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레드삭스, 국정원이 해킹시 미끼로 사용한 파일 공개, 대테러와 연관성 없어 보여

익명 (미확인) | 토, 2015/08/01- 08:14
레드삭스, 국정원이 해킹시 미끼로 사용한 파일 공개, 대테러와 연관성 없어 보여 – 스코틀랜드 정부 문서와 아일랜드 대학 학회 홍보 문서를 미끼로 사용 – 영문 문서 파일에서 한글 발견돼, 한국임을 자백한 꼴 – 맑은 고딕 선호하는 국정원? 편집부 뉴스프로는 지난 23일 네덜란드 보안업체 레드삭스가 국정원이 해킹팀의 가장 적극적인 고객이었다고 폭로한 기사를 보도한 바 있다. 이후 레드삭스는 ...

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국제시민사회 연명 공개서한

개발도상국 등지에서 전지구직인 코로나19 전염병에 맞서 싸우는 한국의 헌신에 대한 요구사항

 

문재인 대통령님께,

 

코로나19 유행병에 대항 한 전 세계적 투쟁에 대한 대한민국의 약속과 요청사항과 관련하여, 우리는 국제 시민 사회 단체 (CSO) / 비정부기구 (NGO)와 연합, 아시아 태평양, 아프리카, 남미, 북미, 중동 및 유럽 지역의 다른 국가의 개인을 대신하여 이 서한을 쓰고 있습니다.

 

코로나19 사태에 대한 한국의 신속하고 민주적인 대응에 세계가 깊은 인상을 받았다고 말하는 것은 결코 과언이 아닙니다. 주요 민주주의 가치인 언론의 자유, 정보 접근성, 투명성, 의료 테스트 및 모든 사람에 대한 관리에 우선순위를 뒀던 한국정부의 리더십을 통해 대한민국은 폐쇄조치를 통해 시민의 자유를 억누르지 않고 바이러스를 수용하는 모델이되었습니다. 이번 총선에 있어서도, 코로나 바이러스가 민주주의와 인권을 막을 수 없다는 것을 보여주는 또 다른 긍정적인 신호였습니다.

 

이 리더십 모델과 민주적 수단을 통해 이해관계를 떠나 시민들의 선호와 우선순위에 관한 결정은 사람들 사이의 연대와 신뢰의 감각을 조성하는 데 핵심적인 역할을 해왔으며 위기의 완화와 협력을 강화했습니다. 코로나19에 대한 한국의 성공적인 관리는 점진적인 정상화에 대한 희망이 있음을 증명했습니다. 국제사회는 한국의 경험을 통해 많은 것을 배울 수 있으며 모범 사례를 교환하는 데 더 많은 협력을 희망하고 있습니다.

 

 

또한, 국제 협력의 중요성에 중점을두고 G20 정상회의(2020 년 3 월 26 일)과 ASEAN + 3 정상회의(2020 년 4 월 14 일)에서도 코로나19 전염병에 대한 ODA (공적개발원조)를 통해 인도 주의적 지원을 약속했습니다.

 

코로나19와의 전쟁에서 전세계 이웃을 지원하고 지원하려는 한국의 노력에 있어서, 우리 시민사회가 필요한 원조와 서비스를 제공하고 대중의 인식과 교육을 증진하며 정부 정책을 모니터링하는 데 중요한 사전 역할을 수행 할 수 있다고 믿습니다. 그리고 코로나19에 대한 대응과 사회에서 취약하고 배제된 사람들의 인권을 옹호합니다.

 

전 지구적 위기의 시대에, 유엔의 기본 정신인 ‘Leaving No One Behind,’ 지속가능발전목표(SDGs), 핵심 인도주의 표준 (CHS)과 인권에 기반한 인권에 근거한 접근 방식에 따라 국제적인 흐름에 다라 사회경제적 영향에 대처하는 데 시민사회와 정부 간의 공공의 신뢰와 파트너십이 필수적이라 할 것입니다.

 

이와 관련하여 다음과 같이 한국정부에 촉구합니다.

1. 인권과 민주주의 원칙을 존중하면서도 코로나19 유행병에 효과적으로 대처하는 데 주도적인 역할을 수행한다.

