North Korea: Difference between revisions
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{{redirect-distinguish2|Democratic People's Republic of Korea|the [[South Korea|Republic of Korea]] (South Korea)}} |
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North Korea is the worst place in the WORLD!!!!! |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2013}} |
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{{pp-semi-indef}}{{pp-move-indef}} |
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{{coord|40|00|N|127|00|E|display=title}} |
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{{Infobox country |
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|conventional_long_name = Democratic People's Republic of Korea |
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|native_name = {{unbulleted list |{{lower|0.2em|{{nobold|{{lang|ko|조선민주주의인민공화국}}}}}} |{{small|''Chosŏn Minjujuŭi Inmin Konghwaguk''}}<ref>{{cite web |title=Administrative Population and Divisions Figures (#26)|work=DPRK: The Land of the Morning Calm |publisher=Permanent Committee on Geographical Names for British Official Use |date=April 2003 |url=http://www.pcgn.org.uk/North%20Korea-%20Land%20of%20the%20Morning%20Calm-%202003.pdf |format=PDF |accessdate=10 October 2006}}{{dead link|date=October 2013}}</ref>}} |
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|common_name = North Korea |
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|image_flag = Flag of North Korea.svg |
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|image_coat = Coat of Arms of North Korea.svg |
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|symbol_type = Emblem |
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|national_motto = {{unbulleted list|《강성대국》|{{small|({{lang-en|"Powerful and Prosperous Nation"}})}}}} |
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|national_anthem = {{unbulleted list|《애국가》|"''[[Aegukka]]''"{{nbsp|2}}{{small|([[Korean romanization|transliteration]])}} |{{small|({{lang-en|"The Patriotic Song"}})}} |<center></center>}} |
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|image_map = North Korea (orthographic projection).svg |
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|map_caption = Area controlled by the Democratic People's Republic of Korea shown in green |
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|capital = [[Pyongyang]] |
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|latd=39 |latm=2 |latNS=N |longd=125 |longm=45 |longEW=E |
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|largest_city = [[Pyongyang]] |
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|official_languages = [[Korean language|Korean]] |
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|languages_type = [[Official script]]s |
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|languages = [[Hangul]] |
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|ethnic_groups = |ethnic_groups_year = |
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|demonym = {{hlist |North Korean |[[Korean people|Korean]]}} |
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|government_type = ''[[Juche]]'' [[single-party state]] <small>(de jure)</small><br/>[[Single-party state|Single-party]] [[Totalitarianism|totalitarian]] [[military|military dictatorship]] under<br/>[[hereditary]] [[dictatorship]]<ref name=UPI>{{cite news|title=North Korea enshrines hereditary rule|url=http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News/2013/08/12/North-Korea-enshrines-hereditary-rule/UPI-17261376325304/|accessdate=5 September 2013|newspaper=UPI|date=14 August 2013}}</ref> <small>(de facto)</small> |
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|leader_name1 = [[Kim Il-sung]] |
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|leader_title1 = [[Eternal President]] |
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|leader_title2 = [[Eternal WPK General Secretary]] |
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|leader_name2 = [[Kim Jong-il]] |
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|leader_title3 = {{nowrap|[[List of leaders of North Korea|Supreme Leader]]}} |
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|leader_name3 = [[Kim Jong-un]]{{ref label|aaa|a|}} |
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|leader_title4 = {{nowrap|[[List of heads of state of North Korea|Chairman of the<br/>Assembly Presidium]]}} |
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|leader_name4 = [[Kim Yong-nam]]{{ref label|bbb|b|}} |
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|leader_title5 = [[Premier of North Korea|Premier]] |
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|leader_name5 = [[Pak Pong-ju]] |
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|legislature = [[Supreme People's Assembly]] |
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|sovereignty_type = [[Soviet Civil Authority|Establishment]] |
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|established_event2 = [[Victory over Japan Day|Liberation]] |
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|established_date2 = 15 August 1945 |
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|established_event3 = {{nowrap|Formal declaration}} |
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|established_date3 = 9 September 1948 |
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|area_rank = 98th |
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|area_magnitude = 1 E11 |
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|area_km2 = 120,540 |
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|area_sq_mi = 46,528 |
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|percent_water = 4.87 |
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|population_estimate = 24,895,000 |
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|population_estimate_rank = 48th |
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|population_estimate_year = 2013 |
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|population_census = 24,052,231<ref name="Nkorea2008">{{cite web |url=http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/sources/census/2010_PHC/North_Korea/Final%20national%20census%20report.pdf |title=DPR Korea 2008 Population Census National Report |year=2009 |publisher=DPRK Central Bureau of Statistics |accessdate=19 February 2011 |location=Pyongyang}}</ref> |
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|population_census_year = 2011 |
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|population_density_km2 = 198.3 |
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|population_density_sq_mi = 513.8 |
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|population_density_rank = 63rd |
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|GDP_PPP = $40 billion<ref name="factbook">[https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/kn.html North Korea], [[CIA World Factbook]], accessed on 31 March 2013.</ref> |
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|GDP_PPP_rank = |
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|GDP_PPP_year = 2011 |
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|GDP_PPP_per_capita = $1,800<ref name="factbook"/> |
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|GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank = |
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|GDP_nominal = $12.4 billion<ref name="unsd">[http://unstats.un.org/unsd/snaama/selbasicFast.asp National Accounts Main Aggregate Database], [[United Nations Statistics Division]], December 2012.</ref> |
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|GDP_nominal_rank = |
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|GDP_nominal_year = 2011 |
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|GDP_nominal_per_capita = $506<ref name="unsd"/> |
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|GDP_nominal_per_capita_rank = |
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|Gini_year = 2007 |Gini_change = decrease <!--increase/decrease/steady--> |Gini = 31 |Gini_ref = <ref>[[List of countries by income equality]]</ref> |
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|HDI_year = 2008 |
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|HDI_change = decrease <!--increase/decrease/steady--> |
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|HDI = 0.733 <!--number only--> |
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|HDI_ref = <ref name="HDI">{{cite web |url=http://www.unescap.org/pdd/publications/workingpaper/wp_09_02.pdf |title=Filling Gaps in the Human Development Index |publisher=United Nations ESCAP |date=February 2009 |accessdate=February 2009}}</ref> |
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|HDI_rank = 156th |
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|currency = [[North Korean won]] (₩) |
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|currency_code = KPW |
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|time_zone = [[Korea Standard Time]] |
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|utc_offset = +9 |
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|time_zone_DST = |DST_note = |utc_offset_DST = |
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|antipodes = |
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|date_format = {{unbulleted list |yy, yyyy년 mm월 dd일 |{{nowrap|yy, yyyy/mm/dd {{resize|75%|([[Juche calendar|CE–1911]]{{\}}[[Common Era|CE]])}}}}}} |
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|drives_on = right |
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|iso3166code = |
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|calling_code = [[Telephone numbers in North Korea|+850]] |
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|cctld = [[.kp]] |
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|footnote_a = {{note|aaa}} Kim Jong-un holds four concurrent positions: First Secretary of the Workers' Party, Chairman of the Central Military Commission, First Chairman of the National Defence Commission and Supreme Commander of the People's Army, serve as the "supreme leader" of the DPRK. |
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|footnote_b = {{note|bbb}} Kim Yong-nam is the "[[Head of State|head of state]] for foreign affairs". The position of president (formerly head of state) was written out of the constitution in 1998. [[Kim Il-sung]], who died in 1994, was given the appellation "[[Eternal President of the Republic|Eternal President]]" in its preamble. |
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}} |
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{{contains Korean text|compact=yes}} |
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'''North Korea''' ({{audio|En-us-North Korea.ogg|listen|help=no}}), officially the '''Democratic People's Republic of Korea''' ('''DPRK'''; [[Hangul|Chosŏn'gŭl]]: {{lang|ko|조선민주주의인민공화국}}; ''Chosŏn Minjujuŭi Inmin Konghwaguk''), is a country in [[East Asia]], in the northern part of the [[Korean Peninsula]]. The name Korea is derived from [[Goryeo]], a dynasty which ruled in the Middle Ages. The capital and largest city is [[Pyongyang]]. North Korea shares a land border with [[China]] to the north and north-west, along the [[Yalu River|Amnok]] (Yalu) and [[Tumen River|Tumen]] rivers. A small section of the Tumen River also forms North Korea's short border with [[Russia]] to the northeast.<ref name=NYT22112>{{cite news |title=Manchurian Trivia |url=http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/02/21/manchurian-trivia/ |accessdate=27 August 2012 |newspaper=The New York Times |date=21 February 2012 |author=Frank Jacobs |format=blog by expert}}</ref> The [[Korean Demilitarized Zone]] marks the boundary between North Korea and [[South Korea]]. The legitimacy of this border is not accepted by either side, as both states claim to be the legitimate government of the entire peninsula. |
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The [[Korean Peninsula]] was governed by the [[Korean Empire]] from the late 19th century to the early 20th century, until it was [[Korea under Japanese rule|annexed by the Empire of Japan]] in 1910. After the [[surrender of Japan]] at the end of [[World War II]], Japanese rule ceased. The Korean Peninsula was [[Division of Korea|divided]] into two occupied zones in 1945, with the northern part of the peninsula occupied by the [[Soviet Civil Authority|Soviet Union]] and the southern portion by the [[USAMGIK|United States]]. A [[United Nations]]-supervised election held in 1948 led to the creation of separate Korean governments for the two occupation zones: the Democratic People's Republic of Korea in the north, and the Republic of Korea in the south. The conflicting claims of sovereignty led to the [[Korean War]] in 1950. An [[Korean Armistice Agreement|armistice]] in 1953 committed both to a cease-fire, but the two countries remain officially at war because a formal peace treaty was never signed.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,528320,00.html|title=U.S.: N. Korea Boosting Guerrilla War Capabilities|agency=Associated Press|date=23 June 2009|publisher=FOX News Network, LLC|accessdate=4 July 2009}}</ref> Both states were accepted into the United Nations in 1991.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.nytimes.com/1991/05/29/world/north-korea-reluctantly-seeks-un-seat.html|title=North Korea Reluctantly Seeks U.N. Seat|last=Sanger|first=David E.|date=29 May 1991|publisher=The New York Times Company|accessdate=4 July 2009}}</ref> |
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Although the DPRK officially describes itself as a [[Juche|''Juche'' Korean-style socialist republic]]<ref>[[wikisource:Constitution of North Korea (1972)|Constitution of North Korea]], Chapter I, Article 1: "The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea is an independent socialist State".</ref> and [[Elections in North Korea|elections]] are held, it is widely considered a [[dictatorship]] that has been described as [[totalitarian]] and [[Stalinist]]{{#tag:ref| |
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<ref>{{Cite news |
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| url = http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/08/28/wnkorea128.xml |
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| title = North Korea power struggle looms |
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| accessdate=31 October 2007 |
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| last=Spencer |
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| first=Richard |
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| authorlink= |
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| date=28 August 2007 |
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| work=The Telegraph (online version of United Kingdom's national newspaper) |
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| quote=A power struggle to succeed Kim Jong-il as leader of North Korea's Stalinist dictatorship may be looming after his eldest son was reported to have returned from semi-voluntary exile. |
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| location=London |
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}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |
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| url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/article2388356.ece |
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| title=North Korea's nuclear 'deal' leaves Japan feeling nervous |
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| accessdate=31 October 2007 |
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| last=Parry |
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| first=Richard Lloyd |
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| authorlink=Richard Lloyd Parry |
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| date=5 September 2007 |
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| work=The Times (online version of United Kingdom's national newspaper of record) |
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| quote=The US Government contradicted earlier North Korean claims that it had agreed to remove the Stalinist dictatorship’s designation as a terrorist state and to lift economic sanctions, as part of talks aimed at disarming Pyongyang of its nuclear weapons. |
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| location=London |
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}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |
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| url=http://socialistworld.net/eng/2003/02/08korea.html |
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| title=The Korean crisis |
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| accessdate=31 October 2007 |
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| last=Walsh |
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| first=Lynn |
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| authorlink=Lynn Walsh |
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| date=8 February 2003 |
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| work=CWI online: Socialism Today, February 2003 edition, journal of the Socialist Party, CWI England and Wales |
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| publisher=socialistworld.net, website of the committee for a worker’s international |
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| quote=Kim Jong-il's regime needs economic concessions to avoid collapse, and just as crucially needs an end to the strategic siege imposed by the US since the end of the Korean war (1950–53). Pyongyang's nuclear [[brinkmanship]], though potentially dangerous, is driven by fear rather than by militaristic ambition. The rotten Stalinist dictatorship faces the prospect of an implosion. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, which deprived North Korea of vital economic support, the regime has consistently attempted to secure from the US a non-aggression pact, recognition of its sovereignty, and economic assistance. The US's equally consistent refusal to enter into direct negotiations with North Korea, effectively ruling out a peace treaty to formally close the 1950–53 Korean war, has encouraged the regime to resort to nuclear blackmail. |
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}}</ref><ref name="nysuccess">{{Cite news |
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| url=http://www.nytimes.com/2003/10/02/international/asia/02CND-KORE.html?ex=1380513600&en=a29d7f1e49aabee0&ei=5007&partner=USERLAND |
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| title=North Korea Says It Is Using Plutonium to Make A-Bombs |
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| accessdate=31 October 2007 |
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| last=Brooke |
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| first=James |
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| authorlink=James Brooke (journalist) |
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| date=2 October 2003 |
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| work=The New York Times |
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| quote=North Korea, run by a Stalinist dictatorship for almost six decades, is largely closed to foreign reporters and it is impossible to independently check today's claims. |
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}}</ref><ref name="intimes">{{cite news |
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| url=http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Let_The_Music_Play_On/articleshow/2859521.cms |
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| title=Leader Article: Let The Music Play On |
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| accessdate=27 March 2008 |
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| last=Buruma |
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| first=Ian |
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| authorlink=Ian Buruma |
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| date=13 March 2008 |
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| work=The Times of India |
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| quote=North Korea, officially known as the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, is one of the world's most oppressive, closed, and vicious dictatorships. It is perhaps the last living example of pure totalitarianism – control of the state over every aspect of human life. |
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}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |
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| url = http://freedomhouse.org/template.cfm?page=22&year=2006&country=6993 |
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| title=Freedom in the World, 2006|publisher=Freedom House|accessdate=13 February 2007 |
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| quote=Citizens of North Korea cannot change their government democratically. North Korea is a totalitarian dictatorship and one of the most restrictive countries in the world.}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |
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| url = http://www.economist.com/media/pdf/DEMOCRACY_TABLE_2007_v3.pdf |
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| title=Economist Intelligence Unit democracy index 2006 |
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| accessdate=9 October 2007 |year=2007 |format=PDF |publisher=[[Economist Intelligence Unit]]}} |
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North Korea ranked in last place (167)</ref><ref>{{Cite news |
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| url=http://www.economist.com/world/asia/displaystory.cfm?story_id=11465278 |
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| title=A portrait of North Korea's new rich |
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| accessdate=18 June 2009|date=29 May 2008|work=[[The Economist]] |
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| quote=EVERY developing country worth its salt has a bustling middle class that is transforming the country and thrilling the markets. So does Stalinist North Korea. |
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}}</ref>}}<ref name=UPI/><ref name=scmp-yoo-sep-18-2013>{{cite web|url=http://www.scmp.com/news/asia/article/1296394/democratic-peoples-monarchy-korea-north-korea-changes-ruling-principles|title=North Korea rewrites rules to legitimise Kim family succession|author=Audrey Yoo|publisher=South China Morning Post|date=16 October 2013|accessdate=16 October 2013}}</ref> with an elaborate [[cult of personality]] around the [[Kim dynasty (North Korea)|Kim family]]. The [[Workers' Party of Korea]], led by a member of the ruling family,<ref name=scmp-yoo-sep-18-2013/> holds ''de facto'' power in the state and leads the [[Democratic Front for the Reunification of the Fatherland]] of which all political officers are required to be a member.<ref name=parlunion5>{{cite web|title=The Parliamentary System of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea | publisher= Association of Secretaries General of Parliaments (ASGP) of the [[Inter-Parliamentary Union]] | work=Constitutional and Parliamentary Information | url=http://www.asgp.info/Resources/Data/Documents/CJOZSZTEPVVOCWJVUPPZVWPAPUOFGF.pdf |format=PDF| accessdate=1 October 2010 |page=5|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120303054935/http://www.asgp.info/Resources/Data/Documents/CJOZSZTEPVVOCWJVUPPZVWPAPUOFGF.pdf|archivedate=2012-03-03}}</ref> ''[[Juche]]'', an ideology of self-reliance initiated by the country's first [[President of North Korea|President]], [[Kim Il-sung]], became the official state ideology, replacing [[Marxism–Leninism]], when the country adopted a new [[Constitution of North Korea|constitution]] in 1972.<ref>{{cite web| url = http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Constitution_of_North_Korea_(1972) | title = Constitution of North Korea (1972) | accessdate = 7 May 2009 | year = 1972}}</ref><ref name="Juche">{{Cite book |
