
6 Americans detained in South Korea for trying to send rice and Bibles to North Korea by sea
SEOUL, South Korea — Six Americans were detained Friday in South Korea for trying to send 1,600 plastic bottles filled with rice, miniature Bibles, $1 bills and USB sticks toward North Korea by sea, police said.
The Americans were apprehended on front-line Gwanghwa Island before throwing the bottles into the sea so they could float toward North Korean shores on the tides, two Gwanghwa police officers said. They said the Americans are being investigated on allegations they violated the law on the management of safety and disasters.
The officers, who requested anonymity because they weren't authorized to speak to media on the issue, refused to provide personal details of the Americans in line with privacy rules.
Gwanghwa police said they haven't found what is on the USB sticks.
The U.S. Embassy in South Korea had no immediate public comment.
For years, activists have sought to float plastic bottles or fly balloons across the border carrying anti-North Korea propaganda leaflets and USB thumb drives carrying South Korean dramas and K-pop songs, a practice that was banned from 2021 to 2023 over concerns it could inflame tensions with the North.
North Korea has responded to previous balloon campaigns with fiery rhetoric and other shows of anger, and last year the country launched its own balloons across the border, dumping rubbish on various South Korean sites including the presidential compound.
In 2023, South Korea's Constitutional Court struck down a controversial law that criminalized the sending of leaflets and other items to North Korea, calling it an excessive restriction on free speech.
But since taking office in early June, the new liberal government of President Lee Jae Myung is pushing to crack down on such civilian campaigns with other safety-related laws to avoid a flare-up tensions with North Korea and promote the safety of front-line South Korean residents.
On June 14, police detained an activist for allegedly flying balloons toward North Korea from Gwanghwa Island.
Lee took office with a promise to restart long-dormant talks with North Korea and establish peace on the Korean Peninsula. Lee's government halted frontline anti-Pyongyang propaganda loudspeaker broadcasts to try to ease military tensions. North Korean broadcasts have not been heard in South Korean front-line towns since then.
But it's unclear if North Korea will respond to Lee's conciliatory gesture after vowing last year to sever relations with South Korea and abandon the goal of peaceful Korean reunification. Official talks between the Koreas have been stalled since 2019, when U.S.-led diplomacy on North Korean denuclearization derailed.
Hyung-jin Kim, The Associated Press
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
2 hours ago
- CTV News
More Americans applying for refugee status in Canada, data shows
Canadian and American flags fly near the Ambassador Bridge at the Canada-USA border crossing in Windsor, Ont. on Saturday, March 21, 2020. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/Rob Gurdebeke) More Americans applied for refugee status in Canada in the first half of 2025 than in all of 2024, and more than in any full year since 2019, according to data published on Thursday by Canada's Immigration and Refugee Board. Their share of total refugee claims - 245 of about 55,000 - is small and Canada's acceptance of U.S. refugee claims has historically been low. Asylum-seekers from other countries crossing the land border from the U.S. are sent back under a bilateral agreement with the reasoning that they should apply for asylum in the first 'safe' country they arrived in. ADVERTISEMENT Last year 204 people filed refugee claims in Canada with the United States as their country of alleged persecution. Claims from the U.S. also rose during the first Trump administration. The data does not say why the claims were made. Eight lawyers told Reuters they are hearing from more trans Americans wanting to leave. Reuters spoke with a trans woman from Arizona who came to Canada in April to file a claim, and to a woman who came to file a claim on behalf of her young trans daughter. U.S. President Donald Trump and the U.S. Supreme Court have rolled back trans rights, restricting who can access gender-affirming care, who can serve in the military, who can use what bathroom and who can play in some sports. To gain asylum, refugees must convince Canada's Immigration and Refugee Board that nowhere in the U.S. is safe for them. The Board recently added documents from groups such as Human Rights Watch examining the U.S.'s treatment of LGBTQ people to its national documentation package detailing country conditions. A U.S. Department of Homeland Security spokesperson said people claiming refugee status in Canada would create room for individuals 'facing actual fear and persecution.' Reporting by Anna Mehler Paperny in Toronto; Editing by Caroline Stauffer and Sandra Maler


Winnipeg Free Press
3 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Trump blames renewable energy for rising electricity prices. Experts point elsewhere
WASHINGTON (AP) — With electricity prices rising at more than twice the rate of inflation, President Donald Trump has lashed out at renewable energy sources such as wind and solar power, blaming them for skyrocketing energy costs. Trump called wind and solar power 'THE SCAM OF THE CENTURY!' in a social media post and vowed not to approve wind or 'farmer destroying Solar' projects. 'The days of stupidity are over in the USA!!!' he wrote on his Truth Social site. Energy analysts say renewable sources have little to do with recent price hikes, which are based on increased demand, aging infrastructure and increasingly extreme weather events such as wildfires that are exacerbated by climate change. The rapid growth of cloud computing and artificial intelligence has fueled demand for energy-hungry data centers that need power to run servers, storage systems, networking equipment and cooling systems. Increased use of electric vehicles also has boosted demand, even as the Trump administration and congressional Republicans move to restrict tax credits and other incentives for EV purchases approved under the Biden administration. Natural gas prices, meanwhile, are rising sharply amid increased exports to Europe and other international customers. More than 40% of U.S. electricity is generated by natural gas. Trump promised during the 2024 campaign to lower Americans' electric bills by 50%. Democrats have been quick to blame him for the price hikes, citing actions to hamstring clean energy in the sprawling tax-and-spending cut bill approved last month, as well as regulations since then to further restrict wind and solar power. Advocates say renewables provide the extra energy needed 'Now more than ever, we need more energy, not less, to meet our increased energy demand and power our grid. Instead of increasing our energy supply Donald Trump is taking a sledgehammer to the clean energy sector, killing jobs and projects,' said New Mexico Sen. Martin Heinrich, the top Democrat on the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee. The GOP bill will cost thousands of jobs and impose higher energy costs nationwide, Heinrich and other critics said. A report from Energy Innovation, a non-partisan think tank, found the GOP tax law will increase the average family's energy bill by $130 annually by 2030. 