Author Topic: Diplomatic decolonization  (Read 6617 times)

90sRetroFan

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Re: Diplomatic decolonization
« Reply #105 on: June 03, 2022, 08:11:49 pm »
How colonized is North Korea?

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/kim-jong-un-congratulates-queen-023039845.html

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(Bloomberg) -- Kim Jong Un congratulated Queen Elizabeth II on the anniversary of her ascension to the throne, as the young North Korean leader sent his first public message to the 96-year-old monarch.

“I extend my congratulations to you and your people on the occasion of the National Day of your country, the official birthday of Your Majesty,” North Korea’s Foreign Ministry said of the note that was sent Thursday from its 38-year-old leader.



Perhaps Kim needs a history lesson about how it used to be OK to be "white" in Korea:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Kingdom%E2%80%93Korea_Treaty_of_1883

Quote
Ministers from the United Kingdom to Korea were appointed in accordance with this treaty; and these diplomats were: Sir Harry Parkes, appointed in 1884; Sir John Walsham, appointed in 1885; Sir Nicholas O'Conor, in 1892; Sir Claude Maxwell, in 1896; John Jordan in 1898.[3]

The treaty remained in effect even after the Japanese protectorate was established in 1905,[4] and only came to and end in 1910 when Japan annexed Korea.

Under the treaty, Great Britain obtained extraterritorial rights in Korea and from 1883 to 1910, British subjects in Korea were not subject to the jurisdiction of Korean courts, but instead were tried or had civil cases brought against them in British consular courts

At least we can say that Windsor-worship is another thing that Kim and Trump have in common.....