2. ODA를 통해 인도 주의적 지원을 유지하거나 증가시켜, 특히 전 세계의 어려운 문제를 극복하는 데 가장 취약한 최빈국과 취약한 국가에서 도움을 요청한다.

3. 시민 공간을 보호하고 코로나19 유행병의 악영향을 해결하는 시민 사회의 역할을 강화하기 위해 도덕적, 정치적, 재정적 지원을 제공한다.

4. 취약한 국가에서 인간의 고통을 예방하고 줄이기 위해 시민사회단체가 지상에서 작동 할 수 있도록 구체적인 조치를 즉시 취한다.

5. 코로나19 전염병에 대항하여 전 세계에서 낙인, 이주민, 노인, 이재민, 난민 및 토착민과 같은 소수 민족 및 소수 민족 등 인종 차별주의에 대항한 범 세계적 행동을 주도한다.

 

우리는 정부가 코로나19의 사회적, 경제적 영향을 해결하는 데 여전히 어려움을 겪고 있음을 잘 알고 있습니다. 그러나 국제사회가 연대를 이루고, 취약한 이웃을 돕는 동시에 이 전투를 벌이는 것이 중요합니다.

 

전세계 시민사회단체 연합은 대한민국의 리더십과 코로나19에 대항하는 전 지구적 싸움에서의 전폭적인 지원 아래 인도적인협력의 기회를 보장하기를 희망합니다.

 

당신의 배려에 감사드립니다.

 

2020년 4월 17일

국제시민사회

(연명단체 아래 원문 참조)

 


 

Open Letter to President Moon Jae-in of

the Republic of Korea (ROK) 

 

April 17, 2020

 

H.E. Moon Jae-in
President of the Republic of Korea
Cheongwadae (Blue House)
1 Cheongwadae-ro, Jongno-gu
Seoul, 03048, Republic of Korea

RE: ROK’s Commitment to the global fight against the COVID-19 pandemic in particular, in the developing counties. 

Dear President Moon,

We are writing on behalf of the international civil society organizations (CSOs) / Non-governmental Organizations (NGOs) and coalitions, and individuals from different countries from the Asia-Pacific, Africa, South and North America, Middle East and the Europe region in regards to the Republic of Korea’s commitment to the global fight against the COVID-19 pandemic.

First of all, we would like to congratulate on the successful management of the parliamentary election concluded on 15 April 2020 despite the COVID-19 pandemic.

It is not an understatement to say that the world was impressed and encouraged at the ROK’s swift and democratic response to its COVID-19 outbreak. Through your administration’s leadership, prioritizing free press, access to information, transparency, medical testing and care for all, which are key democratic values, ROK has become a model in containing the virus without a lockdown or repressing civil liberties.  The parliamentary election was another positive sign to prove that the coronavirus cannot stop democracy and human rights.

This leadership model and the prioritizing of people regardless of their background through democratic means has played a key role in creating a sense of solidarity and trust amongst the people, increasing cooperation in mitigating the crisis. The successful management of COVID-19 by the ROK, has proven that there is hope for a slow recovery. The international community has much to learn from the ROK experience and hopes for more cooperation in exchanging best practices.

We also note that you have put emphasis on the importance of international cooperation and made a commitment to humanitarian assistance through the Official Development Assistance (ODA) at the G20 Virtual Summit (26 March 2020) and ASEAN+3 Virtual Summit (14 April 2020) on the COVID-19 pandemic.

In the ROK’s efforts to support and assist its global neighbors in the fight against COVID-19, we believe that civil society has the ability to play an important proactive role in delivering necessary aid and services, promoting public awareness and education, monitoring the government’s policy and action on the COVID-19, and advocating human rights of the vulnerable and excluded people in society. 

In a time of global crisis, public trust and partnership between civil society and government are essential in addressing the socio-economic impact of the pandemic both nationally and internationally in accordance with Core Humanitarian Standards (CHS) and human rights-based approach with the spirit of ‘leaving no one behind’ for the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

In this regard, we would like to urge your government to:

1.      Continue to play a proactive leadership role in tackling COVID-19 pandemic effectively while respecting human rights and democratic principles.

2.      Maintain or increase humanitarian assistance through the ODA to help countries in need, especially in the least developed countries and fragile states that are the most vulnerable in overcoming unprecedented global challenges.