'By quickly phasing out technology-neutral clean energy tax credits and adding complex material sourcing requirements,' the tax law will 'significantly hamper the development of domestic electricity generation capacity,' the report said. Renewable advocates were more blunt. 'The real scam is blaming solar for fossil fuel price spikes,' the Solar Energy Industries Association said in response to Trump's post. 'Farmers, families, and businesses choose solar to save money, preserve land, and escape high costs of the old, dirty fuels being forced on them by this administration,' the group added. Wind and solar offer some of the cheapest and fastest ways to provide electric power, said Jason Grumet, CEO of the American Clean Power Association, another industry group. More than 90% of new energy capacity that came online in the U.S. in 2024 was clean energy, he said. 'Blocking cheap, clean energy while doubling down on outdated fossil fuels makes no economic or environmental sense,' added Ted Kelly, director of U.S. clean energy for the Environmental Defense Fund, a nonprofit advocacy group. Partisanship anchors debate on rising energy prices Energy Secretary Chris Wright blamed rising prices on 'momentum' from Biden-era policies that backed renewable power over fossil fuel sources such as oil, coal and natural gas. 'That momentum is pushing prices up right now. And who's going to get blamed for it? We're going to get blamed because we're in office,' Wright told POLITICO during a visit to Iowa last week. About 60 percent of the state's electricity comes from wind. Not all the pushback comes from Democrats. Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley, a Republican who backs wind power, has placed a hold on three Treasury nominees to ensure wind and solar have 'an appropriate glidepath for the orderly phase-out of the tax credits' approved in the 2022 climate law under former President Joe Biden. Grassley said he was encouraged by new Treasury guidance that limits tax credits for wind and solar projects but does not eliminate them. The guidance 'seems to offer a viable path forward for the wind and solar industries to continue to meet increased energy demand,' Grassley said in a statement. John Quigley, senior fellow at the Kleinman Center for Energy Policy at the University of Pennsylvania, said the Republican tax law will increase U.S. power bills by slowing construction of solar, wind, and battery projects and could eliminate as many as 45,000 jobs by 2030. Trump administration polices that emphasize fossil fuels are 'an extremely backward force in this conversation,' Quigley said. 'Besides ceding the clean energy future to other nations, we are paying for fossil foolishness with more than money — with our health and with our safety. And our children will pay an even higher price.' ___

3 hours ago
Carney and Trump speak for the first time since blowing past trade deal deadline
Prime Minister Mark Carney spoke to his U.S. counterpart by phone Thursday — the first time the leaders have spoken since the two sides failed to reach a deal on a trade agreement earlier this month. According to a short readout from the Prime Minister's Office, Carney and U.S. President Donald Trump discussed current trade challenges, opportunities and shared priorities in what officials described as a productive and wide-ranging conversation. Carney raised establishing a new economic and security relationship between Canada and the U.S., the PMO said. The two leaders also discussed how to build on President Trump's leadership to support long-term peace and security for Ukraine and Europe — an apparent reference to the U.S. effort to cobble together support from allies to help protect Ukraine from Russia through security guarantees, if those two countries can reach a peace deal. Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand met U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio in Washington early on Thursday to discuss Ukraine. Enlarge image (new window) U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, right, meets with Foreign Minister Anita Anand at the State Department in Washington, Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025. Photo: AP Photo / Cliff Owen A spokesperson for Carney said the prime minister initiated the call with Trump. Canada and the U.S. have been locked in a trade war since Trump slapped tariffs on Canadian goods earlier this year to supposedly spur a crackdown on drugs at the border. The border-related tariff, which Trump raised to 35 per cent at the end of July (new window), applies to virtually all Canadian exports to the U.S. that are not compliant with the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA). There's also a lower rate for energy products and potash. There is no evidence Canada is a major supplier of drugs like fentanyl (new window). In fact, last year, Canadian officials nabbed more drugs coming from the U.S. (new window) than what the Americans captured coming in from Canada. In addition to the border-related tariffs, Trump has levied punishing section 232 tariffs on Canadian steel, aluminum, automobiles and copper, levies that have caused economic dislocation on both sides of the border. On the sidelines of the G7 summit Canada hosted in Kananaskis, Alta., earlier this summer, both Carney and Trump agreed to reach some sort of trade deal by late July — it was later pushed back to Aug. 1 — but failed to come to terms on a mutually agreeable pact. Canada-U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc said the government wasn't willing to accept a bad deal from the Americans. We have always said that we would not accept just any agreement. We would accept an agreement that was in the interests of workers in the Canadian economy. And at the end of the day, that agreement was not yet in sight, LeBlanc said after the Aug. 1 deadline. At the time, a White House official told CBC News a deal was not in hand because Canada has repeatedly demonstrated a lack of seriousness in trade discussions as it relates to removing trade barriers. Trump has repeatedly railed against Canada's system of supply management for some agricultural products like dairy.