party of Korea after a campaign The Korea Times said was one of the closest presidential races ever contested in the country.

The paper reported Yoon, a former prosecutor-general, had won 48.6 per cent of votes, edging out Lee, with 47.8 per cent.

In a foreign policy commentary the paper said Yoon would align more closely with the U.S., taking a tougher line on North Korea and seeking closer links with Japan.

The story quoted Harry Kazianis, of the Washington-based Centre for the National Interest, as saying the incoming president would talk tough on China but do little, because of the importance of the Korea-China economic relationship.

The Times said, however, Yoon had supported South Korean participation in working groups of the Quad alliance of the U.S., Japan, India and Australia. It reported U.S. President Joe Biden had spoken to Yoon by telephone and had invited him to the White House.

And Park Chan-kyong, Seoul correspondent of Hong Kongs South China Morning Post, wrote that Yoon had tapped into rising anti-China sentiment and pledged to embrace the U.S. more closely.

The Korea Times said the campaign had been the ugliest presidential election ever.

Yoon had alleged Lee had been involved in a big land development scandal but Lee had countered with his own allegations of Yoons involvement.

They also mounted offensives against each others wives, the paper said. Yoon and the PPP slammed Lees wife for abusing her husbands powerwhile Lee and the DPK aired suspicions on the career of Yoons wife.

The issue of South Koreas gender politics was explored in a pre-election article by syndicated journalist Gwynne Dyer, published in the Bangkok Post. Gender is not the only issue in South Korea but its the hot-button topic, he wrote.

The F-word (feminism) is being used a lot by both major parties, and not in a good way.

The Korea Herald reported in its main election story that Yoon had won the support of more male voters, while Lee had led among women.

Dont let Myanmar slip from view

Russias invasion of Ukraine and its onslaughts against civilian targets are the zoomed-in focus of international attention but Bangkok Post has issued a plea: don’t forget Myanmar.

As the crisis in Myanmar passed the one-year milestone, resistance towards the junta snowballed into guerrilla warfare involving civilians joining militia groups, the paper said in an editorial.

The actions of the junta have driven 300,000 from Myanmar, with hundreds of civilians arrested, beaten, tortured or killed by the authorities, according to the United NationsThe U.N. projects that up to 25 million people of the countrys more than 55 million population will fall into poverty this year

The people of Myanmar need the worlds attention as well as humanitarian help more than ever.

At The Jakarta Post, however, the editors seem to be losing patience with the Myanmar military regime. They ran a commentary by social issues campaigner Simone Galimberti, under the heading: Why cant ASEAN just suspend Myanmar?

The headline was a watered-down version of Galimbertis view. Considering the military juntas stubborn defiance of its own commitment to ending the plight of the people of Myanmar, ASEAN must formally suspend Myanmar from its activities, she wrote.

Formally suspending is far too moderate a position because actually Myanmar should be kicked out of the bloc until democracy is restored.

Another commentary published in the paper hits out at the U.N. for stopping Myanmar, represented at the U.N. General Assembly by the anti-military National Unity Government, from taking part in a month-long session of its Human Rights Council. Myanmars seat is to be left empty.

The article, signed by four human rights activists involved with Myanmar, says the people of the embattled country are looking to the U.N.to take a principled stand. It has an opportunity to honor its human rights mission while living up to its obligations, the article says.

But in Hong Kong, Bhavan Jaipragas, Chief Asian Correspondent of the South China Morning Post, has a more positive take on the potential fallout on Myanmar of Russias invasion. He noted ASEAN issued a bland statement calling on all relevant parties to exercise maximum restraint. But in the U.N. General Assembly, eight of the 10 ASEAN countries voted to condemn Russia. Only Communist-ruled Vietnam and Laos abstained.

It was, he suggested, a rare display of political spine, sending a strong signal about international law.

Governments can and must dig deep to unite and adopt similar principled positions on issues such as the juntas violence in Myanmar, he wrote.

A word left unsaid

Did Vladimir Putin tell Xi Jinping in advance that Russia would invade Ukraine?

According to Japans The Asahi Shimbun, the answer is more-or-less Yes.

The paper published a confidently written report from Takashi Funakoshi, one of its correspondents, citing Chinese diplomatic authorities, of the February 4 pre-Olympics meeting between the two leaders at the Daoyutai State Guesthouse.

The sources confirmed that Putin discussed Ukraine with Xi, the story said.

The article said: The Chinese side became aware at that meeting that Putin was determined not to rule out military operations against Ukraine, the sources saidXi did not have a response

A case where what was not said was more important than any words spoken.

Russian troops invaded Ukraine less than three weeks later and Chinas response has been to do a clumsy shuffle across the diplomatic dance floor not giving Russia outright support but trying to blame the West for provoking Putin.

As part of the dance, Chinas Foreign Minister, Wang Yi, accused the U.S. of looking to form an Indo-Pacific alliance similar to NATO.

The Japan Times, however, published a Bloomberg commentary saying there was just one problem with the suggestion a previous effort had failed and most Asian countries were not interested in trying again.

The article quoted Marty Natalegawa, a former Indonesian foreign minister as saying: It certainly is a non-starter for our region definitely. Whenever you speak of Southeast Asia or the Indo-Pacific in general, for decades our efforts have been to build an architecture that is inclusive in nature, rather than returning to the old Cold War, East-West kind of divisions.

Racial profiling

In 2018, the Trump administration introduced a programme called the China Initiative, aimed at cracking down on espionage by China. It had some notable successes, says The Straits Times U.S. Correspondent, Charissa Yong. But it was controversial, especially as it seemed to involve racially profiling scientists, disproportionately targeting those of Chinese descent.

Many prosecutors went after researchers for paperwork errors not disclosing ties to Beijing-affiliated bodies when seeking funding from U.S. agencies rather than espionage.

The Biden Administration recently scrapped the programme, Yong says.

David Armstrong

David Armstrong is an Australian journalist and editor with decades of experience, including as editor-in-chief of The Australian, editor of The Bulletin and The Canberra Times and deputy editor the Daily Telegraph in Australia. He is also former editor and editor-in-chief of the South China Morning Post, former president of the Bangkok Post company, former chair of the Phnom Penh Post company and is current chair of ucanews.com.