3.      Provide support – moral, political and financial – to protect civic space and to strengthen the role of civil society in tackling adverse consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic.

4.      Take concrete actions immediately to enable CSOs to operate on the ground to prevent and reduce human suffering in vulnerable countries.

5.      Lead a global action on stigmatization, xenophobia, racism against minorities and vulnerable populations like older persons, migrants, internally displaced persons, refugees, and indigenous peoples in the global fight against the COVID-19 pandemic.

We are aware that your government is still facing challenges in addressing the social and economic impact of the COVID-19. However, it is vital that the international community comes in solidarity and fight the battle simultaneously together in the meanwhile assisting our vulnerable neighbors.

The undersigned, a coalition of civil society organizations across the globe, would like to take this opportunity to assure you of our full support and cooperation in the global fight against the COVID-19 with the Republic of Korea’s leadership.

Thank you for your consideration. 

In solidarity,

 

A list of Signatories (as of 11 pm on 16 April 2020)

–          64 CSOs/NGOs

1          Action for Change (ACHA), Tanzania

2          Action For Development (AFD), Cambodia

3          Adivasi Navjeewan Gathan Navjyoti Agua (ANGNA), India

4          Afghan NGOs Coordination Bureau (ANCB), Afghanistan

5          Africa Development Interchange Network (ADIN), Cameroun

6          Asia Democracy Network (ADN)

7          Asia Development Alliance (ADA)

8          Asian Muslim Action Network (AMAN)

9          Asian Network for Free Elections (ANFREL), Bangkok

10      Camp for Peace Liberia, Liberia

11      Campaign for Good Governance, Bangladesh

12      CECADE, El Salvador

13      Center for Peace Education, Philippines

14      Centre for Environmental Justice, Sri Lanka

15      Centre for Social Policy Development, Pakistan

16      Citizens’ Coalition for Economic Justice (CCEJ), South Korea

17      CIVICUS-World Alliance for Citizen Participation, Johannesburg

18      Climate Watch Thailand

19      COAST Trust, Bangladesh 

20      Coastal Development Partnership, Bangladesh

21      Community Empowerment for Progress Organization (CEPO), South Sudan

22      Consortium Humanitarian Agency, Sri Lanka

23      Cooperation Committee for Cambodia (CCC), Cambodia

24      Dalit NGO Federation (DNF), Nepal

25      Dalit Welfare Organisation(DWO), Nepal

26      Earth Council Asia Pacific, Phils. Inc.

27      Feminist League, Kazakhstan

28      GCAP-Sénégal/POSCO Agenda 2030, Senegal

29      Global Network of Women Peacebuilders (GNWP), New York

30      Good Neighbors Cambodia

31      Hawai’i Institute for Human Rights, USA

32      Housing and Land Rights Network – Habitat International Coalition, Egypt

33      INHURED International

34      International NGO Forum on Indonesian Development (INFID), Indonesia

35      Kazakhstan International bureau for human rights and rule of law, Kazakhstan

36      Krityanand UNESCO Club Jamshedpur, India

37      Maldives Association of Persons with Disabilities, Maldives

38      Management and Sustainable Development Institute, Vietnam

39      MY World Mexico

40      National Campaign for Sustainable Development Nepal

41      National Youth Equity Forum (NYEF), India

42      NGO Education Partnership (NEP), Cambodia

43      NGO Federation of Nepal (NFN)

44      NGO Federation of Nepal (NFN)

45      Pahel Pakistan

46      Pakistan Development Alliance (PDA), Pakistan

47      Pakistan NGOs Forum, Pakistan

48      Participatory Research Action Network- PRAN, India

49      Pax Christi Philippines

50      Peace Hope Pakistan

51      Peoples Development Community (PDC), Bangladesh

52      Phare Ponleu Selpak, Cambodia

53      Reacción Climática, Bolivia

54      RED MEXICANA DE MUJERES, SC., Mexico

55      RENICC – LATINDADD- GCAP, Nicaragua

56      Sarokar Foundation, Nepal

57      Southern Africa Human Rights NGO Network, Tanzania

58      Uddipto Mohila Unnayan Sangstha, Bangladesh

59      Voices for Interactive Choices and Empowerment (VOICE), Bangladesh

60      Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Network (WASH-Net) Sierra Leone

