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This Happened

This Happened — July 27: Korean War Armistice

The Korean War armistice agreement at Panmunjom was signed on this day in 1953, ending three years of fighting.

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What led to the signing of the Korean War Armistice in Panmunjom?

The armistice was the result of negotiations between the United Nations Command, representing the forces supporting South Korea, and the Korean People's Army and the Chinese People's Volunteer Army, representing North Korea and China, respectively. The negotiations aimed to establish a ceasefire and restore peace on the Korean Peninsula.

What were the terms of the Korean War armistice agreement?

The armistice agreement established a demilitarized zone separating North and South Korea along the 38th parallel. It also included provisions for the exchange of prisoners of war and the establishment of a military armistice commission to oversee the ceasefire.

How did the armistice affect the Korean Peninsula and its division?

The armistice effectively maintained the division between North and South Korea, solidifying the separation that had emerged during the war. It created a lasting demilitarized zone that serves as a buffer between the two nations and has become an iconic symbol of the Korean War and its unresolved status.

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Society

Not Just Paris! Mongolia Is Also Battling Bedbugs (And Cockroaches... And Centipedes...)

Public extermination services were halted during the pandemic. Residents have embraced cheaper DIY solutions — but there are risks.

Photo of a bed bug

A bed bug photographed in the Biology Institute at the Technical University (TU) in Dresden, Germany

Khorloo Khukhnokhoi

ERDENET, ORKHON PROVINCE, MONGOLIA — Oyuka dresses for domestic battle. Mask. Gloves. Hair shrouded under a black hood. A disposable white gown reminiscent of a surgeon. It’s 2 p.m. on a Tuesday; her husband is at work and their two young children are at school. She shoves the oven, freezer and washing machine away from the kitchen walls and grabs a lime-green spray can from behind the bathtub, where it’s out of the children’s reach. “Magic Cleaner,” the bottle says in Chinese. A pesticide.

Oyuka — who asked to be referred to only by her nickname, out of fear of being criticized by her neighbors — lives on the eighth floor of a 10-story building in Erdenet, Mongolia’s second-largest city, where towering apartments cram together like subway riders. Lots of people means lots of trash, which means lots and lots of bugs. Cockroaches. Bedbugs. Centipedes. And what Mongolians call black bugs, speck-like insects that Oyuka fears will bite her children and make them sick.

Over the past year, Oyuka started noticing them in corners, under furniture, on windowsills. She increased how often she sprayed Magic Cleaner, from occasionally to every three months — even though the smell makes her stomach lurch. “Because I don’t know any other good poison, I use this poison often,” she says.

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