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| last=Martin |
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| first=Bradley K. |
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| authorlink= |
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| coauthors= |
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| title=Under the Loving Care of the Fatherly Leader: North Korea and the Kim Dynasty |
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| publisher=Thomas Dunne Books |
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| year=2004 |
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| location=New York City, New York |
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| page=111 |
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| quote=Although it was in that 1955 speech that Kim gave full voice to his arguments for ''juche'', he had been talking along similar lines as early as 1948. |
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| doi= |
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| id= |
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| isbn=0-312-32322-0}}</ref> In 2009, references to [[Communism]] ([[Hangul|Chosŏn'gŭl]]: {{lang|ko|공산주의}}) were removed from the country's [[Constitution of the DPRK|constitution]].<ref>[http://leonidpetrov.wordpress.com/2009/10/12/dprk-has-quietly-amended-its-constitution/ DPRK has quietly amended its Constitution] ({{webcite|http://www.webcitation.org/6FXC3csjH}})</ref> |
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The [[means of production]] are owned by the state through [[state-run enterprise]]s and [[Collective farming|collectivized farms]], and most services such as healthcare, education, housing and food production are state funded or subsidized.{{Sfn|Country Profile|2007|pp= 7-8}} In the 1990s North Korea suffered from a [[North Korean famine|famine]] and continues to struggle with food production. In 2013, the UN identified North Korean government policies as the primary cause of the shortages and estimated that 16 million people required [[food aid]].<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.vancouversun.com/business/team+finds+cent+NKorean+children+malnourished+million+NKoreans/8104991/story.html |title=UN: 28 per cent of North Korean children malnourished, 16 million overall need food aid |last=Spielmann |first=Peter James |date=March 15, 2013 |publisher=''The Vancouver Sun'' |accessdate=6 April 2013}}{{dead link|date=October 2013}}</ref><ref name="Pajamas Media">{{cite web|url=http://www.thenational.ae/featured-content/latest/un-north-koreas-policies-cause-the-nations-food-shortages |title=UN: North Korea's policies cause the nation's food shortages |publisher=Pajamas Media |date=23 October 2009 |accessdate=22 October 2011}}</ref> North Korea's health care system has been a subject of controversy: the [[World Health Organization]] described it as "the envy of the developing world" while [[Amnesty International]] claims that it suffers from barely functioning hospitals, poor hygiene and epidemics.<ref name="healthbbc2010">{{Cite news|title=Aid agencies row over North Korea health care system|work=BBC News|date=10 July 2010|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-10665964}}</ref> |
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North Korea follows ''[[Songun]]'', or "military-first" policy in order to strengthen the country and its government.<ref>H. Hodge (2003). [http://www.carlisle.army.mil/USAWC/Parameters/Articles/03spring/hodge.htm "North Korea’s Military Strategy"], ''Parameters'', U.S. Army War College Quarterly.</ref> It is the world's [[List of countries by number of troops|most militarized]] society, with a total of 9,495,000 active, reserve, and [[paramilitary]] personnel. Its active duty army of 1.21 million is the 4th largest in the world, after China, the U.S., and India.<ref name="bgn">{{cite web|url=http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/2792.htm |title=Background Note: North Korea |accessdate=1 August 2007 |author=Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs |date=April 2007 |work=[[United States Department of State]] |authorlink=Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs}}</ref> It is a [[North Korea nuclear weapons program#Nuclear weapons|nuclear-weapons state]] and has an active [[Korean Committee of Space Technology|space program]].<ref name="economist-armied">{{cite news | url = http://www.economist.com/blogs/dailychart/2011/07/armed-forces | title = Armed forces: Armied to the hilt | work = [[The Economist]] | date = 19 July 2011 | accessdate = 28 July 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite book | url = http://csis.org/files/publication/110712_Cordesman_KoreaMilBalance_WEB.pdf | title = The Korean Military Balance | author = Anthony H. Cordesman | publisher = Center for Strategic & International Studies | date = 21 July 2011 | isbn = 978-0-89206-632-2 | accessdate = 28 July 2011 | quote = The DPRK is one of the most militarized countries in the world. It has extraordinarily large anti-aircraft holdings, nearly twice the artillery strength of the Republic of Korea (South Korea), as well as a major advantage in self-propelled artillery and a massive lead in multiple rocket launchers.}}</ref><ref>[http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/space/4307281 International Space Dominance: 7 Nations Launching the Next Space Race], ''Popular Mechanics'', 1 October 2009</ref> As a result of its isolation, it is sometimes known as the "[[hermit kingdom]]". The [[Economist Intelligence Unit]] ranked it as the lowest country in the [[Democracy Index]]. [[Amnesty International]],<ref name="ai1"/><ref name="ai2"/> [[Human Rights Watch]]<ref name="hrw1"/><ref name="hrw2"/> and the [[United Nations|UN's]] commission on human rights in North Korea<ref>{{cite web|title=Report of the Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea| work=United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights| url= http://www.ohchr.org/EN/HRBodies/HRC/CoIDPRK/Pages/ReportoftheCommissionofInquiryDPRK.aspx|author=Michael Kirby, Marzuki Darusman, Sonja Biserko|date=February 17, 2014|accessdate=February 18, 2014}}</ref><ref>Walker, Peter (17 February 2014). [http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/feb/17/north-korea-human-rights-abuses-united-nations North Korean human rights abuses recall Nazis, says UN inquiry chair]. ''[[The Guardian]].'' Retrieved 17 February 2014</ref> report of severe restrictions on [[human rights in North Korea|human rights]] and crimes against humanity 'without parallel in the modern world'. The government rejects these claims.<ref>[http://www.kcna.co.jp/item/2005/200512/news12/23.htm#3 KCNA Assails Role Played by Japan for UN Passage of "Human Rights" Resolution against DPRK], ''KCNA'', 22 December 2005.</ref><ref>[http://www.kcna.co.jp/item/2005/200511/news11/09.htm#10 KCNA Refutes U.S. Anti-DPRK Human Rights Campaign], ''KCNA'', 8 November 2005.</ref><ref name="SCR212">{{cite web|title=February 2012 DPRK (North Korea)|url=http://www.securitycouncilreport.org/site/c.glKWLeMTIsG/b.7966259/k.D9BB/February_2012brDPRK_North_Korea.htm|publisher=United Nations Security Council|date=February 2012}}</ref> |
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==History== |
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{{Main|History of North Korea}} |
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===Ancient kingdoms=== |
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{{Main|History of Korea}} |
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According to legend, [[Gojoseon]] was the first Korean kingdom founded in the north of the peninsula, in 2333 BC by [[Dangun]].<ref name=koreashistory>{{cite web|url=http://www.asianinfo.org/asianinfo/korea/history.htm|title=Korea's History|publisher=Asian Shravan|accessdate=17 February 2009}}</ref> Gojoseon expanded until it controlled the northern Korean Peninsula and some parts of [[Manchuria]]. Gojoseon was first mentioned in Chinese records in the early 7th century BC, and around the 4th century BC, its capital moved to Pyongyang. |
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After many conflicts with the Chinese [[Han Dynasty]], Gojoseon disintegrated. A number of small states emerged in the 2nd and 1st centuries BC, leading to the [[Proto–Three Kingdoms of Korea]] period. This saw the kingdoms of [[Buyeo Kingdom|Buyeo]], [[Okjeo]], [[Dongye]], and the [[Samhan]] confederacy occupying the peninsula and southern Manchuria. Of the various states, [[Goguryeo]] in the north, and [[Baekje]] and [[Silla]] in the south, grew to control the peninsula as the [[Three Kingdoms of Korea]]. Goguryeo was the first Korean kingdom to adopt Buddhism as the state religion in 372. |
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The kingdom reached its zenith in the 5th century AD, when it controlled central Korea, including the present-day Seoul area. Goguryeo fought numerous wars with China and repulsed a number of Chinese invasions. However, the kingdom fell into decline in the 7th century and after internal power struggles, it was conquered by allied Silla-Tang forces. The unification of the Three Kingdoms by [[Unified Silla|Silla]] in 676 led to the [[North South States Period]], in which much of the Korean Peninsula was controlled by Silla. The kingdom of [[Balhae]] controlled northern areas of Korea and parts of Manchuria between the 7th and 10th centuries. |
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Under the rule of Unified Silla, relationships between Korea and China remained relatively peaceful. Silla weakened under internal strife, and eventually was defeated by King [[Taejo of Goryeo]] of the [[Goryeo|Goryeo Dynasty]] in 935. |
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Goryeo, with its capital at [[Gaegyeong]] in present day North Korea, gradually came to rule the whole Korean peninsula. The [[Mongol invasions of Korea|Mongol invasions]] in the 13th century greatly weakened Goryeo. Goryeo became a dependency of the Mongol Empire and was forced to pay tribute. After the [[Mongol Empire]] collapsed, Korea experienced political strife and the Goryeo Dynasty was replaced in 1388 by the long-lasting [[Joseon Dynasty]] (named in honor of the ancient Gojoseon kingdom). |
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[[Image:SelectedTeachingsofBuddhistSagesandSonMasters1377.jpg|thumb|''[[Jikji]]'', the first known book printed with movable metal type in 1377. Bibliothèque Nationale de Paris.]] |
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====Middle Ages==== |
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The capital was moved south to [[Seoul|Hanyang]] (modern-day Seoul) in 1394. Joseon accepted the nominal suzerainty of China. Internal conflicts within the royal court and civil unrest plagued the kingdom in the years that followed, a situation made worse by the depredations of Japanese pirates. |
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After a largely peaceful 15th century, central authority declined and Korea was plagued again by coastal raids by [[Wokou|Japanese pirates]]. Two Japanese [[Japanese invasions of Korea (1592–98)|attempts to conquer Korea]] were repulsed in 1592–1598. In the early 17th century Korea became involved in wars against the rising [[First Manchu invasion of Korea|Manchus]] on the northern borders. |
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The 17th to 19th centuries were marked by increasing Joseon self-isolation from the outside world, dependence on China for external affairs and occasional internal faction fighting. The Joseon Dynasty tried to isolate from sea traders by closing itself to all nations except China. [[Slavery in Asia|Slaves]], ''[[nobi]]'', are estimated to have accounted for about one third of the population of Joseon Korea.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.britannica.com/blackhistory/article-24156 | work =Encyclopædia Britannica | title = Slavery |publisher=Britannica | accessdate = 2009-11-03}}</ref> By the mid-19th century the Joseon court followed a cautious policy of slow exchange with the West. In 1866, an American-owned armed merchant ship, attempted to open Korea to trade. The ship sailed upriver and became stranded near Pyongyang. |
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After being ordered to leave by Korean officials, American crewmen killed four Korean inhabitants, kidnapped a military officer and engaged in sporadic fighting.{{citation needed|date=December 2013}} The ship was finally set aflame by Korean fireships. In 1871, a US force killed 243 Korean troops on Ganghwa island. This incident is called the [[Sinmiyangyo]] in Korea. Five years later, Korea signed a trade treaty with Japan, and in 1882 signed a treaty with the United States, ending centuries of isolationism of the "[[Hermit Kingdom]]". |
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====Japanese occupation (1895–1945)==== |
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{{Main|Korea under Japanese rule}} |
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As a result of the [[First Sino-Japanese War|Sino-Japanese War]] (1894–1895), the 1895 [[Treaty of Shimonoseki]] stipulated the end of traditional Joseon dependency on China. In 1897, Joseon was renamed the Korean Empire. Russian influence was strong until the Russo-Japanese War (1904–1905), after which Korea became a protectorate of Japan. Korea was then [[Korea under Japanese rule|annexed by the Empire of Japan]] in 1910, leading to 35 years of [[military occupation|military rule]]. |
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After the annexation, Japan tried to suppress Korean traditions and culture and ran the economy primarily for the Japanese benefit. Anti-Japanese, pro-liberation rallies took place nationwide on 1 March 1919 (the 1 March Movement). About 7,000 people were killed during the suppression of this movement. Continued anti-Japanese uprisings, such as the nationwide uprising of students in 1929, led to the strengthening of military rule in 1931. After the outbreaks of the [[Second Sino-Japanese War|Sino-Japanese War]] in 1937 and World War II Japan stepped up efforts to extinguish Korean culture. |
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The Korean language was banned and Koreans were forced to adopt Japanese names. Worship at Japanese Shinto shrines was made compulsory. The school curriculum was radically modified to eliminate teaching in the Korean language and history. Numerous Korean cultural artifacts were destroyed or taken to Japan. Resistance groups known as [[Dongnipgun]] (Liberation Army) operated along the Sino-Korean border, fighting guerrilla warfare against Japanese forces. Some of them took part in allied action in China and parts of South East Asia. |
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During World War II, Koreans at home were forced to support the Japanese war effort. Tens of thousands of men were conscripted into Japan's military. Around 200,000 girls and women, many from Korea, were forced to engage in sexual services, with the euphemism "[[comfort women]]". |
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===Division of Korea (1945)=== |
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{{Main|Division of Korea}} |
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[[File:Korea DMZ.svg|thumb|right|250px|The Korean peninsula, first divided along the 38th parallel, later along the demarcation line.]] |
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After the [[surrender of Japan]] at the end of [[World War II]], Japanese rule was brought to an end. [[Division of Korea|The Korean peninsula was divided]] into two occupied zones in 1945 along the [[38th parallel north|38th parallel]], with the northern half of the peninsula [[Soviet Civil Authority|occupied by the Soviet Union]] and the southern half [[USAMGIK|by the United States]], in accordance with a prior arrangement between the two world powers, where [[United Nations]]–supervised elections were intended to be held for the entire peninsula shortly after the war. The [[Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea]], which had operated in exile since 1919, was ignored, mainly because of the American perception that it was too communist-aligned. |
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In August 1945, the [[Soviet Army]] established a Soviet Civil Authority in the northern portion of the Korean Peninsula. The [[Provisional People's Committee for North Korea]] was set up in February 1946, headed by [[Kim Il-sung]]. He introduced sweeping land reforms and nationalized key industries. Talks on the future of Korea were held in Moscow and Seoul but without result. Initial hopes for a unified, independent Korea evaporated as the politics of the Cold War resulted in the establishment of two separate nations with diametrically opposed political, economic, and social systems. |
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There was sporadic unrest in the South. In September 1946, South Korean citizens had risen up against the Allied Military Government. In April 1948, an uprising of the Jeju islanders was violently crushed. The South declared its statehood in May 1948 and two months later the ardent anti-Communist [[Syngman Rhee]] became its ruler. The [[People's Republic of Korea]] was established in the North on 9 September 1948. |
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The Rhee regime consolidated itself through harsh persecution of all suspected opponents. It conducted a number of military campaigns against left-wing insurgents during which 30,000 to 100,000 people lost their lives. In October 1948, the [[Yeosu-Suncheon Rebellion]] occurred and on 24 December 1949, the South Korean Army massacred [[Mungyeong]] citizens who were suspected communist sympathizers and affixed the blame on communists. |
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Soviet forces withdrew from the North in 1948 and most American forces withdrew from the South the following year. This dramatically weakened the Southern regime and encouraged Kim Il-sung to consider an invasion plan against the South.<ref name="Cumings1981"/><ref name=Cumings1981>Bruce Cummings, ''The Origins of the Korean War, Vol. 1: Liberation and the Emergence of Separate Regimes, 1945–1947'', Princeton University Press</ref> War proposals were rejected several times by [[Joseph Stalin]], but along with the development of Soviet nuclear weapons, [[Mao Zedong]]'s victory in China, and the Chinese indication that it would send troops and other support to North Korea, Stalin approved the invasion which led to the start of the [[Korean War]] in June 1950.<ref>{{Cite book| last = Martin | first = Bradley K. | title = Under the Loving Care of the Fatherly Leader: North Korea and the Kim Dynasty | publisher = Thomas Dunne Books + | year = 2004 | location = New York, NY | pages = 66–67 | isbn = 0-312-32322-0}}</ref> The Korean War broke out when North Korean forces crossed the 38th parallel to invade the South. |
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===Korean War (1950–1953)=== |
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{{Main|Korean War}} |
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{{See also|Aftermath of the Korean War|Korean Demilitarized Zone|North Korea – South Korea relations}} |
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[[File:Koreans from Hamhung identify the bodies of some 300 political prisoners who were killed by the North Korean Army by being forced into caves which were subsequently sealed off so that they died of suffocation HD-SN-99-03167.jpg|thumb|Civilians killed by North Korean forces near [[Hamhung]], October 1950]] |
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After Korea was divided by the UN, the two Korean powers both tried to control the whole peninsula under their respective governments. This led to escalating border conflicts on the 38th parallel and attempts to negotiate elections for the whole of Korea.<ref name="TruceTent">{{Cite book| last =Hermes, Jr. | first =Walter | title =Truce Tent and Fighting Front | publisher = [[United States Army Center of Military History]] |year=1992| origyear = 1966| id = CMH Pub 20-3-1 | pages =2, 6, 9 | url = http://www.history.army.mil/books/korea/truce/fm.htm}}</ref> These attempts ended when the [[military of North Korea]] invaded the South on 25 June 1950, leading to a full-scale war. With endorsement from the United Nations, countries allied with the United States intervened on behalf of South Korea. |
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After rapid advances in a South Korean counterattack, North-allied [[People's Republic of China|Chinese]] forces intervened on behalf of North Korea, shifting the balance of the war. Fighting ended on 27 July 1953, with an [[Korean Armistice Agreement|armistice]] that approximately restored the original boundaries between North and South Korea. More than one million civilians and soldiers were killed in the war. |
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Although some have referred to the conflict as a civil war, other important factors were involved.<ref name="AMH">{{Cite book| chapter = The Korean War, 1950–1953 | url = http://www.history.army.mil/books/AMH-V2/AMH%20V2/ | chapterurl = http://www.history.army.mil/books/AMH-V2/AMH%20V2/chapter8.htm | title = American Military History, Volume 2 | year = 2005 | accessdate = 20 August 2007 | publisher = [[United States Army Center of Military History]]| editor = Richard W. Stewart | id = CMH Pub 30-22}}</ref> The Korean War was also the first armed confrontation of the [[Cold War]] and set the standard for many later conflicts. It is often viewed as an example of the [[proxy war]], where the two [[superpower]]s would fight in another country, forcing the people in that country to suffer most of the destruction and death involved in a war between such large nations. The superpowers avoided [[Limited war|descending into an all-out war]] against one another, as well as the mutual use of [[nuclear weapons]]. It also expanded the Cold War, which to that point had mostly been concerned with Europe. A heavily guarded [[Korean Demilitarized Zone|demilitarized zone]] on the 38th parallel still divides the peninsula, and an anti-Communist and anti-North Korea sentiment remains in South Korea. |