61      World Federalist Movement – Canada

62      Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA), Sri Lanka

63      Youth For Environment Education And Development Foundation (YFEED Foundation)

64      Youth Partnership for Peace and Development, Sierra Leone

 

Individual Global Citizens – 16:

1.          Akio Takayanagi, Ferris University/JANIC, Japan

2          Alvin Anthony Uy, Earth Council Asia-Pacific, Inc. Philippines

3          Antoine SONDAG, CSO Pax Romana, France

4          Gail Reyes Galang, Associate Director, Center for Peace Education, Philippines

5          Hieu Nguyen, Vietnam

6          Jeevan Baniya, Independent Scholar, Nepal

7          Martina Kabisama, Tanzania Human Rights Activits, Tanzania

8          Noor Jung Shah, Tribhuvan Universtiy, Nepal

9          Rabani, SSE, Afghanistan

10      Rajendra Suwal, Nepal Nature,

11      Santina Soares, Human rigths and gender equality activist, Timor-Leste

12      Sithuan Chin, Professor, Cambodia  

13      Sophal UY, Social Worker Staff, Cambodia

14      Sushil Pyakurel, Former Commissioner of National Human Rights Commission and Former Human Rights Advisor to the President of Nepal

15      Waheed Ahmad, Chairman Child Protection Committee of Lahore Bar Association, Pakistan

16      Zulaikha Afzali, Afghanistan

 

문의: 국제팀 02-766-5623 

금, 2020/04/24- 01:14
1
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지속가능개발을 앞당기기 위한 지난 10 년간의 촉진과 변화시키는 과정, 행동, 실천, 그리고 코로나-19 긴급현안 대응

“Accelerated action and transformative pathways: realizing the decade of action and delivery for sustainable development” and the current concerns regarding “COVID-19”

 

오는 7월 7-16일로 예정된  고위급정치포럼(HLPF 2020) 및 7월 14-16일 고위급분과토론(HLS 2020)를 앞두고, 위 주제에 대해 유엔 경제사회이사회에 경실련의 입장을 아래와 같이 각각 전달하였습니다.

200426 [Written Statement] by CCEJ, A New Vision for the Future in Our Society

200427 [Oral Statement] Remarks by CCEJ, Stop it!—the Methods of an Infodemic

 


【HLPF 2020 서면 성명】

Written Statement
before
ECOSOC High-Level Segment & Political Forum in 2020

A New Vision for the Future in Our Society

Citizens’ Coalition for Economic Justice [i]
Republic of Korea

April 26, 2020

 

The last year fell on our 30th Anniversary, and we looked back on our historic movements over the last decades. Of significant importance to democratic and socioeconomic transformation with sustainable development in Korean society, have been three key factors: (a) Housing Price Reform: the alleviation of housing bubbles between stated value and real price; (b) Chaebol Reform: the breakup of the corporatocratic structure; and (c) Manifesto Movement by monitoring the governmental activities and evaluating their performance. These are really something many Koreans thought we’re supposed to do.

However, nothing has changed. In retrospect, the last 10 years saw political tensions and upheavals successively in our society. Such a radical change in all the state affairs of security, diplomacy, economy, society and industry, etc. has been bringing about a new order and related problems—such as the “False” industrial revolution—that cannot be resolved by traditional theories any longer and that cannot help being a real challenge for us to achieve sustainable development and economic justice. Such a road-to-Damascus conversion—“Digital” conversion—was dashed by big business and governments that maintained the status quo in the population aging and decline, in low growth and polarization, more and more. And such a socioeconomic inequality becomes fixed now, and forever. For unless we break it through this status quo, we won’t survive any longer.

Now then, we suggest you set a new vision for the future in our society on the ground of our empiricism, a new mission statement that is fixed to achieve the following six goals including twenty-two detailed targets (with over ninety methods):

A. Fair Economy

A-1.  Establish a fair market with economic orders (six methods);
A-2.  Promote innovation for inclusive growth (nine methods);
A-3.  Earn economic esteem on decent work (four methods);
A-4.  Reestablish the governmental role to realize a fair economy (four methods).

B. Social Justice

B-1.  Eradicate windfall profits out of the housing speculation (three methods);
B-2.  Establish justice and taxation (three methods);
B-3.  Reform structural corruption (three methods).

