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A martial arts enthusiast pulls a vehicle with a rope connected to his eye sockets during a performance in Hefei, Anhui province November 30, 2009. Picture taken November 30, 2009. REUTERS/China Daily

Pictures of the year: Oddly

A look at the year's best strange and unusual photos.   Slideshow 

    Disputed Korean rocks bring banking, ring tones

    SEOUL
    Fri Aug 1, 2008 7:59pm EDT
    South Korean navy vessels participate in a defence drill with its air force near Dokdo on the East Sea, July 30, 2008. The small cluster of islands is called Takeshima in Japanese. REUTERS/South Korean Navy/Handout

    SEOUL (Reuters) - A furious dispute with Japan over who owns a desolate cluster of rocks has turned into a marketing opportunity for South Korean business tapping into patriotic fervor.

    Oddly Enough

    One bank has set up a popular "cyber branch" in the tiny Dokdo islands -- called Takeshima in Japanese -- which lie about halfway across the sea to Japan.

    Mobile phone companies have joined in.

    Some have ringtones based on a song eulogizing South Korean rule over the islands. And one is offering a "Dokdo is our territory" call plan that lets subscribers donate to a campaign to promote the islands internationally as South Korean territory.

    And clothing companies are busy pushing a range of T-shirts on the theme, with slogans such as "I love Dokdo."

    One daily showed a photograph of an official handing out badges to travelers at the country's main international airport with the slogan :"Dokdo is Korean territory!!."

    The latest furor erupted in July after Japan, Korea's colonial ruler from 1910-45, advised schools to teach that the islands were Japanese.

    Both countries say their claims go back centuries though the diplomatic squabble has looked more intense after it was realized that the cluster of rocks might sit above valuable gas deposits.

    Local media reported that some of the products on sale are leftover stock from the last patriotic flurry over the islands in 2005.

    "It's natural that companies are grabbing the chance to take advantage ... when the patriotic sentiment is at its peak," said Kim Rando, a consumer studies professor at Seoul National University.

    "But this marketing strategy that appeals only to patriotism could give rise to excessive nationalism," he added.

    (Reporting by Kim Junghyun; Writing by Jonathan Thatcher)



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