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Since the Armistice in 1953, relations between the North Korean government and South Korea, the [[European Union]], [[Canada]], the United States, and Japan have remained tense, and hostile incidents occur often.<ref>Casey, Steven (2008). ''Selling the Korean War: propaganda, politics, and public opinion in the United States, 1950–1953.'' Oxford University Press US. ISBN 978-0-19-530692-7.</ref>{{Page needed|date=September 2010}} North and South Korea signed the [[June 15th North-South Joint Declaration]] in 2000, in which they promised to seek peaceful reunification.<ref name=joint>{{cite web |url=http://www.kcckp.net/en/one/nation.php |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20071113143537/http://www.kcckp.net/en/one/nation.php |archivedate=2007-11-13 |title=North-South Joint Declaration |accessdate=1 August 2007 |date=15 June 2000 |work=[[Naenara]]}}</ref> On 4 October 2007, the leaders of North and South Korea pledged to hold summit talks to officially declare the war over and reaffirmed the principle of mutual non-aggression.<ref name=idUKSEO16392220071004>{{Cite news|url=http://uk.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUKSEO16392220071004 |title=Factbox – North, South Korea pledge peace, prosperity |accessdate=4 October 2007 |work=Reuters | date=4 October 2007}}</ref> On 13 March 2013, North Korea confirmed it ended the 1953 Armistice and declared North Korea "is not restrained by the North-South declaration on non-aggression."<ref name="end of armistise">{{cite web|last=Chang-Won|first=Lim|title=North Korea confirms end of war armistice|url=http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5ihNf_P_yjcx87RS5q6V7XIM9xduA?docId=CNG.9853b860fe89106d015080a384fbfdf4.491|publisher=AFP|accessdate=23 March 2013}}{{dead link|date=April 2014}}</ref> |
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===Late 20th century=== |
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{{Main|Korean Demilitarized Zone}} |
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[[File:DPRK Soldier.JPG|thumb|A [[Korean People's Army]] soldier pointing to the [[Korean Demilitarized Zone]].]] |
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The relative peace between the South and the North following the armistice was interrupted by border skirmishes and assassination attempts. The North failed in several assassination attempts on South Korean leaders, most notably in 1968, 1974 and the [[Rangoon bombing]] in 1983; tunnels were frequently found under the DMZ and war nearly broke out over the [[Axe Murder Incident]] at [[Panmunjeom]] in 1976.<ref>Kirkbride, Wayne (1984). ''DMZ, a story of the Panmunjom axe murder.'' Hollym International Corp.</ref> In 1973, extremely secret, high-level contacts began to be conducted through the offices of the [[Red Cross]], but ended after the Panmunjeom incident with little progress having been made and the idea that the two Koreas would join international organizations separately.<ref>Doug Bandow and Ted Galen Carpenter (1992). ''The U.S.-South Korean alliance: time for a change.'' Transaction Publishers. pp. 98–99. ISBN 978-1-56000-583-4.</ref> |
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North Korea remained closely aligned to China and the Soviet Union until the mid-1960s. Recovery from the war was quick – by 1957 industrial production reached 1949 levels. The last Chinese troops withdrew from the country in October 1958.{{Sfn|Country Study|2009|p=XV}} Until the 1960s, economic growth was higher than in South Korea, and North Korean GDP per capita was equal to that of its southern neighbor as late as 1976.{{Sfn|Country Study|2009|pp=XXXII, 46}} However, by the 1980s the economy had begun to stagnate, and almost completely collapsed after the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991. Flooding in the mid-1990s exacerbated the economic crisis and led to [[North Korean famine|widespread famine]] which the government proved incapable of curtailing. |
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In the late 1990s, with the South having transitioned to [[liberal democracy]], the success of the [[Nordpolitik]] policy, and power in the North having been taken up by Kim Il-sung's son [[Kim Jong-il]], the two nations began to engage publicly for the first time, with the South declaring its [[Sunshine Policy]].<ref>Kwak, Tae-Hwan; Joo, Seung-Ho (2003). ''The Korean peace process and the four powers.'' Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. ISBN 978-0-7546-3653-3.</ref><ref>DeRouen, Karl; Heo, Uk (2005). ''Defense and Security: A Compendium of National Armed Forces and Security Policies.'' ABC-CLIO.</ref> |
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===Early 21st century=== |
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{{See also|Bombardment of Yeonpyeong}} |
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[[File:Cho Myong-nok and Bill Clinton.jpg|thumb|180px|Vice Marshal [[Jo Myong-rok]] meets [[Bill Clinton]] at the White House, October 2000]] |
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By the beginning of the 21st century, the worst of the devastating famine had passed, but North Korea continues to rely heavily on foreign aid for its food supply. In January 2002, U.S. president [[George W. Bush]] labeled North Korea part of an "[[axis of evil]]" and an "[[outposts of tyranny|outpost of tyranny]]". The highest-level contact the government has had with the United States was with [[United States Secretary of State|U.S. Secretary of State]] [[Madeleine Albright]], who made a visit to Pyongyang in 2000,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/clinton/interviews/albright.html |title=Interview – Madeleine Albright |accessdate=11 August 2007 |author=Chris Bury|date=November 2000 |work=[[Nightline (US news program)|Nightline]] [[Frontline (US TV series)|Frontline]], on [[Public Broadcasting Service|PBS]].org}}</ref> but the two countries do not have formal diplomatic relations.<ref name="cia-kn">{{cite web|url=https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/kn.html#Econ |title=Korea, North |accessdate=17 May 2010 |year=2009 | work=The World Factbook}}</ref> By 2006, approximately 37,000 American soldiers remained in South Korea, although by June 2009 this number had fallen to around 30,000.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/northkorea/5397767/South-Korea-and-US-troops-raise-alert-level-over-North-Korean-threat.html |title=South Korean and US Troops raise alert level over North Korean Threat |accessdate=6 July 2009 |author=Malcolm Moore |date=28 May 2009|work=[[Telegraph]] Online | location=London}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://english.people.com.cn/200501/13/eng20050113_170566.html |title=S. Korea to cut 40,000 troops by 2008 |accessdate=1 August 2007 |author=Xinhua |date=13 January 2005 |work=[[People's Daily]] Online}}</ref> Kim Jong-il privately stated his acceptance of U.S. troops on the peninsula, even after a possible [[Korean reunification|reunification]].<ref name="wpost">{{Cite news|url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/discussion/2005/07/27/DI2005072701759.html |title=North Korea: Six-Party Talks Continue |accessdate=1 August 2007 |author= Don Oberdorfer|date=28 July 2005 |work=[[The Washington Post]] Online}}</ref> Publicly, North Korea strongly demands the removal of [[United States Forces Korea|American troops from South Korea]].<ref name="wpost"/> |
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On 13 June 2009, the [[Associated Press]] reported that in response to new U.N. sanctions, North Korea declared it would progress with its [[uranium enrichment]] program. This marked the first time the DPRK has publicly acknowledged that it is conducting a uranium enrichment program.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://news.aol.com/article/north-korea-nuclear-program/506625? |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090618012736/http://news.aol.com/article/north-korea-nuclear-program/506625? |archivedate=2009-06-18 | title=North Korea Vows Nuclear Step-Up |accessdate=14 June 2009 |author= Kwang-Tae Kim|date=13 June 2009 |agency=Associated Press}}</ref> In August 2009, former U.S. president [[Bill Clinton]] met with Kim Jong-il to secure the release of two American journalists, who had been sentenced for entering the country illegally.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/asiapcf/08/04/nkorea.clinton/index.html |title=U.S. journalists head home from North Korea |publisher=CNN.com |date= 5 August 2009|accessdate=2 January 2010}}</ref> Current U.S. President [[Barack Obama]]'s position towards North Korea has been to resist making deals with North Korea for the sake of defusing tension, a policy known as "strategic patience."<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/66581/sung-yoon-lee/the-pyongyang-playbook | title=The Pyongyang Playbook |accessdate=6 November 2010 |last1= Lee | first1=Sung-Yoon |authorlink= Sung-Yoon Lee|date=26 August 2010|work =[[Foreign Policy]]}}</ref> |
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On 23 November 2010, North Korea fired about 170 rounds of artillery on [[Yeonpyeong Island]] and the surrounding waters near the Yellow Sea border, with some 90 shells landing on the island. The attack resulted in the deaths of two marines and two civilians on the South Korean side, and fifteen marines and at least three civilians wounded.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/national/2010/11/24/86/0301000000AEN20101124012200315F.HTML | title=S. Korea to toughen rules of engagement against N. Korean attack |accessdate=24 November 2010 |author=Deok-hyun Kim |date=24 November 2010}}</ref> South Korean forces fired back 80 shells, although the results remain unclear. |
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North Korean news sources alleged that the North Korean actions, described as "a prompt and powerful physical strike", were in response to provocation from South Korea that had held an artillery exercise in the disputed waters south of the island.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://175.45.179.68/English/Today/news13.htm | title=Lee Myung Bak Group Accused of Scuttling Dialogue and Humanitarian Work | accessdate=24 November 2010 | author=Korean Central News Agency}}{{dead link|date=October 2013}}</ref> |
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On 17 December 2011, the [[List of leaders of North Korea|Supreme Leader of North Korea]], [[Kim Jong-il]] died from a heart attack.<ref name="apdeath">{{cite news|title=North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, 69, has died|url=http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5izIlSjdJ6OnbxnvsA8REol_H-PpA?docId=e4eb9efdbd884d2fbff01ada250d87de|accessdate=19 December 2011|newspaper=Associated Press|date=19 December 2011}}{{dead link|date=October 2013}}</ref> His death was reported by the [[Korean Central News Agency]] around 08:30 local time with the newscaster announcing his youngest son [[Kim Jong-un]] as his successor. |
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The announcement placed South Korean and United States troops on high alert, with many politicians from the global community stating that Kim's death leaves a great deal of uncertainty in the country's future.<ref>{{cite news|title=Kim Jong-il's death triggers regional alert|url=http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/world-politics/kim-jong-ils-death-triggers-regional-alert/story-fn9hkofv-1226226254210|accessdate=20 December 2011|newspaper=The Australian|date=20 December 2011|first=Rick|last=Wallace}}</ref> North Korea was put into a state of semi-alert, with foreigners put under suspicion and asked to leave.<ref>Lodish, Emily (22 December 2011) {{Wayback |date=20120108052952 |url=http://www.globalpost.com/dispatches/globalpost-blogs/the-rice-bowl/kim-jong-il-kim-jong-un-north-korea |title=Why is North Korea asking foreigners to leave? }} GlobalPost.</ref> |
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[[File:NKmuseum.jpg|thumb|North Koreans touring the [[Sinchon Museum of American War Atrocities|Museum of American War Atrocities]] in September 2009]] |
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===Pre-emptive nuclear strike threats of 2013=== |
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{{Main|2013 North Korean crisis}} |
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On 7 March 2013, North Korea announced its intentions to launch a preemptive nuclear strike against the United States.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/07/north-korea-threats_n_2826846.html |title=North Korea Threatens Pre-Emptive Nuclear Strike Against U.S |publisher=Huffingtonpost.com |accessdate=2013-09-09 |date=7 March 2013}}</ref> The statement called the United States, the "sworn enemy of the Korean people".<ref>{{cite news|title=North Korea Issues Blunt New Threat to United States|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/25/world/asia/north-korea-vows-nuclear-test-as-threats-intensify.html|accessdate=24 January 2013|newspaper=The New York Times|date=24 January 2013|first=David|last=Sanger}}</ref> |
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On 8 March 2013, the North Korean government announced that it was withdrawing from all non-aggression pacts with South Korea in response to [[United Nations Security Council Resolution 2094|U.N. Resolution 2094]].<ref name="BBC-20130308">{{cite news| url = http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-21709917| title = North Korea ends peace pacts with South| publisher = BBC News| accessdate = 8 March 2013| date=8 March 2013}}</ref><ref name="Guardian-armistice">{{cite news|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/mar/11/north-korea-declares-end-armistice|title=North Korea ends armistice with South amid war games on both sides of border|work=The Guardian|date=11 March 2013|accessdate=14 March 2013|location=London}}</ref><ref name="Guardian-hotline">{{cite news|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/mar/11/north-korea-cuts-peace-hotline|title=North Korea cuts peace hotline as South begins military drills|date=11 March 2013|accessdate=14 March 2013|work=The Guardian|location=London}}</ref> The announcement said it was closing its joint border crossing with South Korea and cutting off the hotline to the South.<ref name="BBC-20130308"/><ref name="Guardian-armistice"/><ref name="Guardian-hotline"/> |
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On 13 March 2013, North Korea confirmed it ended the 1953 Armistice and declared North Korea "is not restrained by the North-South declaration on non-aggression.<ref name="end of armistise" /> Confirmation of the severing of the hotline between the North and the South—the last remaining communication link between the two countries at that time—was publicly announced on March 27, 2013, the same date that the hotline was cut off. According to the Korean Central News Agency, a senior North Korean military official stated: "Under the situation where a war may break out any moment, there is no need to keep up North-South military communications" prior to the cessation of the communication channel.<ref>{{cite news|title=North Korea cuts off contact with South|url=http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/north-korean-fury-over-souths-warning/story-e6frg6so-1226607959530|accessdate=28 March 2013|newspaper=The Australian|date=28 March 2013|author=AFP}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=North Korea Cuts Off the Remaining Military Hot Lines With South Korea|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/28/world/asia/north-korea-shuts-last-remaining-hotline-to-south.html?_r=0|accessdate=28 March 2013|newspaper=The New York Times|date=27 March 2013|author=Choe Sang-Hun}}</ref> |
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On 30 March 2013, the North Korean government declared it was in 'a state of war' with South Korea. A North Korean statement promised "stern physical actions" against "any provocative act". The North Korean leader Kim Jong-un declared that rockets were ready to be fired at American bases in the Pacific in response to the U.S. flying two nuclear-capable [[Northrop Grumman B-2 Spirit|B2 stealth bombers]] over the Korean peninsula. The United States warned North Korea that the rapidly escalating military confrontation would lead to further isolation, as [[The Pentagon]] declared that the U.S. was "fully capable" of defending itself and its allies against a missile attack.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-21979127|title=North Korea enters 'state of war' with South|date=30 March 2013|accessdate=30 March 2013|work=BBC}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/mar/29/us-condemns-north-korea-threats|title=US warns North Korea of increased isolation if threats escalate further|date=29 March 2013|accessdate=30 March 2013|work=The Guardian|location=London|first=Ewen|last=MacAskill}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/mar/29/kim-jongun-missiles-standby-attack-us|title=North Korea says it is ready to launch strike against US bases|date=29 March 2013|accessdate=30 March 2013|work=The Guardian|location=London|first=Tania|last=Branigan}}</ref> On 4 April 2013 North Korea's state news agency KCNA announced "The moment of explosion is approaching fast. No one can say a war will break out in Korea or not and whether it will break out today or tomorrow."<ref>[http://edition.cnn.com/2013/04/03/world/asia/koreas-tensions/index.html North Korea warns 'moment of explosion' nears – CNN.com]. Edition.cnn.com. Retrieved on 6 April 2013.</ref> |
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U.S. National Intelligence Director [[James R. Clapper|James Clapper]] speculated that Kim Jong-un is trying to assert his control over North Korea, and has no endgame other than gaining recognition;<ref>{{cite web|author=Robert Burns And Julie Pace |url=http://news.yahoo.com/obama-urges-north-korea-end-belligerence-204923866--politics.html |title=Obama urges North Korea to end belligerence - Yahoo! News |publisher=News.yahoo.com |date=2013-04-11 |accessdate=2013-04-16}}</ref> analysts and other U.S. officials have echoed similar sentiments.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.cnn.com/2013/04/12/world/asia/koreas-tensions/index.html |title=Nuclear North Korea unacceptable, Kerry says |publisher=CNN.com |accessdate=2013-04-16 |date=13 April 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.aljazeera.com/news/asia-pacific/2013/04/20134114379333251.html |title=US 'prepared' to deal with North Korea action - Asia-Pacific |publisher=Al Jazeera English |accessdate=2013-04-16}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=In Focus: North Korea’s Nuclear Threats|url=http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2013/04/12/world/asia/north-korea-questions.html?_r=0|newspaper=New York Times|date=April 16, 2013}}</ref> |
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Four missile launches were conducted on May 18 and 19, 2013—according to South Korea's defense ministry, three short-range guided missiles landed into the waters off the Korean peninsula on May 18, followed by a fourth on May 19. The missiles did not put any neighboring nations at risk and Pyongyang's actions were widely viewed as an exercise in fear creation to prompt other countries to consider security and aid concessions. The launches occurred during a period when relations were strained between the North and the South, as Pyongyang refused to participate in talks over the closed Kaesong plant.<ref>{{cite news|title=North Korea Fires Missiles|url=http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323463704578492844202791354.html?mod=WSJ_hps_LEFTTopStories|accessdate=20 May 2013|newspaper=The Wall Street Journal|date=19 May 2013|author=KYONG-AE CHOI|author2=ALASTAIR GALE}}</ref> |
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At the start of June 2013, the North Korean government offered to enter into talks that would represent the first dialogue of its kind in many years. The South Korean government immediately accepted the proposal.<ref>{{cite news|title=Seoul says yes to peace talks offer from North Korea|url=http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/seoul-says-yes-to-peace-talks-offer-from-north-korea/story-e6frg6so-1226658940838?utm_source=The%20Australian&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=editorial&net_sub_uid=44933799|accessdate=6 June 2013|newspaper=The Australian|date=7 June 2013|author=Rick Wallace}}</ref> |
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==Geography== |
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{{Main|Geography of North Korea}} |
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[[File:Baitou Mountain Tianchi.jpg|thumb|right|Lake [[Heaven Lake|Ch'ŏnji]] at [[Baekdu Mountain]], North Korea's highest point]] |
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North Korea occupies the northern portion of the [[Korean Peninsula]], lying between latitudes [[37th parallel north|37°]] and [[43rd parallel north|43°N]], and longitudes [[124th meridian east|124°]] and [[131st meridian east|131°E]]. It covers an area of {{convert|120540|km2|sqmi|0}}. North Korea shares land borders with China and Russia to the north, and borders South Korea along the [[Korean Demilitarized Zone]]. |
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To its west are the [[Yellow Sea]] and [[Korea Bay]], and to its east lies Japan across the [[Sea of Japan]] (East Sea of Korea). The highest point in North Korea is [[Baekdu Mountain]] at {{convert|2744|m|ft|0}}. The longest river is the Amnok (Yalu) River which flows for {{convert|790|km|mi|0}}.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.koreanhistoryproject.org/Jta/Kr/KrGEO0.htm |title=Korea Geography |accessdate=1 August 2007 |author= Bill Caraway|year=2007 |work=The Korean History Project}}</ref> |
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The capital and largest city is [[Pyongyang]]; other major cities include [[Kaesong]] in the south, [[Sinuiju]] in the northwest, [[Wonsan]] and [[Hamhung]] in the east and [[Chongjin]] in the northeast. |
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In 2013, internet users were encouraged to participate in a community based event on [[Google Maps]]. These users could use [[Google Map Maker]] along with [[Cartography]] and [[Telemetry]] skills that eventually led to a virtual map of Pyongyang.<ref>{{cite news|title=A New Target for Google Maps: The Streets of North Korea|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/30/world/asia/google-maps-new-target-secretive-north-korea.html?_r=0|newspaper=New York Times|date=29 January 2013|first1=Choe|last1=Sang-Hun}}</ref> In addition, the Google Map of North Korea includes [[Human rights in North Korea#The prison system|political prison camp]] locations such as [[Camp 22]].<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.nzherald.co.nz/technology/news/article.cfm?c_id=5&objectid=10862319 |title=Google maps out North Korea – Technology – NZ Herald News |publisher=Nzherald.co.nz |date=30 January 2013 |accessdate=8 March 2013}}</ref> |
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===Topography=== |
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{{Further|Korean Peninsula}} |
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[[File:North Korea Topography.png|thumb|350px|Topography of North Korea.]] |