C. Community Well-being

C-1.  Secure social welfare based on the full-scale budget and fiscal soundness (three methods);
C-2.  Reinforce housing welfare (three methods).

D. Social Inclusion

D-1.  Do technological innovation for the human being (seven methods);
D-2.  Close the socioeconomic achievement gap in education (four methods);
D-3.  Realize the society without hate and discrimination (three methods);
D-4.  Narrow the development gap between local areas (three methods).

E. Democratic Communitarianism

E-1.  Reform politics and the judiciary (five methods);
E-2.  Reform the government (two methods);
E-3.  Strengthen local autonomy with decentralization (five methods);
E-4.  Strengthen CSO partnership with citizen participation (Drafts).

F. Community Peace-building

F-1.  Develop sustainable inter-Korean relations, denuclearize the Korean Peninsula and build peace regimes (six methods);
F-2.  Building a new system of peaceful coöperation in Northeast Asia (six methods);
F-3.  Toughen safeguards system (seven methods);
F-4.  Cope with disasters, climate change and environmental destruction (two methods);
F-5.  Protect food security and sustainable agriculture (three methods).


【HLS 2020 구두 성명】

Oral Statement
before
ECOSOC High-Level Segment & Political Forum in 2020

Stop it!—the Methods of an Infodemic

Citizens’ Coalition for Economic Justice  [i]
Republic of Korea

April 27, 2020

 

“A moldering stone façade is still lépreuse.” Have you ever heard this word? That meant, nothing is more punitive than to give a disease a meaning. Any important disease, COVID-19, whose causality is murky, without hope, without despair, and for which treatment is ineffectual, tends to be awash in significance. The one thing, the subjects of deepest dread—corruption, decay, pollution, anomie, weakness—could come over to us as an infodemic crisis. The infodemic itself might be another pandemic. In the name of “witch-hunting,” that horror but terror with prejudice and discrimination would be imposed on other people. This disease become[-s] witch-hunting, ugly-disgusting stigmatization. “It’s said to be an Adjectival disease-like,” Susan Sontag said.

In this regard, the cardinal fact upon witch-hunting with the whole blame of mass is that this stigmatization is the nature of an infodemic on today’s crisis—Jesus Christ!

So, out of the crisis, WE are NOT fighting with Asian “foes” whom we are to thrash and overcome and vanquish and punish, and then abandon them. They are to be our neighbors—NAY, they are to be our fellow-citizens. Whatever be their faults, whatever be their incidents or coincidences then and now against us, if we are to stay in our hometown at all, they also will be here; and not only so, but they are indistinguishable from the great majority of our citizens around the world.

Now anyone who rightly appreciates these facts, what will they said are to be our public enemies in the pandemic crisis which we have undertaken in Wuhan nor our hometown?

The first ought to be to impose upon our Asianphobes without racial prejudice and any discrimination. But the second is to impress upon them our ultimate and essential friendliness towards them.

 

             All the best. Thank you for all the medical teams.

 

 

 

[i] Both statements were contributed by Hochul M. Jung ([email protected]) to the United Nations Economic and Social Council for discussion in the 2020 High-Level Segment (HLS) and Political Forum (HLPF) on Sustainable Development and with respect to the theme: “Accelerated action and transformative pathways: realizing the decade of action and delivery for sustainable development.” The written statement referred to the CCEJ’s visionary statement for Korean society from 2020 to 2030. And the particular theme: the current concerns about COVID-19. You can see this information: http://sdg.iisd.org/news/hlpf-2020-to-focus-on-accelerated-action-transformative-pathways/

If you need more information:
Please, visit us: http://ccej.or.kr/eng/who-we-are/about-us/;
Refer to our Achievements (RLA, 2003): http://www.rightlivelihoodaward.org/laureates/citizens-coalition-for-economic-justice-ccej/

기타 위 행사와 관련된 정보는 다음의 링크를 직접 참조하시면 확인할 수 있습니다.
https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/hlpf/2020

 

200426 [Written Statement] by CCEJ, A New Vision for the Future in Our Society

200427 [Oral Statement] Remarks by CCEJ, Stop it!—the Methods of an Infodemic

문의: 국제팀 정호철 간사 (02-766-5623)

화, 2020/04/28- 03:31
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