NATL WEATHER SERVICE UPGRADES THE TORNADO THAT HIT MOORE, OK ON MON TO AN **

WEATHER SERVICE SAYS THE TORNADO'S PATH WAS 17 MILES LONG, 1.3 MILES WIDE **

SPOX SAYS THE AGENCY UPGRADED THE RATING FROM AN EF-4 BASED ON DAMAGE **

IT'S THE FIRST EF-5 TWISTER TO HIT THE U.S. IN TWO YRS **

LAWMAKERS SAY THE GOVT HAS PLENTY OF FUNDING FOR RECOVERY EFFORTS IN OK **

GOVT HAS MORE THAN $11 BIL IN DISASTER RELIEF FUNDS AND RECOVERY COSTS ARE **

WHITE HOUSE SPOX JAY CARNEY AND TOP LAWMAKERS ON CAPITOL HILL AGREED TUES **

DAMAGE FROM MONDAY'S DEADLY TORNADO IS EXPECTED TO EXCEED THAT OF THE **

THE JOPLIN TWISTER CAUSED SOME $3 BIL IN DAMAGE, INCLUDING $2 BIL IN **

JOPLIN'S EF-5 TORNADO KILLED 158 PEOPLE AND INJURED MORE THAN 1,100 NEARLY **

U.S. OFFICIALS ID FIVE MEN THEY BELIEVE MAY BE BEHIND THE DEADLY 9/11 **

OFFICIALS SAY THEY HAVE ENOUGH EVIDENCE TO JUSTIFY SEIZING THEM BY MILITARY **

HOWEVER, THEY DO NOT HAVE ENOUGH PROOF TO TRY THEM IN A U.S. CIVILIAN COURT **

THE ATTACK LAST SEPT KILLED FOUR AMERICANS, INCLUDING AMB CHRIS STEVENS **

IRS OFFICIAL LOIS LERNER WILL PLEAD THE FIFTH AT A CONGRESSIONAL HEARING ON **

IN A LETTER ADDRESSED TO HOUSE OVERSIGHT CMTE CHMN DARRELL ISSA (R-CA), **

ISSA ALLEGES LERNER HAD PROVIDED FALSE AND MISLEADING INFO TO CONGRESS ON **

LERNER IS THE DIRECTOR OF THE IRS DIVISION THAT HANDLES APPLICATIONS FOR **

JURY BEGINNING DELIBERATIONS IN THE PENALTY PHASE OF THE JODI ARIAS MURDER **

ARIAS ASKED JURORS ON TUES TO GIVE HER LIFE IN PRISON INSTEAD OF THE DEATH **

THE 32-YR-OLD WAS CONVICTED EARLIER THIS MONTH OF FIRST-DEGREE MURDER IN **


 

Taking pictures in North Korea by a foreigner…yikes…read about it in the STATE DEPARTMENT’s JUST RELEASED WARNING ABOUT TRAVEL IN NORTH KOREA

See below…note that even just speaking to a North Korean citizen without permission (despite being lawfully in North Korea) may be considered ESPIONAGE by the North Koreans. 

It is also unlawful to shop at stores that are not designated for shopping by foreigners.  Taking unauthorized pictures may be ESPIONAGE. 

(Note:  I have at least 10,000 pictures from my 3 trips to North Korea!  I just snapped away and never thought twice about it! ugh)

NORTH KOREA

 

September 11, 2012

 

The Department of State continues to warn U.S. citizens about travel to North Korea (Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, or DPRK). The North Korean government will detain, prosecute, and sentence anyone who enters the DPRK without first having received explicit, official permission and an entry visa from its government. Travel by U.S. citizens to North Korea is not routine, and U.S. citizens crossing into North Korea, even accidentally, have been subject to arrest and long-term detention. Since January 2009, four U.S. citizens have been arrested for entering North Korea illegally. In 2010, a fifth U.S. citizen, who had a valid DPRK visa in his U.S. passport, was arrested inside North Korea on unspecified charges. This replaces the Travel Warning for North Korea dated November 3, 2011, to remind US citizens about the risks involved in traveling to the DPRK.