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Early European visitors to Korea remarked that the country resembled "a sea in a heavy gale" because of the many successive [[mountain range]]s that crisscross the peninsula.<ref name="Topography">{{cite web|url=http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+kp0030)|title=Topography and Drainage|publisher=Library of Congress|accessdate=17 August 2009|date=1 June 1993}}</ref> Some 80% of North Korea is composed of [[mountain]]s and [[Highland (geography)|uplands]], separated by deep and narrow [[valley]]s. All of the peninsula's mountains with elevations of {{convert|2000|m|ft|sp=us}} or more are located in North Korea. The coastal [[plain]]s are wide in the west and discontinuous in the east. A great majority of the population lives in the plains and [[lowland]]s. |
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The highest point in North Korea is [[Baekdu Mountain]] which is a [[volcano|volcanic mountain]] which forms part of the Chinese/North Korean border with [[basalt]] [[lava]] [[plateau]] with elevations between {{convert|1400|and|2744|m|ft|sp=us}} above sea level.<ref name="Topography"/> The [[Hamgyong Mountains|Hamgyong Range]], located in the extreme northeastern part of the peninsula, has many high peaks including Kwanmobong at approximately {{convert|2541|m|0|abbr=on}}. |
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Other major ranges include the [[Rangrim Mountains]], which are located in the north-central part of North Korea and run in a north-south direction, making communication between the eastern and western parts of the country rather difficult; and the [[Kangnam Mountains|Kangnam]] Range, which runs along the North Korea–China border. [[Mount Kumgang]], or Diamond Mountain, (approximately {{convert|1638|m|ft|disp=or}}) in the [[Taebaek Mountains|Taebaek Range]], which extends into South Korea, is famous for its scenic beauty.<ref name="Topography"/> |
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For the most part, the plains are small. The most extensive are the [[Pyongyang]] and [[Chaeryong]] plains, each covering about {{convert|500|km2|sqmi|sp=us}}. Because the mountains on the east coast drop abruptly to the sea, the plains are even smaller there than on the west coast. Unlike neighboring Japan or northern China, North Korea experiences few severe [[earthquake]]s. |
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===Climate=== |
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{{Main|Climate of North Korea}} |
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North Korea has a [[continental climate]] with four distinct seasons.<ref name="climate">{{cite web|url=http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+kp0031) |title=North Korea Country Studies. Climate |publisher=Lcweb2.loc.gov |accessdate=23 June 2010}}</ref> Long winters bring bitter cold and clear weather interspersed with snow storms as a result of northern and northwestern winds that blow from [[Siberia]]. Average snowfall is 37 days during the winter. The weather is likely to be particularly harsh in the northern, mountainous regions. |
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Summer tends to be short, hot, humid, and rainy because of the southern and southeastern [[monsoon]] winds that bring moist air from the [[Pacific Ocean]]. Typhoons affect the peninsula on an average of at least once every summer.<ref name="climate"/> Spring and autumn are transitional seasons marked by mild temperatures and variable winds and bring the most pleasant weather. Natural hazards include late spring droughts which often are followed by [[North Korea flooding (disambiguation)|severe flooding]]. There are occasional [[typhoon]]s during the early fall. |
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North Korea's climate is relatively [[temperate]]. Most of the country is classified as type ''Dwa'' in the [[Köppen climate classification]] scheme, with warm summers and cold, dry winters. In summer there is a short rainy season called ''changma''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://countrystudies.us/north-korea/21.htm |title=North Korea – Climate |accessdate=1 August 2007 |author=[[Federal Research Division]] of the US [[Library of Congress]] |year=2007 |work=Country Studies}}</ref> On 7 August 2007, the most devastating [[2007 North Korea flooding|floods]] in 40 years caused the North Korean government to ask for international help. [[NGO]]s, such as the [[Red Cross]], asked people to raise funds because they feared a humanitarian catastrophe.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ifrc.org/Docs/News/pr07/4607.asp |title="Emergency appeal for DPRK flood survivors", website of the Red Cross |publisher=Ifrc.org |date=20 August 2007 |accessdate=23 June 2010}}</ref> |
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==Administrative divisions== |
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{{Main|Administrative divisions of North Korea}} |
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{{See also|Provinces of Korea|Special cities of North Korea|List of cities in North Korea}} |
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<div class="left"> |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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|- |
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!Map !! !! Name<sup>a</sup> !! Chosŏn'gŭl !! Administrative Seat |
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|- |
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|rowspan="15"|{{North Korea Provincial level Labelled Map}} |
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!colspan="5"| Capital city (''chikhalsi'')<sup>a</sup> |
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|- |
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| 1 || [[Pyongyang]] ||평양직할시|| ([[Chung-guyok]]) |
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|- |
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!colspan="5"| Special city (''teukbyeolsi'')<sup>a</sup> |
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|- |
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| 2 || [[Rason]] ||라선특별시|| ([[Rasŏn|Rajin-guyok]]) |
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|- |
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!colspan="5"| Provinces (''do'')<sup>a</sup> |
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|- |
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| 3 || [[South Pyongan Province|South Pyongan]] ||평안남도|| [[Pyongsong]] |
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|- |
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| 4 || [[North Pyongan Province|North Pyongan]] ||평안북도|| [[Sinuiju]] |
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|- |
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| 5 || [[Chagang Province|Chagang]] ||자강도|| [[Kanggye]] |
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|- |
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| 6 || [[South Hwanghae Province|South Hwanghae]] ||황해남도|| [[Haeju]] |
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|- |
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| 7 || [[North Hwanghae Province|North Hwanghae]] ||황해북도|| [[Sariwon]] |
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|- |
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| 8 || [[Kangwon Province (North Korea)|Kangwon]] ||강원도|| [[Wonsan]] |
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|- |
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| 9 || [[South Hamgyong Province|South Hamgyong]] ||함경남도|| [[Hamhung]] |
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|- |
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| 10 || [[North Hamgyong Province|North Hamgyong]] ||함경북도|| [[Chongjin]] |
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|- |
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| 11 || [[Ryanggang Province|Ryanggang]] <cite id = "Ad_1></cite>[[#Ad 2|*]] ||량강도|| [[Hyesan]] |
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|- |
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| colspan="5"|<cite id="Ad_2></cite>[[#Ad 1|*]] – Rendered in [[North-South differences in the Korean language|Southern dialects]] as "Yanggang" (양강도). |
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|} |
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</div> |
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{{Largest cities of North Korea}} |
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==Government and politics== |
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{{Main|Government of North Korea|Politics of North Korea}} |
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===Regime ideology=== |
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[[File:Juche Tower.jpg|thumb|upright|The [[Juche Tower]] ('Tower of [[Juche]] Idea').]] |
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North Korea is a self-described ''[[Juche]]'' (self-reliant) state,<ref>{{cite web |
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| url=http://www.korea-dpr.com/faq.htm |
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| archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080308222109/http://www.korea-dpr.com/faq.htm |
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| archivedate=2008-03-08 |
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| title=18. Is North Korea a 'Stalinist' state? |
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| accessdate=31 October 2007 |
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| date=5 May 2005 |
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| work=DPRK FAQ; Document approved by Zo Sun Il |
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| publisher=Official Webpages of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea |
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}}</ref> described by some observers as a ''[[de facto]]'' [[absolute monarchy]]<ref>Young W. Kihl, Hong Nack Kim. ''North Korea: The Politics of Regime Survival''. Armonk, New York, USA: M. E. Sharpe, Inc., 2006. Pp 56.</ref><ref>Robert A. Scalapino, Chong-Sik Lee. ''The Society''. University of California Press, 1972. Pp. 689.</ref><ref>Bong Youn Choy. A history of the Korean reunification movement: its issues and prospects. Research Committee on Korean Reunification, Institute of International Studies, Bradley University, 1984. Pp. 117.</ref> or "hereditary dictatorship"<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/article2452356.ece|title=A tale of two dictatorships: The links between North Korea and Syria|last=Sheridan|first=Michael|date=16 September 2007|work=[[The Times]]|accessdate=9 April 2010 | location=London}}</ref> with a pronounced [[North Korea's cult of personality|cult of personality]] organized around [[Kim Il-sung]] (the founder of North Korea and the country's only [[president]]) and his late son, [[Kim Jong-il]]. However, the 4th Conference of the Workers' Party of Korea said that Kimilsungism-Kimjongilism was "the only guiding idea of the party".<ref name=4thconference2>{{cite web|url=http://www.rodong.rep.kp/InterEn/index.php?strPageID=SF01_02_01&newsID=2012-04-12-0006 |title=4th Party Conference of WPK Held, ''Rodong Sinmun'', 12 April 2012 |publisher=Rodong.rep.kp |accessdate=2013-09-09}}{{dead link|date=October 2013}}</ref> |
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A North Korea scholar dismisses the idea that ''[[juche]]'' is North Korea's leading ideology, regarding its public exaltation as designed to deceive foreigners.<ref name="Rank">{{cite news|url=http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Korea/LD10Dg02.html|title=Lifting the cloak on North Korean secrecy: ''The Cleanest Race, How North Koreans See Themselves'' by B R Myers|first=Michael|last=Rank|date=10 April 2012|accessdate=23 December 2012|publisher=Asia Times}}</ref> In the latest version of the North Korean constitution, the state and party officially rejected North Korea's founding ideology of communism.<ref name="rejectcommunism"/> |
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Research based on North Korea's domestic documents, and popularized in 2009 by [[Brian Reynolds Myers|Brian R. Myers]] in his book ''[[The Cleanest Race]]'', and later supported by other academics,<ref>[[Andrei Lankov]]. Review of ''The Cleanest Race''. ''Far Eastern Economic Review''. 4 December 2010.</ref><ref>[[Christopher Hitchens]]: [http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/fighting_words/2010/02/a_nation_of_racist_dwarfs.html A Nation of Racist Dwarfs – Kim Jong-il's regime is even weirder and more despicable than you thought] (2010)</ref> characterizes [[Korean ethnic nationalism|North Korean ideology as being a racialist-focused nationalism]], and heavily influenced by the [[Statism in Shōwa Japan|racialist outlook of Japan before the end of the Second World War]].<ref>{{cite news| author=[[Brian Reynolds Myers]] | url = http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704471504574445980801810944.html | title = The Constitution of Kim Jong Il. | work = [[Wall Street Journal]] | date = 1 October 2009 | accessdate = 20 December 2012 | quote = From its beginnings in 1945 the regime has espoused—to its subjects if not to its Soviet and Chinese aid-providers—a race-based, paranoid nationalism that has nothing to do with Marxism-Leninism. [...] North Korea has always had less in common with the former Soviet Union than with the Japan of the 1930s, another 'national defense state' in which a command economy was pursued not as an end in itself, but as a prerequisite for rapid armament. North Korea is, in other words, a national-socialist country}}</ref>{{Sfn|Myers|2011|pp= 9; 11–12}} [[Charles K. Armstrong]] criticizes Myers for taking the Japanese comparison too far, suggesting that North Korean ideology is "actually ''closer'' to European [[fascism]]" than to Imperial Japanese fascism, since Imperial Japan lacked a [[charismatic leader]] and mass-mobilizing party.<ref name="Armstrong">{{cite journal|title=Trends in the Study of North Korea|first=Charles K|last=Armstrong|journal=[[The Journal of Asian Studies]]|volume=70|issue=2|date=May 2011|pages=357–371|authorlink=Charles K. Armstrong}}</ref> |
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===Leadership=== |
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[[File:The statues of Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il on Mansu Hill in Pyongyang (april 2012).jpg|thumb|250px|North Koreans are bowing to the statues of Kim Il-Sung (left) and Kim Jong Il.]] |
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Following Kim Il-sung's death in 1994, he was not replaced but instead received the designation of "[[Eternal President of the Republic|Eternal President]]", and his body was interred in the vast [[Kumsusan Palace of the Sun]] in central Pyongyang.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.lindsayfincher.com/2009/11/north-korea-bowing-before-kim-il-sungs-embalmed-corpse-at-the-kumsusan-memorial-palace.html |title=North Korea: Bowing before Kim Il-Sung’s embalmed corpse at the Kumsusan Memorial Palace |publisher=Lindsayfincher.com |date=23 April 1996 |accessdate=3 November 2011}}</ref> |
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Although the office of the President is ceremonially held by the deceased Kim Il-sung,<ref name="hitchens07">{{Cite news|url=http://www.slate.com/id/2180464/|title=Why has the Bush administration lost interest in North Korea?|last=Hitchens|first=Christopher|date=24 December 2007|work=[[Slate (magazine)|Slate]]|accessdate=9 April 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ansa.it/ansalatina/notizie/fdg/200909281404357105/200909281404357105.html|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20091001195755/http://www.ansa.it/ansalatina/notizie/fdg/200909281404357105/200909281404357105.html|archivedate=2009-10-01|title=CONSTITUCION DE NORCOREA SUPRIME COMUNISMO, KIM JONG LIDER |publisher=Ansa.it |date=28 September 2009 |accessdate=11 March 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www1.korea-np.co.jp/pk/061st_issue/98091708.htm |title=DPRK's Socialist Constitution (Full Text) |accessdate=1 August 2007 |author=10th [[Supreme People's Assembly]]. |date=15 September 1998 |work=The People's Korea}}</ref> the [[List of leaders of North Korea|Supreme Leader]] until his death in December 2011 was Kim Jong-il, who was [[General Secretary of the Workers' Party of Korea]] and [[Chairman of the National Defence Commission of North Korea]]. The legislature of North Korea is the [[Supreme People's Assembly]], currently led by [[Supreme People's Assembly|Chairman]] [[Kim Yong-nam]]. The head of the [[Cabinet of North Korea]] is the [[Premier of North Korea]] [[Pak Pong-ju]]. |
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The structure of the government is described in the [[Constitution of North Korea]].<ref name="rejectcommunism">{{Cite news|url=http://www.reuters.com/article/2009/09/28/idUSSEO253213|title=North Korea drops communism, boosts "Dear Leaders"|first=Jon|last=Herskovitz|first2=Christine|last2=Kim|date=28 September 2009|accessdate=17 July 2011|publisher=Reuters}}</ref> The governing party by law is the [[Democratic Front for the Reunification of the Fatherland]], a coalition of the [[Workers' Party of Korea]] and two other smaller parties, the [[Korean Social Democratic Party]] and the [[Chondoist Chongu Party]]. These parties nominate all candidates for office and hold all seats in the Supreme People's Assembly. They have negligible power, as the leader holds autocratic control over the nation's affairs. |
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In June 2009, it was reported in South Korean media that intelligence indicated that the country's next leader would be [[Kim Jong-un]], the youngest of Kim Jong-il's three sons.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/8078324.stm|title=N Korea 'names Kim's successor' |date=2 June 2009|publisher=BBC|accessdate=2 June 2009}}</ref> |
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This was confirmed on 19 December 2011, following Kim Jong-il's death.<ref name="apdeath"/><ref>{{cite news |url = http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204791104577107350219610874.html |title = Kim Jong Il Has Died |date = 18 December 2011 |accessdate = 19 December 2011 |author = Alastair Gale |publisher = [[The Wall Street Journal Asia]]}}</ref> According to [[Cheong Seong-chang]] of [[Sejong Institute]], speaking on 25 June 2012, there is some possibility that the new leader Kim Jong-un, who has greater visible interest in the welfare of his people and engages in greater interaction with them than his father did, will consider economic reforms and regularization of international relations.<ref name=KH62712>{{cite news|title=N.K. leader seen moving toward economic reform|url=http://view.koreaherald.com/kh/view.php?ud=20120627001074|accessdate=28 June 2012|newspaper=The Korea Herald|date=27 June 2012|author=Song Sang-ho}}</ref> |
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===Controls on political expression=== |
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Political expression is tightly controlled in North Korea. Supporters of the government who deviate from the government line are subject to [[reeducation through labor|reeducation]] in sections of [[labor camp]]s set aside for that purpose. Those who are successfully [[rehabilitation (penology)|rehabilitated]] may reassume responsible government positions on their release.<ref>[http://koreajoongangdaily.joinsmsn.com/news/article/article.aspx?aid=2952180 "Report on political prisoners in North soon"] article by Han Yeong-ik in Korea Joongang Daily 30 April 2012</ref> |
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Troublesome political dissidents, [[Political faction|faction]]alists and [[class enemy|class enemies]], who are considered irredeemable are [[Incarceration|incarcerated]] together with any close family members or children born in the camp in "[[Total Control Zones]]" for a life of hard labor. Labor camps in North Korea are actually areas of the country set aside for that purpose, [[Camp 22]] (also known as Kwan-li-so No.22 Haengyong) is 31 miles by 25 miles with a population of about 50,000. Those who attempt to escape or violate camp rules are executed or sent to a separate prison within the camp. The labor camps are reserved for political prisoners; common criminals are incarcerated in a separate system.<ref name = "WPNKCamps" >[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/19/AR2009071902178.html "Outside World Turns Blind Eye to N. Korea's Hard-Labor Camps"] by Blaine Harden in ''The Washington Post'' 20 July 2009</ref> There are 6 such areas in the northern and northeastern portion of North Korea.<ref name = "WPMap" >[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/special/world/north-korean-prison-camps-2009/ "On the Map: Five Major North Korean Prison Camps"] interactive map in ''The Washington Post'' 20 July 2009</ref> |
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In January 2013, North Korea purchased 16,000 [[video camera]]s from [[China]] in order to conduct [[mass surveillance]] on citizens.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/northkorea/9801850/North-Korea-steps-up-surveillance-of-citizens-with-16000-CCTV-cameras.html |title=North Korea steps up surveillance of citizens with 16,000 CCTV cameras |publisher=Telegraph |date=15 January 2013|author= Julian Ryall |location=London}}</ref> |
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===Foreign relations=== |
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{{Main|Foreign relations of North Korea}} |
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[[File:Vladimir Putin with Kim Jong-Il-7.jpg|thumb|250px|[[President of Russia|Russian President]], [[Vladimir Putin]], meets with the former Chairman of the National Defence Commission, Kim Jong-il, in Pyongyang, 2000.]] |
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North Korea has long maintained close relations with the [[People's Republic of China|People's Republic of China (PRC)]] and [[Russia]]. The [[Revolutions of 1989|fall of communism]] in eastern Europe in 1989, and the disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1991, resulted in a devastating drop in aid to North Korea from Russia, although China continues to provide substantial assistance. North Korea continues to have strong ties with its [[socialism|socialist]] southeast Asian allies in [[Vietnam]] and [[Laos]], as well as with [[Cambodia]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www1.korea-np.co.jp/pk/165th_issue/2001072510.htm |title=Kim Yong Nam Visits 3 ASEAN Nations To Strengthen Traditional Ties |accessdate=1 August 2007 |year=2001 |work=The People's Korea}}</ref> |
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North Korea has started installing a [[Chinese–Korean border fence|concrete and barbed wire fence]] on its northern border, in response to China's wish to curb [[North Korean refugees|an overflow of illegal refugees from North Korea]]. Previously, the border between China and North Korea had only been lightly patrolled.<ref>{{Cite news|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110501203637/http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/5084232.html|archivedate=1 May 2011|url=http://chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/5084232.html|title=Report: N. Korea building fence to keep people in|publisher=The Houston Chronicle|accessdate=4 July 2009}}</ref> |
