Os agressores não podem ser perdoados!!!

Mais uma bela peça da retórica norte-coreana! Confesso que estou me divertindo com isso! Façamos figa para que o democrático regime de Pyong Yang seja preservado! (Afinal, já perdi Kadafi, Chávez, Chico Cézar (Kim Jong-il, o pai de Bob Filho), e Berlusconi… o mundo está ficando sem graça…).

North Korea Rally

Aggressors Can Never Be Pardoned: Minju Joson

Pyongyang, April 5 (KCNA) — The decisive battle with the U.S. imperialists and their followers will be a patriotic sacred war of justice based on the truth that the DPRK cannot co-exist with the aggressors keen on bringing it down and daring hurt the supreme dignity, the whole of the life and soul of its army and people.

Minju Joson Friday says this in a bylined commentary.

The nearly 70 year-long moves of the U.S. to antagonize the DPRK are unheard-of ones in their persistency and cruelty, the news analyst says, and goes on:

The U.S. has persisted in its moves to ignite a war against the DPRK for over 60 years after suffering a bitter defeat in the June 25 Korean war started by it to stifle the DPRK in its cradle.

The U.S. is pushing forward in the practical phase the moves for unleashing a nuclear war against the DPRK, taking issue with it over its satellite launch for peaceful purposes and nuclear test for self-defence.

The south Korean puppet forces are daring hurt the national treasure of Songun Korea, a crystal of the profound reverence and pure loyalty of all its service personnel and people. Continuar lendo

Moçambique: entre Noruega e Nigéria

Boa reportagem da BBC sobre o destino de Moçambique, após a descoberta de petróleo no país. Com honrosas exceções, a maldição do petróleo continua prevalecendo. De toda maneira, boas oportunidades de negócio podem ser avistadas para quem estiver disposto a atuar na ex-colônia portuguesa e chegar primeiro…

Chamine petroleo

BBCNEWS – Africa – 4 April 2013 

Will Mozambique end up like Nigeria or Norway?

By Alexis AkwagyiramBBC News
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-22008933

The 2011 discovery of a major off-shore gas field, combined with extensive coal reserves inland, has prompted some to suggest that Mozambique, one of the world’s poorest countries, has hit the jackpot.

The gas is thought to be worth an estimated $350bn (£233bn) while projections predict that from 2015 the country could produce 100 million tonnes a year, putting it just outside the top 10 producers in the world. Continuar lendo