海外の反日宣伝活動に英語で対応するスレ Part 30

このエントリーをはてなブックマークに追加
423名無しさん@英語勉強中
新潟氏ねよ! マジで田中の息の掛かった所は最悪だな、
未だに糞真紀子を当選させたりしてるし、サイテー!

One of the first North Korean agents to go public with his story was the late Chang Young Ung, a Japanese-born Korean who was a high-level member of Chongryun in Kobe.
Chang, code name Blacksnake, spied on Japan for over a quarter century until the early 1990s.
His memoirs, published in late 1999, were the first of their kind. The book sent shock waves through Japan.

Chang told The Japan Times in 2000, the year before he died, that he helped move billions of yen in money and goods into North Korea.

During the 1970s and 1980s it was ridiculously easy to transfer all sorts of sensitive electronic parts and funnel cash to North Korea.
Port authorities in Japan, especially in Niigata, didn't bother to carefully inspect either the cargo or hand luggage of passengers on ships to North Korea," Chang said.

How much cash from Japan has ended up in North Korea will never be known but most experts say it is at least in the tens of trillions of yen.
during the bubble economy of the late 1980s and early 1990s, the amount moved, both legally and illegally,
was about 60 billion yen annually.

Sakamoto said that much of the illegal cash in the 1970s and 1980s was from pachinko parlors run by Chongyrun members, who would stuff it into suitcases and walk them past customs officials,
especially in Niigata Prefecture, where a ferry runs to North Korea. By the mid-1990s, he said, that income had all but dried up.

"Chongyrun and Niigata customs officials had an agreement whereby passengers wouldn't be searched too closely.
And often, inspections of the cargo were nothing more than quick glance.

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20061021f1.html