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As a result of the [[North Korea and weapons of mass destruction|North Korean nuclear weapons program]], the [[six-party talks]] were established to find a peaceful solution to the growing tension between the two Korean governments, the Russian Federation, the People's Republic of China, Japan, and the United States. |
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On 17 July 2007, United Nations inspectors verified the shutdown of five North Korean nuclear facilities, according to the February 2007 agreement.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/asiapcf/07/18/nkorea.iaea/index.html |title=U.N. verifies closure of North Korean nuclear facilities |accessdate=18 July 2007 |author=CNN | date=18 July 2007}}</ref> On 4 October 2007, South Korean President Roh Moo-Hyun and North Korean leader Kim Jong-il signed an 8-point peace agreement, on issues of permanent peace, high-level talks, economic cooperation, renewal of train, highway and air travel, and a joint Olympic cheering squad.<ref name=idUKSEO16392220071004/> |
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The United States and South Korea previously designated the North as a [[state sponsored terrorism|state sponsor of terrorism]].<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/crt/2007/103711.htm | archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100220062057/http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/crt/2007/103711.htm | archivedate=2010-02-20 | title=Country Reports on Terrorism: Chapter 3 – State Sponsors of Terrorism Overview | author=Office of the Coordinator for Counterterrorism | accessdate=26 June 2008}}</ref> The [[Rangoon bombing|1983 bombing that killed members of the South Korean government]] and the [[Korean Air Flight 858|destruction of a South Korean airliner]] have been attributed to North Korea.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/countries/korea.html |title=Country Guide|accessdate=26 June 2008|work=The Washington Post}}</ref> North Korea has also admitted responsibility for [[North Korean abductions of Japanese|the kidnapping of 13 Japanese citizens in the 1970s and 1980s]], five of whom were returned to Japan in 2002.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/5074234.stm |title=N Korea to face Japan sanctions |accessdate=26 June 2008 | date=13 June 2006 | work=BBC News}}</ref> On 11 October 2008, the United States removed North Korea from its list of states that sponsor terrorism.<ref>{{Cite news| url = http://edition.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/asiapcf/10/11/us.north.korea/index.html | title = U.S. takes North Korea off terror list | publisher = CNN | date = 11 October 2008 | accessdate = 11 October 2008}}</ref> |
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In 2009, relationships between North and South Korea increased in intensity; North Korea had been reported to have deployed missiles,<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7905361.stm|title=North Korea deploying more missiles|publisher=BBC News|date=23 February 2009}}</ref> ended its former agreements with South Korea,<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7859671.stm|title=North Korea tears up agreements|publisher=BBC News|date=30 January 2009|accessdate=8 March 2009}}</ref> and threatened South Korea and the United States not to interfere with a satellite launch it had planned.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7931670.stm|publisher=BBC News|date=3 March 2009|accessdate=8 March 2009|title=North Korea warning over satellite}}</ref> |
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North and South Korea are still technically at war (having never signed a peace treaty after the Korean War) and share the world’s most heavily fortified border.<ref name=border>{{Cite news|url=http://edition.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/asiapcf/06/03/koreas.agree/index.html|title= Koreas agree to military hotline – Jun 4, 2004|publisher=Edition.cnn.com|date=4 June 2004|accessdate=18 February 2010}}</ref> On 27 May 2009, North Korean media declared that the [[Korean Armistice Agreement|Korean Armistice]] was no longer valid because the South Korean government's pledge to "definitely join" the [[Proliferation Security Initiative]].{{Citation needed|date=November 2010}} |
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To further complicate and intensify strain between the two nations, the [[ROKS Cheonan sinking|sinking of the South Korean warship ''Cheonan'']] in March 2010, killing 46 seamen, is as of 20 May 2010 claimed by a multi-national research team<ref>{{Cite news| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/world/asia_pacific/10131683.stm | work=BBC News | title=Anger at North Korea over sinking | date=20 May 2010 | accessdate=23 May 2010}}</ref> to have been caused by a North Korean torpedo, which the North denies. South Korea agreed with the findings from the research group and President Lee Myung-bak declared in May 2010 that Seoul would cut all trade with North Korea as part of measures primarily aimed at striking back at North Korea diplomatically and financially.<ref>Matthew Lee (24 May 2010) {{Wayback |date=20100528081726 |url=http://apnews.myway.com/article/20100524/D9FT51NG0.html |title=Clinton: Koreas security situation 'precarious' }}{{dead link|date=April 2014}}, Associated Press</ref> As a result of this, North Korea severed all ties, completely abrogated the previous pact of non aggression and expelled all South Koreans from [[Kaesong Industrial Region|a joint industrial zone in Kaesong]].<ref>[http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE64O3YU20100525 Text from North Korea statement], by Jonathan Thatcher, Reuters, 25 May 2010</ref> On 23 November 2010, North Korea attacked [[Yeonpyeong Island]], further deteriorating the diplomatic relations with the South and other nations.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/nov/23/north-south-korea-crisis-conflict | title=North Korea: a deadly attack, a counter-strike – now Koreans hold their breath | date=23 November 2010 | location=London | work=The Guardian | first1=Tania | last1=Branigan | first2=Ewen | last2=MacAskill}}</ref> |
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Most of the foreign embassies connecting with diplomatic ties to North Korea are located in [[Beijing|Beijing (Capital of China)]] rather than in [[Pyongyang|Pyongyang (Capital of DPRK)]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://app.yonhapnews.co.kr/YNA/Basic/article/search/YIBW_showSearchArticle.aspx?searchpart=article&searchtext=%E5%8C%97%20%EC%88%98%EA%B5%90%EA%B5%AD%20%EC%83%81%EC%A3%BC%EA%B3%B5%EA%B4%80&contents_id=AKR20090302193700083 |title=北 수교국 상주공관, 평양보다 베이징에 많아 |accessdate=13 December 2010 |date=2 March 2009 |work=[[Yonhap News]]}}</ref> |
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==Society== |
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===Ascribed status=== |
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[[File:Korean youth on Pyongyang street.jpg|thumb|[[Sneakers (footwear)|Sneaker]]-wearing North Korean youths walking in Pyongyang.]] |
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According to North Korean documents and refugee testimonies,<ref name=HRNKSongbun>{{cite book|title=Marked for Life: Songbun, North Korea’s Social Classification System|publisher=Committee for Human Rights in North Korea|url=http://www.hrnk.org/uploads/pdfs/HRNK_Songbun_Web.pdf|author=Robert Collins|accessdate=8 June 2012|date=6 June 2012}}</ref> all North Koreans are sorted into groups according to their [[Songbun]], an [[ascribed status]] system. Based on their own behavior and the political, social, and economic background of their family for three generations as well as behavior by relatives within that range, Songbun is allegedly used to determine whether an individual is trusted with responsibility, given opportunities,<ref name=NKSongbun>{{cite news|title=Marked for Life: Songbun, North Korea’s Social Classification System|url=http://www.nknews.org/2012/06/marked-for-life-songbun-north-koreas-social-classification-system/|accessdate=8 June 2012|newspaper=NK News|date=7 June 2012|author=Matthew McGrath}}</ref> or even receives adequate food.<ref name=HRNKSongbun/><ref name=H-LH>{{cite book|title=Kim Il-song's North Korea|year=1999|publisher=Praeger|location=Westport, Connecticut, London|isbn=0-275-96296-2|pages=3–11, 31–33|author=Helen-Louise Hunter|others=Foreword by Stephen J. Solarz}}</ref> |
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Songbun allegedly affects access to educational and employment opportunities and particularly whether a person is eligible to join North Korea's ruling party.<ref name=NKSongbun/> There are 3 main classifications and about 50 sub-classifications. According to Kim Il-sung, speaking in 1958, the loyal "core class" constituted 25% of the North Korean population, the "wavering class" 55%, and the "hostile class" 20%.<ref name=HRNKSongbun/> The highest status is accorded to individuals descended from those who participated with Kim Il-sung in the resistance against Japanese occupation during and before World War II and to those who were factory workers, laborers or peasants as of 1950.<ref name=BRHLH>{{cite web|title=A Look at North Korean Society|url=http://www.winzigconsultingservices.com/files/samples/kq/Helen_Hunter.html|publisher=winzigconsultingservices.com|accessdate=8 June 2011|author=Jerry Winzig|format=book review of ''Kim Il-song's North Korea'' by Helen-Louise Hunter|quote=In North Korea, one's songbun, or socio-economic and class background, is extremely important and is primarily determined at birth. People with the best songbun are descendants of the anti-Japanese guerrillas who fought with Kim Il-song, followed by people whose parents or grandparents were factory workers, laborers, or poor, small farmers in 1950. "Ranked below them in descending order are forty-seven distinct groups in what must be the most class-differentiated society in the world today." Anyone with a father, uncle, or grandfather who owned land or was a doctor, Christian minister, merchant, or lawyer has low songbun.}}</ref> |
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While some analysts believe private commerce recently changed the Songbun system to some extent,<ref>{{cite news| title=North Korea's Songbun Caste System Faces Power Of Wealth | author=Tim Sullivan|work= Huffington Post| date= 29 December 2012| url= http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/29/north-korea-songbun-caste-system_n_2380799.html| accessdate= 28 February 2013}}</ref> most North Korean refugees say it remains a commanding presence in everyday life.<ref name=HRNKSongbun/> However the North Korean government claims all citizens are equal and denies any discrimination on the basis of family background.<ref>[http://www.kinu.or.kr/eng/pub/pub_04_01.jsp?bid=DATA04&page=1&num=32&mode=view KINU White Paper on Human Rights in North Korea 2011, p. 216, 225]. Kinu.or.kr (30 August 2011). Retrieved on 6 April 2013.</ref> |
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[[File:North Korea-Pyongyang-Grand Peoples Study House-01.jpg|thumb|right|upright|A uniformed civilian man riding a bicycle in Pyongyang.]] |
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===Human rights=== |
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{{Main|Human rights in North Korea}} |
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Many international [[human rights]] organizations accuse North Korea of having one of the worst human rights records of any nation.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.amnestyusa.org/countries/north_korea/index.do |title=Our Issues, North Korea |accessdate=1 August 2007 |author=Amnesty International |year=2007 |work=Human Rights Concerns |authorlink=Amnesty International}}</ref> [[Amnesty International]] reports of severe restrictions on the freedom of association, expression and movement, arbitrary detention, torture and other ill-treatment resulting in death, and executions.<ref name="ai1">{{cite web | title= Annual Report 2011: North Korea| work=Amnesty International | url= http://www.amnesty.org/en/region/north-korea/report-2011| accessdate=20 April 2012}}</ref> The organization demands the closure of prison camps, where 200,000 political prisoners and their families exist in “the most inhuman conditions imaginable”.<ref name="ai2">{{cite web | title= North Korea: Catastrophic human rights record overshadows ‘Day of the Sun’ | work=Amnesty International |date=12 April 2012| url= http://www.amnesty.org/en/news/north-korea-catastrophic-human-rights-record-overshadows-day-sun-2012-04-12 | accessdate=10 April 2012}}</ref> North Koreans have been referred to as "some of the world's most brutalized people" by [[Human Rights Watch]], because of the severe restrictions placed on their [[Freedom (political)|political]] and [[economic freedom]]s.<ref name="hrw1">{{cite web|url=http://hrw.org/english/docs/2007/05/16/nkorea15944.htm |title=Grotesque indifference |accessdate=1 August 2007 |author= Kay Seok|date=15 May 2007 |work=[[Human Rights Watch]]}}</ref><ref name="hrw2">{{cite web| url = http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2009/02/17/human-rights-north-korea | title = Human Rights in North Korea | work = hrw.org | publisher = Human Rights Watch | date = 17 February 2009 | accessdate = 13 December 2010}}</ref> According to the United Nations Commission of Inquiry the crimes against humanity in North Korea entail extermination, murder, enslavement, torture, imprisonment, rape, forced abortions and other sexual violence, persecution on political, religious, racial and gender grounds, the forcible transfer of populations, the enforced disappearance of persons and the inhumane act of knowingly causing prolonged starvation.<ref>{{cite web|title=North Korea: UN Commission documents wide-ranging and ongoing crimes against humanity, urges referral to ICC| work=United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights| url= http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=14255&LangID=E|date=February 17, 2014|accessdate=February 18, 2014}}</ref> |
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In the 1990s just listening to South Korean radio transmissions could result in capital punishment.{{Citation needed|date=June 2009}} Some were also allegedly sent to prison camps for singing a South Korean song.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/217457/after-28-years-in-north-korean-camp-survivor-speaks-out |title=After 28 years in North Korean camp, survivor speaks out | Inquirer News |publisher=Newsinfo.inquirer.net |date=23 June 2012 |accessdate=8 March 2013}}</ref> |
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===Political prison camps=== |
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{{Main|Prisons in North Korea}} |
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{{location map+|North Korea|caption = Political prison camps in North Korea| float=right|width=|places= |
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{{location map~|North Korea|label=[[Bukchang concentration camp|Bukchang]]| position=bottom|lat=39.446164|long=126.163223 <!--exact position is lat=39.546164,long=126.063223, slightly shifted for better visibility --> |region=KP-02}} |
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{{location map~|North Korea|label=[[Chongjin concentration camp|Chongjin]]| position=left|lat=41.833486|long=129.725597|region=KP-09}} |
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{{location map~|North Korea|label=[[Camp 22|Haengyong]]| position=left|lat=42.537967|long=129.935517|region=KP-09}} |
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{{location map~|North Korea|label=[[Hwasong concentration camp|Hwasong]]| position=left|lat=41.268505|long=129.391211|region=KP-09}} |
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{{location map~|North Korea|label=[[Kaechon internment camp|Kaechon]]| position=left|lat=39.571086|long=126.055466|region=KP-02}} |
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{{location map~|North Korea|label=[[Yodok concentration camp|Yodok]]|position=right|lat=39.674163|long=126.851406|region=KP-08}}}} |
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The [[State Security Department]] of North Korea is responsible for several activities involving law enforcement and allegedly maintain various prison camps. [[North Korean defectors]] have testified to the existence of [[Prisons in North Korea|prisons and concentration camps]]<ref>{{cite news |title=Torture in North Korea: Concentration Camps in the Spotlight | url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/karin-badt/torture-in-north-korea-co_b_545254.html | last=Badt | first=Karin | accessdate=8 October 2010 | date=21 April 2010 | work=Huffington Post}}<!-- This looks awfully like an unreliable blog post, yanno --></ref> including "[[kwalliso|total control zones]]", (Kwan-li-so : {{lang|ko|관리소}}), where political undesirables are imprisoned for life at hard labor and are subjected to reported torture, starvation, rape, murder, [[North Korean human experimentation|medical experimentation]], forced labor, and forced abortions.<ref name=hrnk2>{{cite web | title= The Hidden Gulag – Exposing Crimes against Humanity in North Korea’s Vast Prison System | work= The Committee for Human Rights in North Korea | url= http://www.hrnk.org/uploads/pdfs/HRNK_HiddenGulag2_Web_5-18.pdf| accessdate= 14 September 2012}}</ref> |
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According to [[Amnesty International]], based on satellite images and testimonies, around 200,000 prisoners (about 0.85% of the population) are held in six large political prison camps,<ref name=ai_ppc >{{cite web | title= North Korea: Political Prison Camps| work=Amnesty International |date=4 May 2011| url= http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/ASA24/001/2011/en/2671e54f-1cd1-46c1-96f1-6a463efa6f65/asa240012011en.pdf | accessdate=10 April 2012}}</ref> being in operation since the 1950s. They are forced to work in conditions approaching slavery and are frequently subjected to torture and other cruel, inhumane, and degrading treatment.<ref>{{cite web | title= Images reveal scale of North Korean political prison camps | work=Amnesty International |date=3 May 2011| url= http://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/images-reveal-scale-north-korean-political-prison-camps-2011-05-03 | accessdate= 10 April 2012}}</ref> [[Kaechon internment camp|Camp 14 in Kaechon]],<ref name=guardian >{{cite news| title=How one man escaped from a North Korean prison camp|author=Blaine Harden|date=16 March 2012| url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/mar/16/escape-north-korea-prison-camp|publisher=The Guardian|location=London}}</ref> [[Yodok concentration camp|Camp 15 in Yodok]]<ref name=csw >{{cite web | title=North Korea: A case to answer – a call to act (p. 25–26)| work=Christian Solidarity Worldwide, June 20, 2007| url= http://docs-eu.livesiteadmin.com/c8880e0f-f6ed-4585-8f09-4e4b6d11e698/north-korea-a-case-to-answer-a-call-to-act.pdf | accessdate= 10 April 2012}}</ref> and [[Bukchang concentration camp|Camp 18 in Bukchang]]<ref name=sub_ihr>{{cite web| title=Subcommittee on International Human Rights, 40th Parliament, 3rd session, February 1, 2011: Testimony of Ms. Hye Sook Kim| work=Parliament of Canada| url=http://www.parl.gc.ca/HousePublications/Publication.aspx?DocId=4916717&Language=E&Mode=1&Parl=40&Ses=3#Int-3706941 | accessdate= 10 April 2012}}</ref> are described in detailed testimonies.<ref name="hrnk2"/> |
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People suspected of not being loyal to the regime, e.g. because they are Christians or because they criticized the leadership,<ref name="ai_ppc"/> are deported to these camps without trial,<ref>{{cite web | title=Concentrations of Inhumanity (p. 40–44)| work=Freedom House, May 2007| url= http://www.freedomhouse.org/sites/default/files/ConcentrationsInhumanity.pdf |
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| accessdate= 10 April 2012}}</ref> often with their whole family and mostly without any chance of being released.<ref>{{cite web | title= Survey Report on Political Prisoners’ Camps in North Korea (p. 58–73)| work= National Human Rights Commission of Korea, December 2009 | url= http://nkdb.org/bbs1/data/publication/Survey_Report_on_Political_Prisoners_Camp_in_North_Korea_.pdf | accessdate= 10 April 2012}}</ref> [[The International Coalition to Stop Crimes Against Humanity in North Korea (ICNK)]] estimates that over 10,000 people die in North Korean prison camps every year.<ref>{{cite web | title= Human Rights Groups Call on UN Over N.Korea Gulag| work=The Chosunilbo, April 4, 2012| url= http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2012/04/04/2012040401146.html | accessdate= 10 April 2012}}</ref> According to [[R.J. Rummel]], forced labor, executions, and concentration camps were responsible for over one million deaths in North Korea from 1948 to 1987;<ref>R. J. Rummel (1997) [http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/SOD.CHAP10.HTM Statistics Of North Korean Democide: Estimates, Calculations, And Sources], ''Statistics of Democide''.</ref> others have estimated 400,000 deaths in concentration camps alone.<ref>Thomas Omestad (23 June 2003) [http://web.archive.org/web/20131103062444/http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/articles/030623/23gulag.htm "Gulag Nation"], [[U.S. News & World Report]].</ref> |
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===Personality cult=== |
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{{main|North Korea's cult of personality}} |
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The North Korean government exercises control over many aspects of the nation's culture, and this control is used to perpetuate a [[cult of personality]] surrounding Kim Il-sung,{{Sfn|Myers|2011|p= 100}} and, to a lesser extent, Kim Jong-il.{{Sfn|Myers|2011|p= 113}} While visiting North Korea in 1979, journalist Bradley Martin noted that nearly all music, art, and sculpture that he observed [[propaganda|glorified]] "Great Leader" Kim Il-sung, whose personality cult was then being extended to his son, "Dear Leader" Kim Jong-il.<ref name="LovingCare">Bradley K. Martin. ''Under the Loving Care of the Fatherly Leader: North Korea and the Kim Dynasty''. ISBN 0-312-32322-0</ref> Bradley Martin also reported that there is even widespread belief that Kim Il-sung "created the world", and Kim Jong-il could "control the weather".<ref name="LovingCare"/> |
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Such reports are contested by North Korea researcher [[Brian Reynolds Myers|Brian R. Myers]]: "divine powers have never been attributed to either of the two Kims. In fact, the propaganda apparatus in Pyongyang has generally been careful ''not'' to make claims that run directly counter to citizens’ experience or common sense."{{Sfn|Myers|2011|p=7}} He further explains that the state propaganda painted Kim Jong-il as someone whose expertise lay in military matters and that the famine of the 1990s was partially caused by natural disasters out of Kim Jong-il's control.{{Sfn|Myers|2011|pp=114, 116}} |