The Government of North Korea imposes heavy fines and long prison sentences with hard labor on persons who enter the country without a valid passport and a North Korean visa. If you travel unescorted inside North Korea without explicit official authorization, North Korean security personnel may view your actions as espionage.

Security personnel may view any unauthorized attempt you make to talk to a North Korean citizen as espionage. North Korean authorities may fine or arrest you for unauthorized currency transactions or for shopping at stores not designated for foreigners.

It is a criminal act in North Korea to show disrespect to the country’s former leaders, Kim Jong Il and Kim Il Sung, or to current leader, Kim Jong Un. North Korean authorities have threatened foreign journalists who questioned the policies or public statements of the DPRK or the actions of the current leadership.

North Korean government authorities may also view taking unauthorized pictures as espionage, confiscate cameras and film and/or detain the photographer. DPRK border officials routinely confiscate visitors’ mobile phones upon arrival, returning the phones only upon departure. Foreign visitors to North Korea may be arrested, detained, or expelled for activities that would not be considered criminal outside the DPRK, including involvement in unsanctioned religious and political activities, engaging in unauthorized travel, or interaction with the local population.

The United States and the DPRK do not have diplomatic and consular relations. Since the United States does not maintain diplomatic or consular relations with North Korea, the U.S. government cannot provide normal consular services to its citizens in North Korea. The Swedish Embassy, the U.S. Protecting Power in the DPRK capital of Pyongyang, provides limited consular services to U.S. citizens traveling in North Korea who are ill, injured, arrested, or who have died while there. However, the Protecting Power cannot get U.S. citizens out of jail or pay their criminal fines.

U.S. citizens who plan to travel to North Korea are strongly encouraged to contact the U.S. Embassy in Beijing, China about their trip by enrolling in the State Department’s Smart Traveler Enrollment Program. If you have received official permission and are going to visit North Korea by transiting China, please take the time to tell the U.S. Embassy in Beijing, China, about your trip. If you check in, we can keep you up to date with important safety and security announcements. Enrollment also makes it easier for friends and family to get in touch with you in an emergency via the U.S. Embassy or Consulate.

China residents can contact U.S. Embassy Beijing directly:

U. S. Embassy Beijing: The Embassy is located next to the Ladies’ Street (Nuren Jie) and Laitai Flower Market, opposite the Kempinski Hotel and Lufthansa shopping Center on Tianze Road near the Liangmaqiao subway stop.

U.S. Embassy Beijing

American Citizens Services Unit

No. 55 An Jia Lou Road

Chaoyang District

Beijing, China 100600

Telephone: (86-10) 8531-4000

Facsimile: (86-10) 8531-3300

Email: amcitbeijing@state.gov

Emergency after-hours telephone: (86-10) 8531-4000

 

You are also strongly encouraged to contact the Embassy of Sweden by telephone or email about your trip. Please provide the Protecting Power with your name, date of birth, dates of your trip, and emergency contact information:

 

The Embassy of Sweden Pyongyang (U.S. Protecting Power) in North Korea.

Munsu-Dong District

Pyongyang, DPRK

Telephone: (850-2) 3817 485 (reception)

Telephone: (850-2) 3817 904, (850-2) 3817 907 (Second Secretary)

Telephone: (850-2) 3817 908, (850-2) 3817 905 (Ambassador)

Facsimile: (850-2) 3817 663

Email: ambassaden.pyongyang@foreign.ministry.se

U.S. citizens should also consult the Department of State’s Country Specific Information for North Korea, and the current Worldwide Caution, which are located on the Department’s Internet travel website. U.S. citizens can obtain current information on safety and security conditions by calling 1-888-407-4747 toll-free in the United States and Canada or, from outside the United States and Canada, +1-202-501-4444. These numbers are available from 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Eastern Time, Monday through Friday (except U.S. federal holidays).

 

Stay up to date by bookmarking our Bureau of Consular Affairs website, which contains the current Travel Warnings and Travel Alerts as well as the Worldwide Caution. Follow us on Twitter and the Bureau of Consular Affairs page on facebook as well. You can also download our free Smart Traveler App, available through iTunes and the Android market to have travel information at your fingertips.

 

 









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