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[[File:Kim Il-sung.jpg|thumb|250px|A propaganda poster with Kim Il-sung's official portrait.]] |
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The song "[[No Motherland Without You]]" (당신이없으면 조국도없다), sung by the North Korean Army Choir, was created especially for Kim Jong-il and is one of the most popular tunes in the country. Kim Il-sung is still officially revered as the nation's "Eternal President". Several landmarks in North Korea are named for Kim Il-sung, including [[Kim Il-sung University]], [[Kim Il-sung Stadium]], and [[Kim Il-sung Square]]. Defectors have been quoted as saying that North Korean schools deify both father and son.<ref>Chol-hwan Kang and Pierre Rigoulot (2005). ''The Aquariums of Pyongyang: Ten Years in the North Korean Gulag'', Basic Books. ISBN 0-465-01104-7</ref> Kim Il-sung rejected the notion that he had created a cult around himself, and accused those who suggested this of "[[Political faction|factionalism]]".<ref name="LovingCare"/> Following the death of Kim Il-Sung, North Koreans were prostrating and weeping to a bronze statue of him in an organized event;<ref>{{cite news | title=DEATH OF A LEADER: THE SCENE; In Pyongyang, Crowds of Mourners Gather at Kim Statue| work=The New York Times| url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C04E5D9143FF933A25754C0A962958260| accessdate=19 November 2007 | date=10 July 1994}}</ref> similar scenes were broadcast by state television following the death of Kim Jong-il. |
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Critics maintain this Kim Jong-il personality cult was inherited from his father, Kim Il-sung. Kim Jong-il was often the center of attention throughout ordinary life in the DPRK. His birthday is one of the most important public holidays in the country. On his 60th birthday (based on his official date of birth), mass celebrations occurred throughout the country.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/1823713.stm|title=North Korea marks leader's birthday|publisher=BBC|date=16 February 2002|accessdate=18 December 2007}}</ref> Kim Jong-il's personality cult, although significant, was not as extensive as his father's. One point of view is that Kim Jong-il's cult of personality was solely out of respect for Kim Il-sung or out of fear of punishment for failure to pay homage.<ref name="Hermit">{{cite web|url=http://nautilus.org/publications/books/dprkbb/negotiating/dprk-briefing-book-korean-monarch-kim-jong-il-technocrat-ruler-of-the-hermit-kingdom-facing-the-challenge-of-modernity/|title=Korean Monarch Kim Jong Il: Technocrat Ruler of the Hermit Kingdom Facing the Challenge of Modernity|publisher= [[Nautilus Institute for Security and Sustainability|The Nautilus Institute]]|accessdate=18 December 2007|last=Mansourov|first=Alexandre}}</ref> Media and government sources from outside of North Korea generally support this view,<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/6368203.stm|title=Nuclear deal fuels Kim's celebrations|publisher=BBC|date=16 February 2007|accessdate=18 December 2007|last=Scanlon|first=Charles}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=http://news.independent.co.uk/world/asia/article1916374.ece|title=Kim Jong Il, the tyrant with a passion for wine, women and the bomb|publisher=The Independent|date=21 October 2006|accessdate=18 December 2007|last=Coonan|first=Clifford | location=London}}</ref><ref>Richard Lloyd Parry. [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,25689-2396147,00.html "'Dear Leader' clings to power while his people pay the price"], The Times. 10 October 2006. Retrieved 18 December 2007.</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.nzherald.co.nz/terrorism/news/article.cfm?c_id=340&objectid=10405224|title='North Korea's 'Dear Leader' flaunts nuclear prowess|publisher=New Zealand Herald|date=10 October 2006|accessdate=18 December 2007}}</ref><ref>Compiled by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor. [http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2003/27775.htm "Country Reports on Human Rights Practices"] US Department of State. 25 February 2004. Retrieved 18 December 2007.</ref> while North Korean government sources say that it is genuine hero worship.<ref>Jason LaBouyer (May/June 2005) {{Wayback |date=20080216051805 |url=http://www.korea-dpr.com/lodestar0605v.pdf |title="When friends become enemies — Understanding left-wing hostility to the DPRK" }}{{dead link|date=April 2014}}, Lodestar, pp. 7–9. Korea-DPR.com. Retrieved 18 December 2007.</ref> |
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B. R. Myers also argues that the worship is real and not unlike worship of [[Adolf Hitler]] in [[Nazi Germany]].<ref>Myers</ref> In a more recent event – on {{date|2012-06-11}} – a 14-year-old North Korean schoolgirl drowned while attempting to rescue portraits of Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-il from a flood.<ref>[http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/90777/7859315.html DPRK honors schoolgirl who died saving Kim portraits – People's Daily Online]. English.peopledaily.com.cn (28 June 2012). Retrieved on 6 April 2013.</ref> |
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===Korean reunification=== |
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{{Main|Korean reunification}} |
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North Korea's policy is to seek reunification without what it sees as outside interference, through a federal structure retaining each side's leadership and systems. In 2000, both North and South Korea signed the [[June 15th North–South Joint Declaration]] in which both sides made promises to seek out a peaceful reunification.<ref name=joint/> The Democratic Federal Republic of Korea is a [[proposed state]] first mentioned by then North Korean president Kim Il-sung on 10 October 1980, proposing a federation between North and South Korea in which the respective political systems would initially remain.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.songunpoliticsstudygroup.org/Oct102008/W-801010.HTM|title=REPORT TO THE SIXTH CONGRESS OF THE WORKERS’ PARTY OF KOREA ON THE WORK OF THE CENTRAL COMMITTEE|last=Kim|first=Il Sung|date=10 October 1980|publisher=Songun Politics Study Group (USA)|accessdate=4 July 2009}}{{dead link|date=October 2013}}</ref> |
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==Military== |
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{{Main|Korean People's Army}} |
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{{See also|North Korea and weapons of mass destruction|Songun}} |
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[[File:JointSecurityAreaNorthKoreans.jpg|thumb|250px|Korean People's Army soldiers observing the South Korean side of the DMZ]] |
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The [[Ministry of People's Armed Forces (North Korea)|Ministry of the People's Armed Forces]] maintains the Korean People's Army (KPA), which serves as the military force of the country.<ref>[http://www.statista.com/statistics/167421/comparison-of-the-military-strength-of-north-korea-and-south-korea/ Statistics: Comparison of the Military Strength of North Korea and South Korea]. International Institute for Strategic Studies. April 2013. Retrieved August 2, 2013.</ref> The Korean People's Army (KPA) is the name for the collective armed personnel of the North Korean military. It has five branches: [[North Korean Ground Force|Ground Force]], [[Korean People's Army Navy|Naval Force]], [[Korean People's Army Air Force|Air Force]], [[North Korean Special Operation Force|Special Operations Force]], and [[Artillery Guidance Bureau|Rocket Force]]. According to the [[United States Department of State|U.S. Department of State]], North Korea has the [[List of countries by number of troops|fourth-largest army]] in the world, at an estimated 1.21 million armed personnel, with about 20% of men aged 17–54 in the regular armed forces.<ref name="bgn"/> North Korea has the highest percentage of military personnel per capita of any nation in the world, with approximately one enlisted soldier for every 25 citizens.<ref name="economist-armied"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/mil_arm_per_percap-military-army-personnel-per-capita |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070217230331/http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/mil_arm_per_percap-military-army-personnel-per-capita |archivedate=2007-02-17 |title=Army personnel (per capita) by country |accessdate=1 August 2007 |year=2007 |work=NationMaster}}</ref> North Korea also has a [[Defense industry of North Korea|Defense Industry]] that is responsible for engineering military equipment. In 1994, North Korea received 10 [[Golf class submarine|Golf II Class Submarines]] from Russia.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://cns.miis.edu/archive/country_north_korea/chr9495.htm |title=CNS – Chronology of North Korea's Missile Trade and Developments: 1994–1995 |publisher=Cns.miis.edu |accessdate=8 March 2013}}</ref> |
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[[File:SPG M-1978 KOKSAN.JPG|thumb|250px|[[Koksan (artillery)|Koksan]], one of North Korea's principal heavy artillery pieces. This example was captured in Iraq.]] |
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Military strategy is designed for insertion of agents and sabotage behind enemy lines in wartime,<ref name="bgn"/> with much of the KPA's forces deployed along the heavily fortified [[Korean Demilitarized Zone]]. The Korean People's Army operates a very large amount of equipment, including 4,060 [[tank]]s, 2,500 [[Armoured personnel carrier|APCs]], 17,900 [[artillery]] pieces, 11,000 air defense guns and some 10,000 [[MANPADS]] and [[anti-tank guided missile]]s<ref>[http://www.soldiering.ru/country/guide2003/army-09.php Армии стран мира : К], soldiering.ru</ref> in the Ground force; at least 915 vessels in the Navy and 1,748 aircraft in the Air Force,{{Sfn|Country Profile|2007|p= 19 – Major Military Equipment}} of which 478 are fighters and 180 are bombers.<ref>[http://www.milaviapress.com/orbat/northkorea/index.php Order of Battle – North Korea], MilAviaPress</ref> |
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North Korea also has the largest special forces in the world, as well as the largest [[submarine]] fleet.{{Sfn|Country Study|2009|pp= 288–293}} The equipment is a mixture of World War II vintage vehicles and small arms, widely proliferated Cold War technology, and more modern Soviet or locally produced weapons. In line with its [[asymmetric warfare]] strategy, North Korea employs a wide range of unconventional techniques and equipment, such as [[GPS]] jammers,<ref>[http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/library/news/dprk/2010/dprk-101007-voa01.htm North Korea Appears Capable of Jamming GPS Receivers], globalsecurity.org, 7 October 2010</ref> [[stealth technology|stealth]] paint,<ref>[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/northkorea/7960218/North-Korea-develops-stealth-paint-to-camouflage-fighter-jets.html North Korea 'develops stealth paint to camouflage fighter jets'], The Daily Telegraph, 23 August 2010</ref> [[midget submarine]]s and [[human torpedo]]es,<ref>[http://www.dailynk.com/english/read.php?cataId=nk02500&num=6463 North Korea's Human Torpedoes], DailyNK, 6 May 2010</ref> a vast array of chemical and biological weapons,<ref>{{cite web| url = http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2010/04/29/2010042901362.html | title = New Threat from N.Korea's 'Asymmetrical' Warfare | publisher = The Chosun Ilbo (English Edition) | work = English.chosun.com | date = 29 April 2010 | accessdate = 13 December 2010}}</ref> and blinding laser weapons.<ref>[http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/asiapcf/11/24/north.korea.capability/index.html North Korea's military aging but sizable], CNN, 25 November 2010</ref> According to official North Korean media, military expenditures for 2010 amount to 15.8% of the state budget.<ref name="kcna2010budget">{{cite web|title=Report on Implementation of 2009 Budget and 2010 Budget|url=http://kcna.co.jp/item/2010/201004/news09/20100409-10ee.html|publisher=[[Korean Central News Agency]]|date=9 April 2010}}</ref> |
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North Korea has active nuclear and ballistic missile weapons programs and has been subject to United Nations Security Council resolutions [[United Nations Security Council Resolution 1695|1695]] of July 2006, [[United Nations Security Council Resolution 1718|1718]] of October 2006, and [[United Nations Security Council Resolution 1874|1874]] of June 2009, for carrying out both missile and nuclear tests. North Korea probably has fissile material for up to nine nuclear weapons,<ref>{{Wayback |date=20080311202121 |url=http://www.isis-online.org/mapproject/country_pages/northkorea.html |title=ISIS Fast Facts on North Korea }}{{dead link|date=April 2014}}. Retrieved 21 April 2009.</ref> and has the capability to deploy nuclear warheads on [[intermediate-range ballistic missile]]s.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/article6155956.ece|title=North Korea is fully fledged nuclear power, experts agree|accessdate=25 April 2009 | work=The Times | location=London | date=24 April 2009 | author=Deirdre Hipwell}}</ref> The launch of a North Korean satellite in December 2012 was seen as a weapons development step by South Korea and its allies<ref>{{cite news|author=Choe Sang-Hun|title=North Korean Missile Said to Have Military Purpose|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/24/world/asia/north-korean-rocket-had-military-purpose-seoul-says.html?_r=1&|newspaper=New York Times|date=23 December 2012}}</ref> and condemned by the UN Security Council.<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-20697922 UN Security Council condemns North Korea rocket launch]. BBC, 13 December 2012.</ref> |
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===Weapons manufacturing=== |
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In North Korea, weapons are manufactured in roughly 1,800 underground defense industry plants scattered throughout the country. Most of these facilities are located in [[Chagang Province]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.fas.org/irp/world/rok/nis-docs/defense09.htm|title=Defense|publisher=Federation of American Scientists|accessdate=October 11, 2013}}</ref> |
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===Nuclear capabilities=== |
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{{See also|North Korea nuclear weapons program|Timeline of the North Korean nuclear program}} |
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In the 1990s, North Korea sold medium-sized nuclear capable missiles to [[Pakistan]] in a deal facilitated by China.<ref>{{cite book|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=LVjhy7I2lDAC&pg=PA263 |title=Asian Strategic And Military Perspective |author= Ravi Shekhar Narain Singh | publisher=Lancer Publishers|isbn=817062245X|year=2005}}</ref> In 2005, North Korea admitted to having nuclear weapons but vowed to close their nuclear programs.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,146950,00.html |title=North Korea Confirms It Has Nuclear Weapons |publisher=Fox News |accessdate=8 March 2013 |date=11 February 2005}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2005/sep/20/northkorea |title=North Korea vows to abandon nuclear weapons project | World news |publisher=The Guardian |date=20 September 2005 |accessdate=8 March 2013 |location=London |first1=Ian |last1=Traynor |first2=Jonathan |last2=Watts |first3=Julian |last3=Borger}}</ref> The promise of a reduction in nuclear programs has also been reinforced at various [[Inter-Korean Summit]] meetings between North and South Korea since the year 2000. However, [[Nuclear power in North Korea|nuclear plants in North Korea]] have caused international concern since the 1950s as they are capable of assisting in the development of nuclear arms. International issues involving North Korea's refusal to discontinue nuclear projects have prevented Russia based [[Gazprom]] from developing a $2.5 billion pipeline to South Korea through Pyongyang. The revenue generated from Gazprom is intended to provide North Korea with $100 million per year in transit fees.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.platts.com/RSSFeedDetailedNews/RSSFeed/NaturalGas/8400342 |title=Kogas says gas pipe from Russia via N. Korea to cost $2.5 bil – Natural Gas | Platts News Article & Story |publisher=Platts.com |date=22 February 1999 |accessdate=8 March 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://en.ria.ru/russia/20111117/168770662.html |title=North Korea to get $100 million annually for Russian gas transit |publisher=RIA Novosti |date=17 November 2011 |accessdate=8 March 2013}}</ref> |
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The [[Japan Meteorological Agency]] has been able to use technological advances in [[seismology]] to detect various nuclear weapons tests.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_asiapacific/view/1255645/1/.html |title=Japan detects xenon in air after North Korea's nuclear test |publisher=Channel NewsAsia |accessdate=8 March 2013}}</ref> |
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Following North Korea's withdrawal from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty in 2003, it was subject to series of sanctions against by the UN Security Council, including [[United Nations Security Council Resolution 1695|Resolution 1695]], [[United Nations Security Council Resolution 1718|Resolution 1718]], [[United Nations Security Council Resolution 1874|Resolution 1874]], and [[United Nations Security Council Resolution 2087|Resolution 2087]]. |
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==Economy== |
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{{Main|Economy of North Korea}} |
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[[File:KoreaAtNight20121205 NASA.png|thumb|200px|An image of the Korean Peninsula at night rendered from [[NASA]] observations. The disparity in illumination levels is an indication of the differences between the North and South in population and technology.<ref>{{Cite news|author=Tom Zeller Jr.| title=The Internet Black Hole That Is North Korea | publisher=The New York Times | date=23 October 2006 | url=http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/23/technology/23link.html | accessdate=26 December 2008}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news| author=Bill Powell| title=North Korea | publisher=[[Time (magazine)|Time]] | date=14 August 2007 | url=http://www.time.com/time/topics/article/0,8599,1653050,00.html| archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090524054656/http://www.time.com/time/topics/article/0,8599,1653050,00.html| archivedate=24 May 2009| accessdate=26 December 2008}}</ref>]] |
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The economy of North Korea operates under the [[Central Bank of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea]] and issues the [[North Korean won]]. North Korea has an industrialized, highly centralized [[command economy]] with a high priority on self-sufficiency and independence. North Korea and [[Cuba]] are the only two states with an almost entirely government-planned, state-owned economy. The Central Planning Committee prepares, supervises and implements economic plans, while a General Bureau of Provincial Industry in each region is responsible for the management of local manufacturing facilities, production, resource allocation, and sales.<ref>[http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/55a/160.html Local factories in North Korea]{{dead link|date=October 2013}}, Interview by staff reporter, Joon Ang Ilbo, taken from Tong-il Hankuk newspaper, 14 March 2002</ref> |
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North Korea's isolation policy means that [[international trade]] is highly restricted. North Korea passed a law in 1984 allowing for foreign investment through joint ventures,<ref>{{Cite doi | 10.2307/2644057}}</ref> but failed to attract any significant investment. In 1991, it established the [[Rajin-Sonbong Economic Special Zone|Rason Economic Special Zone]],<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nkeconwatch.com/2010/04/05/scott-snyder-on-rason/ |title=North Korean Economy Watch » Blog Archive » Scott Snyder on Rason |publisher=Nkeconwatch.com |date=5 April 2010 |accessdate=23 June 2010}}</ref> in an attempt to attract foreign investment from [[China]] and [[Russia]]. Chinese and Russian companies have purchased rights to use the ports at Rason. Chinese investors are renovating a road from Rason to China,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nkeconwatch.com/2010/04/13/bridge-on-china-north-korea-border-being-renovated/ |title=North Korean Economy Watch » Blog Archive » Bridge on China-North Korea border being renovated |publisher=Nkeconwatch.com |date=13 April 2010 |accessdate=23 June 2010}}</ref> and Russian railway workers are renovating the railway from Rason to Russia, from where it continues onto the [[Trans-Siberian Railway]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nkeconwatch.com/2008/08/12/russia-inks-deal-connecting-rajin-to-trans-siberian-railroad/ |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100312080254/http://www.nkeconwatch.com/2008/08/12/russia-inks-deal-connecting-rajin-to-trans-siberian-railroad/ |archivedate=2010-03-12 |title=Russia inks deal connecting Rajin to Trans-Siberian Railroad|publisher=Nkeconwatch.com |date=12 August 2008 |accessdate=23 June 2010}}</ref> |
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Until 1998, the United Nations published [[Human Development Index|HDI]] and [[GDP per capita]] figures for North Korea, which stood at a medium level of human development at 0.766 (ranked 75th) and a GDP per capita of $4,058.<ref name="hdr.undp.org">{{cite web|url=http://hdr.undp.org/en/reports/global/hdr1998/|title=Human Development Report 1998|year=1998|publisher=United Nations Development Programme|accessdate=4 July 2009}}</ref> The average salary was about $47 per month in 2004.<ref>[http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/1202/p11s01-trgn.html Welcome to North Korea. Rule No. 1: Obey all rules], Steve Knipp, Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor. 2 December 2004.</ref> |
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The average official salary in 2011 was equivalent to $2 per month while the actual monthly income seems to be around $15 because most North Koreans earn money in illegal small businesses: trade, subsistence farming, and handicrafts. The illegal economy is dominated by women because men have to attend their places of official work even though most of the factories are non-functioning.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2011/10/304_96327.html |title=NK is no Stalinist country |publisher=The Korea Times |date=9 October 2011 |accessdate=9 October 2011}}</ref> It is estimated that in the early 2000s, the average North Korean family drew some 80% of its income from small businesses that are legal in market economies but illegal in North Korea.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Korea/MI23Dg02.html |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110924095232/http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Korea/MI23Dg02.html |archivedate=2011-09-24 |title=It's not all doom and gloom in Pyongyang |publisher=Asia Times |date=23 September 2011 |author= Andrei Lankov}}</ref> |
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Despite substantial economic problems, quality of life was improving and wages were rising steadily in 2007.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_international/212761.html|title=<nowiki>[</nowiki>Feature<nowiki>]</nowiki> In reclusive North, signs of economic liberalization|last=Ryu|first=Yi-geun|coauthors=Daniel Rakove|date=30 May 2007|work=The Hankyoreh|publisher=The Hankyoreh Media Company|accessdate=4 July 2009}}</ref> Small-scale private markets, known as ''janmadang'', exist throughout the country and provide the population with imported food and commodities ranging from cosmetics to motorcycles in exchange for money.<ref>[http://www.dailynk.com/english/read.php?cataId=nk00400&num=2828 Jangmadang Will Prevent "Second Food Crisis" from Developing], DailyNK, 26 October 2007</ref><ref>[http://www.dailynk.com/english/read.php?cataId=nk00100&num=4409 2008 Top Items in the Jangmadang], The DailyNK, 1 January 2009</ref> In 2009, the government carried out a currency redenomination with the aim to curb free market activity across the country, but the attempt failed, causing [[inflation]] rates to skyrocket, and eventually led to the lifting of the ban on free market trade.<ref>[http://www.dailynk.com/english/read.php?cataId=nk00400&num=7084 Kim Jong Eun's Long-lasting Pain in the Neck], TheDailyNK, 30 November 2010</ref> |
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Food rations, housing, healthcare, and education are offered from the state for free,{{Sfn|Country Profile|2007}} and the payment of taxes has been abolished since 1 April 1974.<ref name="taxfree">{{cite web|url=http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/library/news/dprk/2006/dprk-060321-kcna03.htm |title=DPRK—Only Tax-free Country |accessdate=19 June 2009}}</ref> In order to increase productivity from agriculture and industry, since the 1960s the North Korean government has introduced a number of management systems such as the Taean work system.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+kp0072) |title=The Taean Work System |publisher=Lcweb2.loc.gov |accessdate=23 June 2010}}</ref> In the 21st century, following a recovery in 1999, North Korea's [[GDP growth]] was slow but steady until 2005. Between 2006 and 2011 the majority of years have had negative growth.<ref>Staff (29 May 2012) [http://www.wfp.org/sites/default/files/DPRK%20Overview%20Of%20Needs%20And%20Assistance%202012.pdf Overview of Needs and Assistance In DPRK 2012] United Nations, Retrieved 3 August 2012</ref> In 2012, the [[Bank of Korea]] published the following estimates of North Korea's GDP growth:<ref>Park Yung Hwan, (9 July 2012) [http://www.nkeconwatch.com/nk-uploads/DPRK-GDP-2011-BOK.pdf Gross Domestic Product Estimates for North Korea for 2011] The Bank of Korea, Retrieved 3 August 2012</ref><ref name="koreatimes.co.kr">{{cite web|url=http://koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2009/06/123_47603.html |title=NK's Economy Records 1st Growth in 3 Years |publisher=Koreatimes.co.kr |date=28 June 2009 |accessdate=2 January 2010}}</ref> |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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|+ GDP growth by year |
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! 2000 |
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! 2001 |
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! 2002 |
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! 2003 |
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! 2004 |
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! 2005 |
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! 2006 |
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! 2007 |
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! 2008 |
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! 2009 |
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! 2010 |
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! 2011 |
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|- |
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| 0.3% |
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| 3.8% |
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| 1.2% |
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| 1.8% |
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| 2.1% |
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| 3.8% |
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| −1.0% |
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| −1.2% |
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| 3.1% |
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| −0.9% |
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| −0.5% |
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| 0.8% |
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|} |
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[[File:Granja de Pollos Hungju.jpg|thumb|right|Hungju collective chicken farm, [[Chagang Province]].]] |
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According to estimates from 2002, the dominant sector in the North Korean economy is industry (43.1%), followed by [[service (economics)|services]] (33.6%) and agriculture (23.3%). In 2004, it was estimated that agriculture employed 37% of the workforce while industry and services employed the remaining 63%.<ref name="cia-kn"/> Major industries include military products, machine building, electric power, chemicals, mining, metallurgy, textiles, food processing and tourism. [[Iron ore]] and [[coal]] production are among the few sectors where North Korea performs significantly better than its southern neighbor – the DPRK produces about 10 times larger amounts of each resource.<ref>[http://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_northkorea/457520.html In limited N.Korean market, furor for S.Korean products], The Hankyoreh, 6 January 2011</ref> In the agricultural sector, [[Potato production in North Korea]] is a major activity that provides for food security in the country. |
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Rice yields are about 2.8 tons per hectare, about half that in most countries, with soil degradation, lack of fertilizers, and limited mechanization blamed.<ref name="Pajamas Media"/> In 2005, North Korea was ranked by the [[FAO]] as an estimated 10th in the production of fresh fruit<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.fao.org/es/ess/top/commodity.html?lang=en&item=619&year=2005|title=MAJOR FOOD AND AGRICULTURAL COMMODITIES AND PRODUCERS – Countries by commodity|year=2005|publisher=UN FAO Statistics Division|accessdate=4 July 2009}}</ref> and as an estimated 19th in the production of [[apple]]s.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.fao.org/es/ess/top/commodity.html?item=515&lang=en&year=2005|title=MAJOR FOOD AND AGRICULTURAL COMMODITIES AND PRODUCERS – Countries by commodity|year=2005|publisher=UN FAO Statistics Division|accessdate=4 July 2009}}</ref> It has substantial natural resources and is the world's 18th largest producer of [[List of countries by iron production|iron]] and [[List of countries by zinc production|zinc]], having the [[Coal#World coal reserves|22nd largest]] [[coal]] reserves in the world. It is also the 15th largest [[List of countries by fluorite production|fluorite producer]] and 12th largest producer of [[List of countries by copper mine production|copper]] and [[List of countries by salt production|salt]] in Asia. Other major natural resources in production include [[lead]], [[tungsten]], [[graphite]], [[magnesite]], [[gold]], [[pyrites]], [[fluorspar]], and [[hydropower]].<ref name="cia-kn"/> |
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===Private commerce=== |
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[[File:Kaesong familymart.jpg|thumb|left|A [[FamilyMart]] store in [[Kaesong Industrial Region]], North Korea's light industry center.]] |
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In 1991, North Korea started experimenting with private capitalism in the [[Rajin-Sonbong Economic Special Zone]], and in 2002 also set up the [[Kaesong Industrial Region]].<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=travel&res=9407E0D91239F936A1575AC0A9649C8B63 |title=North Korea to Let Capitalism Loose in Investment Zone |accessdate=2 August 2007 |author= Howard W. French|date=25 September 2002 |work=[[The New York Times]]}}</ref> A small number of other areas have been designated as [[Special cities of North Korea|Special Administrative Regions]]. |
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[[File:Generic paracetamol dprk.jpg|thumb|right|Generic [[paracetamol]] tablets made in the DPRK by a joint venture company]] |
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A small number of capitalistic elements are gradually spreading from the trial area, including a number of advertising billboards along certain highways. Recent visitors have reported that the number of open-air farmers' markets has increased in [[Kaesong]] and [[Pyongyang]], as well as along the China-North Korea border, bypassing the food rationing system. |
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In addition to food aid, China reportedly provides an estimated 80% to 90% of North Korea's oil imports at "friendly prices" that are sharply lower than the world market price.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.koreaherald.co.kr/SITE/data/html_dir/2006/10/26/200610260049.asp |title=China's N.K. policy unlikely to change |accessdate=2 August 2007 |author=Sung-wook Nam|date=26 October 2006 |work=The [[Korea Herald]]}}{{dead link|date=April 2014}}</ref> |
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North Korea also has a [[cartoon animation]] industry, sub-contracting work from South Korean animation studios.<ref>{{Cite news|first=Sunny|last=Lee|title=US cartoons 'made in North Korea' |date=14 March 2007|url=http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Korea/IC14Dg03.html|accessdate=27 October 2010|work=[[Asia Times Online]]}}</ref> |
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{{anchor|Trade}} |
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===International trade=== |
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China and South Korea are the largest trade partners of North Korea.<ref name="cankor">{{cite web|url=http://www.cankor.ca/issues/220.htm |title=Fourth round of Six-Party Talks |accessdate=1 August 2007 |date=27 September 2005 |work=CanKor, on Korean Peace and Security | archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20070929191454/http://www.cankor.ca/issues/220.htm| archivedate = 29 September 2007}}</ref> China is North Korea's closest economic partner, accounting for around 70% North Korea's foreign trade in 2011.<ref>{{cite web| url = http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/eo20090701mr.html | title = Tough to thwart North Korean arms exports | publisher = The Japan Times Online | work = JapanTimes.co.jp | date = 1 July 2009 | accessdate = 13 December 2010}}</ref><ref>Youkyung Lee (27 December 2011) [http://bigstory.ap.org/article/nkoreas-china-trade-jumps-2011 NKorea's China trade jumps in 2011]. bigstory.ap.org.</ref> Chinese statistics for 2013 indicate that North Korean exports to China were nearly $3 billion, with imports of about $3.6 billion. Trade with South Korea declined after [[Lee Myung-bak]] was elected [[President of South Korea]] in 2008, who reduced trade to put pressure on North Korea over nuclear matters. Trade with South Korea fell from $1.8 billion to $1.1 billion between 2007 and 2013, most of remaining being through the [[Kaesŏng Industrial Park]].<ref name=ft-20140220>{{cite news |url=http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/f8fca490-9a23-11e3-a407-00144feab7de.html |title=South Korea has lost the North to China |author=Aidan Foster-Carter |newspaper=Financial Times |date=20 February 2014 |accessdate=1 April 2014}}</ref> |
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In 2000, the Centre for the Study of the Capitalist System was established.<ref name="koreatimes-trade">{{Cite news|url=http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2008/04/120_14039.html|title=NK Showing Increased Interest in Foreign Trade|date=20 November 2007|publisher=The Korea Times|accessdate=17 October 2009}}</ref> Increasingly more foreign-invested joint ventures have been set up since 2002.<ref>[[Felix Abt]], North Korea – A demanding business environment / Practical advice on investing and doing business, German Asia-Pacific Business Association, Hamburg, September 2009</ref> The [[Pyongyang Business School]] was established by the Swiss government to help teach students business management.<ref name="ft-business">{{Cite news|url=http://us.ft.com/ftgateway/superpage.ft?news_id=fto081820051525136708&page=2|title=Graduates prove N Korea is now open for business|last=Fifield|first=Anna|date=18 August 2005|publisher=Financial Times|accessdate=17 October 2009}}{{dead link|date=October 2013}}</ref> |
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European investors have worked alongside North Korea to develop freelance [[computer programming]] employment opportunities.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.northkoreatech.org/2013/02/11/nosotek-website-hacked/ |title=Exclusive: Nosotek website hacked « North Korea Tech |publisher=Northkoreatech.org |date=11 February 2013 |accessdate=8 March 2013}}</ref> |
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===Tourism=== |
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{{Main|Tourism in North Korea}} |
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[[File:Lake-samilpo-at-geumgangsan.jpg|thumb|250px|The [[Mount Kumgang Tourist Region]] was popular among South Korean tourists until its suspension in 2008.]] |
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Tourism in North Korea is organized by the state-owned Korea International Travel Company. All tourists/visitors are constantly accompanied by one or two guides, who usually speak the tourist's native language. While tourism has increased over the last few years, tourists from Western countries remain few. |
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Most visitors come from [[China]], [[Russia]], and [[Japan]]. For citizens of South Korea, it is almost impossible to get a [[Visa (document)|visa]] to North Korea; they can get entry permits to special tourist areas designated for South Koreans, such as Kaesong. United States citizens were also subject to visa restrictions, allowed to visit only during the yearly [[Arirang Festival]]; these restrictions were lifted in January 2010. Fewer than 2,500 United States citizens have visited North Korea since 1953.<ref>{{cite web|last=Anderson |first=Chris |url=http://www.cnngo.com/explorations/none/north-korea-lifts-travel-restrictions-americans-529062 |title=Visit anytime! North Korea lifts restrictions on U.S. tourists |publisher=CNNGo.com |date=15 January 2010 |accessdate=23 June 2010}}</ref> |
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In the area of [[Mount Kumgang]], the company [[Hyundai Group|Hyundai]] established and operates a special tourist area. Travel to this area is possible for South Koreans and United States citizens, but only in organized groups from South Korea. A special administrative region, the [[Mount Kumgang Tourist Region]], exists for this purpose. Trips to the region were suspended after a South Korean woman who wandered into a controlled military zone was shot dead by border guards in late 2008.<ref>{{cite web|title=S Korea hopes DPRK to begin dialogue over S Korean tourist shot dead|publisher=chinaview.cn|url=http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-07/10/content_11686216.htm|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100109053304/http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-07/10/content_11686216.htm|archivedate=2010-01-09|date=10 July 2009}}</ref> When tours had not resumed by May 2010, North Korea announced that it would seize South Korean real estate assets in the region.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2010/04/09/2010040900476.html |title=The Chosun Ilbo (English Edition): Daily News from Korea – N.Korea Seizes S.Korean Property in Mt. Kumgang |publisher=English.chosun.com |date=9 April 2010 |accessdate=23 June 2010}}</ref> |
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There are [[List of hotels in North Korea|hotels]] throughout the country, the largest currently operating being the [[Yanggakdo International Hotel]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.tripadvisor.com/Hotels-g294443-North_Korea-Hotels.html |title=North Korea Hotels: Compare 13 Hotels in North Korea, with 254 Reviews |publisher=TripAdvisor |date=4 March 2013 |accessdate=8 March 2013}}</ref> |
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===Famine=== |
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{{Main|North Korean famine}} |
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In the 1990s North Korea faced significant economic disruptions, including a series of natural disasters, economic mismanagement and serious resource shortages after the collapse of the [[Eastern Bloc]]. These resulted in a shortfall of staple [[Cereal|grain]] output of more than 1 million tons from what the country needs to meet internationally accepted minimum dietary requirements.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://countrystudies.us/north-korea/49.htm |title=North Korea – Agriculture |accessdate=1 August 2007 |author=[[Federal Research Division]] of the US [[Library of Congress]] |year=2007 |work=Country Studies}}</ref> The [[North Korean famine]] known as the "Arduous March" resulted in the deaths of between 300,000 and 800,000 North Koreans per year during the three-year famine, peaking in 1997.<ref name="famine">{{Cite news|url=http://www.cnn.com/WORLD/asiapcf/9808/19/nkorea.famine/ |title=Famine may have killed 2 million in North Korea |accessdate=1 August 2007 |author=May Lee|date=19 August 1998 |work=[[CNN]] | archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20070209071653/http://www.cnn.com/WORLD/asiapcf/9808/19/nkorea.famine/| archivedate = 9 February 2007}}</ref> The deaths were most likely caused by famine-related illnesses such as [[pneumonia]], [[tuberculosis]], and [[diarrhea]] rather than [[starvation]].<ref name="famine"/> |
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[[File:North Korean Countryside.jpg|thumb|right|Farmland in North Korea]] |
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In 2006, [[Amnesty International]] reported that a national nutrition survey conducted by the North Korean government, the [[World Food Programme]], and [[United Nations Children's Fund|UNICEF]] found that 7% of children were severely [[malnutrition|malnourished]]; 37% were chronically malnourished; 23.4% were underweight; and one in three mothers was malnourished and [[anemia|anemic]] as the result of the lingering effect of the famine. The inflation caused by some of the 2002 economic reforms, including the Songun or [[Songun|"Military-first" policy]], was cited for creating the increased price of basic foods.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://web.amnesty.org/report2006/prk-summary-eng |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070529223004/http://web.amnesty.org/report2006/prk-summary-eng |archivedate=2007-05-29 |title=Asia-Pacific : North Korea |accessdate=1 August 2007 |year=2007 |work=[[Amnesty International]]}}</ref> |
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The history of Japanese assistance to North Korea has been marked with challenges; from a large pro-[[Pyongyang]] community of Koreans in Japan to public outrage over the 1998 North Korean missile launch and revelations regarding the abduction of Japanese citizens.<ref name="haggard">Haggard Stephan; Marcus Noland (2007). ''Ch6 The political economy of aid: Famine in North Korea''. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 137.<!--Insert footnote text here--></ref> In June 1995, an agreement was reached that the two countries would act jointly.<ref name="haggard"/> South Korea would provide 150,000 tons of grain in unmarked bags, and Japan would provide 150,000 tons free and another 150,000 tons on concessional terms.<ref name="haggard"/> In October 1995 and January 1996, North Korea again approached Japan for assistance. On these two occasions, both of which came at crucial moments in the evolution of the famine, opposition from both South Korea and domestic political sources quashed the deals.<ref name="haggard"/> |
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Beginning in 1997, the U.S. began shipping food aid to North Korea through the United Nations [[World Food Programme]] (WFP) to combat the famine. Shipments peaked in 1999 at nearly 700,000 tons making the U.S. the largest foreign aid donor to the country at the time.<ref>Mark E. Manyin and Mary Beth Nikitin (26 April 2012) [http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/row/R40095.pdf Foreign Assistance to North Korea]. Congressional Research Service Report for Congress. fas.org</ref> Under the [[Presidency of George W. Bush|Bush Administration]], aid was drastically reduced year after year from 350,000 tons in 2001 to 40,000 in 2004.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.globalpolicy.org//socecon/hunger/relief/2005/0520nkorea.htm |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070216001402/http://www.globalpolicy.org//socecon/hunger/relief/2005/0520nkorea.htm |archivedate=2007-02-16 |title=US Has Put Food Aid for North Korea on Hold |accessdate=1 August 2007 |author= Jay Solomon|date=20 May 2005 |work=Wall Street Journal}}</ref> The Bush Administration took criticism for using "food as a weapon" during talks over the North's nuclear weapons program, but insisted the [[United States Agency for International Development|U.S. Agency for International Development]] (USAID) criteria were the same for all countries and the situation in North Korea had "improved significantly since its collapse in the mid-1990s." Agricultural production had increased from about 2.7 million tons in 1997 to 4.2 million tons in 2004.<ref name="assistance">{{cite web|url=http://internationalrelations.house.gov/archives/109/4-06usaid.pdf |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070309205512/http://internationalrelations.house.gov/archives/109/4-06usaid.pdf |archivedate=2007-03-09 |title=Report on U.S. Humanitarian assistance to North Koreans |accessdate=1 August 2007 |date=15 April 2006 |work=[[United States House Committee on Foreign Affairs]] |format=PDF}}</ref> |
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In 2013, there were reports of famine returning to parts of North Korea and driving some to cannibalism, with the claims that one man dug up his grandchild's corpse to eat and another boiled his child and ate the flesh.<ref name="independent.co.uk">{{cite news|author=Rob Williams |url=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/north-korean-cannibalism-fears-amid-claims-starving-people-eat-children-and-corpses-8468781.html |title=North Korean cannibalism fears amid claims starving people forced to desperate measures – Asia – World |publisher=The Independent |date=28 January 2013 |accessdate=8 March 2013 |location=London}}</ref> Another man was allegedly executed after murdering his two children for food.<ref name="independent.co.uk"/> However, the [[World Food Program]] reported malnutrition and food shortages, but not famine.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wfp.org/countries/korea-democratic-peoples-republic-dprk/overview |title=Korea, Democratic People's Republic (DPRK) | WFP | United Nations World Food Programme – Fighting Hunger Worldwide |publisher=WFP |accessdate=8 March 2013}}</ref> |
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==Crime and law enforcement== |
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The [[Ministry of People's Security (North Korea)|Ministry of People's Security]] maintains all law enforcement activities at the local level, which includes police and other initiatives. There is also a [[State Security Department]] that operates in a similar way to an "Office of the Interior" located in other countries. |
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==Media and telecommunications== |
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{{Main|Media of North Korea|Telecommunications in North Korea}} |
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===Media=== |
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North Korean media are under some of the strictest government control in the world. The North Korean constitution provides for [[freedom of speech]] and the [[freedom of the press|press]], but the government prohibits the exercise of these rights in practice. In its 2013 report, [[Reporters without Borders]] ranked freedom of the press in North Korea as 177th out of 178, above only that of [[Eritrea]].<ref name=rwb>[http://en.rsf.org/spip.php?page=classement&id_rubrique=1034 Annual Press Freedom Index]. Retrieved 4 November 2010.</ref><ref>{{cite web|work=Reporters Without Borders|title=PRESS FREEDOM INDEX 2013|url=http://en.rsf.org/press-freedom-index-2013,1054.html}}</ref> Only news that favors the regime is permitted, while news that covers the economic and political problems in the country, and foreign criticism of the government, are not allowed.<ref name=bbc>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/6037715.stm "Meagre media for North Korea"], BBC, 10 October 2006.</ref> The media upholds the personality cult of [[Kim Jong-un]], regularly reporting on his daily activities. The main news provider to media in the DPRK is the [[Korean Central News Agency]]. |
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North Korea has 12 principal newspapers and 20 major periodicals, all of varying periodicity and all published in [[Pyongyang]].<ref>Larinda B. Pervis (2007). ''North Korea Issues: Nuclear Posturing, Saber Rattling, and International Mischief''. Nova Science Publishers. p. 22. ISBN 978-1-60021-655-8.</ref> Newspapers include the ''[[Rodong Sinmun]]'', ''Joson Inmingun'', ''Minju Choson'', and ''Rodongja Sinmum''. No private press is known to exist.<ref>Ian Liston-Smith (10 October 2006). [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/6037715.stm Meagre media for North Koreans]. [[BBC News]].</ref> |
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In January 2012, the [[Associated Press]] opened a bureau in Pyongyang for full news coverage within North Korea.<ref>{{cite news|last=Calderone|first=Michael|title=Associated Press North Korea Bureau Opens As First All-Format News Office In Pyongyang|url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/16/associated-press-north-korea-bureau-pyongyang_n_1208159.html|accessdate=26 March 2012|newspaper=The Huffington Post|date=16 January 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|author=Tania Branigan in Beijing |url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/jan/16/associated-press-bureau-north-korea |title=Associated Press opens news bureau in North Korea | World news | guardian.co.uk |publisher=Guardian |accessdate=2013-04-16 |location=London |date=16 January 2012}}</ref> |
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A study commissioned by the [[United States Department of State|U. S. State Department]] shows that, despite extremely strict regulations and draconian penalties, North Koreans, particularly elite elements, have increasing access to news and other media outside the state-controlled media authorized by the government.<ref name="intermedia"/> While access to the Internet is tightly controlled, listening to the radio and viewing DVDs is increasing, and receiving television broadcasts from neighboring states is also possible in border areas.<ref name="intermedia">{{cite web|title=A Quiet Opening: North Koreans in a Changing Media Environment |url=http://audiencescapes.org/sites/default/files/A_Quiet_Opening_FINAL_InterMedia.pdf|publisher=InterMedia|accessdate=19 Jan 2013| first1=Nat |last1=Kretchun |first2=Jane |last2=Kim |date=10 May 2012|quote=The primary focus of the study was on the ability of North Koreans to access outside information from foreign sources through a variety of media, communication technologies and personal sources. The relationship between information exposure on North Koreans’ perceptions of the outside world and their own country was also analyzed.}}</ref><ref name=WPUSSTATE>{{cite news|title=Illicit access to foreign media is changing North Koreans' worldview, study says|url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/illicit-access-to-foreign-media-is-changing-north-koreans-worldview-study-says/2012/05/10/gIQAnwMpEU_story.html|accessdate=10 May 2012|newspaper=The Washington Post|date=10 May 2012|agency=Associated Press|deadurl=yes}}{{dead link|date=April 2013}}</ref> |
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A South Korean professor claimed that the spread of cheap, Chinese-made "portable TVs" ([[Enhanced Versatile Disc|EVD]] players) in North Korea is making it harder for authorities to crack down on citizens watching South Korean-made videos.<ref>{{cite news|title=Spread of portable EVD players fueling ‘Korean wave’ in N. Korea|url=http://www.koreaobserver.com/spread-portable-evd-players-fueling-korean-wave-n-korea-8364/|accessdate=22 October 2013|newspaper=The Korea Observer|date=22 October 2013}}</ref><ref>[http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/news/world/asia/article3918883.ece North Korea: 80 executed for ‘watching illegal television programmes’] The Times, 13 November 2013, Internet copy retrieved with subscription 13 December 2013</ref> |
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[[Uriminzokkiri]] is a Korean news website that frequently posts propaganda including the United States attack video published in 2013.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/northkorea/9849231/North-Korea-video-shows-US-city-under-attack.html |title=Video: North Korea video shows US city under attack |publisher=Telegraph |date=5 February 2013 |accessdate=8 March 2013 |location=London}}</ref> |
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===Radio=== |
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It has been reported that North Korea uses "[[Radio jamming in Korea|radio jamming]]" techniques in order to prevent access to non-nationalist broadcasts. However, a group by the name of '''Free North Korea Radio''' conducts numerous activities that focus on providing a free radio station to North Koreans. The broadcasts often include instructions on methods to leave the country and their faction has contact with underground reporters within North Korea. The group primarily consists of numerous [[North Korean defectors|North Korean refugees and defectors]].<ref>{{cite book|author=Melanie Kirkpatrick |title=Escape from North Korea: The Untold Story of Asia's Underground Railroad |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=yMizWCJ6hTYC&pg=PA286 |year=2012 |publisher=Encounter Books |isbn=978-1-59403-646-0 |pages=286–}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author1=Karin Deutsch Karlekar |author2=Sarah Gibbard Cook |title=Freedom of the Press 2008: A Global Survey of Media Independence |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=fEKw8ZIUbh8C&pg=PA250 |year=2009 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |isbn=978-0-7425-6309-4 |pages=250–}}</ref> |
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===Telephones and mobiles=== |
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In North Korea, the [[Telephone numbers in North Korea|Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications]] maintains the [[Telephone numbers in North Korea|phone systems]] within the country and oversees the Postal Service. North Korea has an adequate [[telephony|telephone system]], with 1.18 million fixed lines available in 2008.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2150rank.html?countryName=Korea,North&countryCode=kn®ionCode=eas&rank=70#kn | title=Country Comparison: Telephones – main lines in use | publisher=CIA | work=The World Factbook}}</ref> However, most phones are only installed for senior government officials. Someone wanting a phone installed must fill out a form indicating their rank, why he wants a phone, and how he will pay for it.<ref>French, Paul. ''North Korea: The Paranoid Peninsula – A Modern History.''New York: Zed Books, 2007. 22. Print.</ref> |
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The number of mobile phones in Pyongyang rose from 3,000 in 2002 to approximately 20,000 in 2004.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://yaleglobal.yale.edu/content/chinese-cell-phone-breaches-north-korean-hermit-kingdom |title=Chinese Cell Phone Breaches North Korean Hermit Kingdom |accessdate=2 August 2007 |author=Rebecca MacKinnon |date=17 January 2005 |work=Yale Global Online}}</ref> |
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North Korea has a [[3G]] network for cell phones that provides service to over 1 million subscribers as of February 2012. The service is provided by [[Koryolink]], a venture between the North Korean government and Egypt based [[Orascom Telecom Holding]] which is owned by [[Naguib Sawiris]]. In May 2010, more than 120,000 North Koreans owned mobile phones;<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.businessweek.com/idg/2010-05-13/cell-phone-demand-stays-strong-in-north-korea.html |title=Cell phone demand stays strong in North Korea |publisher=BusinessWeek |date=13 May 2010 |accessdate=23 June 2010}}</ref> this number had increased to 301,000 by September 2010,<ref>[http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/northkorea/2010/11/09/0401000000AEN20101109001400315.HTML Mobile phone subscriptions in N. Korea quadruple in one year: operator], YonhapNews, 9 November 2010</ref> 660,000 by August 2011,<ref>[http://www.dailynk.com/english/read.php?cataId=nk00100&num=8047 Orascom User Numbers Keep Rising], DailyNK, 11 August 2011</ref> and 900,000 by December 2011.<ref>Hamish McDonald (24 December 2011) [http://www.theage.com.au/world/father-knows-best-son-to-maintain-status-quo-20111223-1p8r4.html Father knows best: son to maintain status quo], The Age.</ref> Restrictions have included a ban on cell phones from 2004–2008 and the removal of Internet access from individual phones.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2004/06/04/1086203598828.html |title=North Korea recalls mobile phones |accessdate=2 August 2007 |date=4 June 2004 |work=[[The Sydney Morning Herald]]}}</ref><ref name="bbc.co.uk">Dave Lee. (10 December 2012) [http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-20445632 North Korea: On the net in world's most secretive nation]. Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved on 6 April 2013.</ref> According to a report, there are an estimated 1.5 million mobile phone users in North Korea in 2013.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.nknews.org/2013/01/north-korean-cellphones-light-in-a-dark-society/ | title = North Korean cellphones: Light in a Dark Society? | accessdate = 7 February 2013 | date = 31 January 2013 | author = [[Staff writer]] | publisher = NKnews.org }}</ref> From 1 March 2013, Koryolink will authorize full internet access on mobile phones for foreign nationals visiting North Korea. |
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===Internet=== |
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{{See also|Internet in North Korea|Communications in North Korea}} |
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North Korea's first [[Internet café]] opened in 2002 as a joint venture with a South Korean Internet company, Hoonnet. The former CEO of Hoonnet was Kim Beom-hoon.<ref>[http://www.casinocitytimes.com/news/article/korean-company-exporting-online-casino-game-software-124390 Korean Company Exporting Online Casino Game Software]. Casinocitytimes.com (24 July 2001). Retrieved on 6 April 2013.</ref> Ordinary North Koreans do not have access to the global Internet network, but are provided with a nationwide, public-use Intranet service called ''[[Kwangmyong (network)|Kwangmyong]]'', which features domestic news, an [[e-mail]] service, and censored information from foreign websites (mostly scientific).<ref>{{Cite news|title=North Korea's IT revolution |
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| author=Bertil Lintner|date=24 April 2007|accessdate=11 May 2007|publisher=Asia Times|url=http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Korea/ID24Dg01.html}}</ref> The computers primarily use [[Red Star OS]] as an operating system.<ref name="bbc.co.uk"/> |
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==Transportation== |
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{{Main|Transport in North Korea}} |
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[[File:Pyongyang Metro.JPG|thumb|right|Puhŭng station of the [[Pyongyang Metro]].]] |
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Two of the few ways to enter North Korea are over the [[Sino-Korea Friendship Bridge]] or via [[Panmunjeom]], the former crossing the [[Yalu River|Amnok River]] (Yalu) and the latter crossing the [[Korean Demilitarized Zone|Demilitarized Zone]]. |
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On 13 October 2011 a train from the Russian border settlement of [[Khasan (urban-type settlement)|Khasan]] made an inaugural run to [[Rajin]] in North Korea. The 54 kilometer newly repaired link of the [[Trans-Korean Main Line]] was the first step in an effort to rebuild the Trans-Korean rail and integrate it into the Trans-Siberian railroad.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.straitstimes.com/BreakingNews/World/Story/STIStory_722934.html |title=Russian train travels to North Korea along repaired link |date=13 October 2011}}</ref> |
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Cars are relatively rare, but {{As of|2008|lc=on}} some 70% of households used [[bicycle]]s, which also play an increasingly important role in small-scale private trade.<ref>[http://www.dailynk.com/english/read.php?cataId=nk00100&num=4230 70% of Households Use Bikes], The Daily NK, 30 October 2008</ref> Very few cars and light trucks are made in a joint-venture between [[Pyonghwa|Pyeonghwa Motors]] of South Korea, and the North Korean [[Ryonbong|Ryonbong General Corp]] at a facility in [[Nampo]], North Korea.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-167008653.html |title=PYEONGHWA MOTORS, CHINA'S BRILLIANCE IN TALKS TO PRODUCE TRUCKS. |publisher=AsiaPulse News |date=1 August 2007 |accessdate=16 August 2010}}{{dead link|date=October 2013}}</ref> Another local producer of vehicles is [[Sungri Motor Plant]], which manufactures civilian vehicles and heavy trucks. |
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There is a mix of locally built and imported trolleybuses and trams in urban centers in North Korea. Earlier fleets were obtained in Europe and China, but the trade embargo has forced North Korea to build their own vehicles.{{citation needed|date=February 2013}} |
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===Rail transport=== |
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[[File:DPRK train.JPG|thumb|left|A train in North Korea]] |
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Choson Cul Minzuzui Inmingonghoagug is the only rail operator in North Korea. It has a network of {{convert|5200|km|mi|abbr=on}} of track with {{convert|4500|km|mi|abbr=on}} in [[standard gauge]].<ref name="A Glimpse of North Korea's Railways">{{cite web|url=http://dspace.dial.pipex.com/steam/trains/nkorea04.htm|title=A Glimpse of North Korea's Railways|author=Rob Dickinson|work=The International Steam Pages|accessdate=4 July 2009| archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20080502142007/http://dspace.dial.pipex.com/steam/trains/nkorea04.htm| archivedate = 2 May 2008}}</ref> There is a small narrow gauge railway in operation in Haeju peninsula.<ref name="A Glimpse of North Korea's Railways"/> The railway fleet consists of a mix of electric and steam locomotives. Cars are mostly made in North Korea using Soviet and Chinese designs. There are some locomotives from Imperial Japan, the United States, and Europe remaining in use. Second-hand Chinese locomotives (early DF4Bs, BJ Hydraulics, etc.) have also been spotted in active service. |
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People traveling from the capital Pyongyang to other regions in North Korea typically travel by rail. However, in order to travel out of Pyongyang, people need an official travel certificate, ID, and a purchased ticket in advance. Because of lack of maintenance on the rail infrastructure and vehicles, the travel time by rail is increasing. It has been reported that the {{convert|120|mi|abbr=on|disp=flip}} trip from Pyongyang to [[Kaesong]] can take up to 6 hours.<ref>Paul French (2007). ''North Korea: The Paranoid Peninsula – A Modern History''. 2nd ed. New York: Zed Books, p. 18, ISBN 1842779052.</ref> |
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===Marine transport=== |
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[[File:Dai Hong Dan.jpg|thumb|right|A North Korean cargo ship off the coast of [[Somalia]]]] |
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Water transport on the major rivers and along the coasts plays a growing role in freight and passenger traffic. Except for the Yalu and Taedong rivers, most of the inland waterways, totaling {{convert|2253|km|mi|sp=us}}, are navigable only by small boats. Coastal traffic is heaviest on the eastern seaboard, whose deeper waters can accommodate larger vessels. The major ports are [[Nampho]] on the west coast and [[Rajin]], [[Chongjin]], [[Wonsan]], and [[Hamhung]] on the east coast. The country's harbor loading capacity in the 1990s was estimated at almost 35 million tons a year.<ref name="phpclasses.org">{{cite web|url=http://www.phpclasses.org/browse/country/kp/ |title=About North Korea – Location, Flag, Map, Weather, Transportation |publisher=PHP Classes |accessdate=3 November 2011}}</ref>{{Failed verification|date=May 2013}} |
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In the early 1990s, North Korea possessed an ocean-going merchant fleet, largely domestically produced, of 68 ships (of at least {{GRT|1000|metric}}), totaling {{GRT|465801|GRT|metric|first=yes}}/{{DWT|709,442|metric|first=yes}}, which includes 58 cargo ships and 2 tankers. There is a continuing investment in upgrading and expanding port facilities, developing transportation—particularly on the Taedong River—and increasing the share of international cargo by domestic vessels.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.alibaba.com/showroom/north-korea-shipping.html |title=North Korea Shipping-North Korea Shipping Manufacturers, Suppliers and Exporters on |publisher=Alibaba.com |accessdate=3 November 2011}}</ref> |
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===Air transport=== |
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[[File:Pyongyang airport.JPG|thumb|left|The departure lounge at [[Pyongyang Sunan International Airport]]]] |
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There are several [[List of airports in North Korea|North Korean Airports]], although international air connections are limited. There are regularly scheduled flights from the [[Pyongyang Sunan International Airport]] – {{convert|24|km|mi|sp=us}} north of Pyongyang – to [[Moscow]], [[Khabarovsk]], [[Vladivostok]], [[Bangkok]], [[Beijing]], [[Dalian]], [[Kuala Lumpur]], [[Shanghai]], [[Shenyang]] along with seasonal services to [[Singapore]] and charter flights from Pyongyang to numerous Asian and European destinations including Tokyo and Nagoya. Regular charters to existing scheduled services are operated as per demand. An agreement to initiate a service between Pyongyang and Tokyo was signed in 1990. Internal flights are available between [[Pyongyang]], [[Hamhung]], [[Haeju]], [[Kaesong]], [[Kanggye]], [[Kilju]], [[Nampho]], [[Sinuiju]], [[Samjiyon]], [[Wonsan]], and [[Chongjin]].<ref>{{cite web|author=DSwede |url=http://www.virtualtourist.com/travel/Asia/North_Korea/Transportation-North_Korea-TG-C-1.html |title=North Korea Transportation – Car, Train, Bus & Taxi |publisher=VirtualTourist |accessdate=3 November 2011}}</ref> |
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All civil aircraft are operated by [[Air Koryo]]: 38 aircraft in 2010, which were purchased from the Soviet Union and Russia. From 1976 to 1978, four [[Tu-154]] jets were added to the seven propeller-driven An-24s and two Ilyushin Il-18s; afterwards adding 4 long-range Ilyushin Il-62M, three Ilyushin Il-76MD large cargo aircraft. In 2008, a long range Tupolev Tu-204-300 was purchased along with, in 2010, a larger version the Tupolev Tu-204-100B.<ref name="phpclasses.org"/> |
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==Demographics== |
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{{Main|Demographics of North Korea}} |
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[[File:Pyramide Corée du Nord (english).png|thumb|right|[[Population pyramid]] of North Korea]] |
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North Korea's population of roughly 24 million is one of the most ethnically and linguistically homogeneous in the world, with very small numbers of Chinese, [[Japanese people in North Korea|Japanese]], Vietnamese, South Korean, and European expatriate minorities. |
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According to the [[CIA World Factbook]], North Korea's life expectancy was 63.8 years in 2009, a figure roughly equivalent to that of Pakistan and Burma and slightly lower than Russia.<ref name="Central Intelligence Agency">{{cite web|url=https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2102rank.html|title=CIA – The World Factbook – Country Comparison :: Life expectancy at birth|year=2009|work=The World Factbook|publisher=Central Intelligence Agency|accessdate=4 July 2009}}</ref> [[Infant mortality]] stood at a high level of 51.3, which is 2.5 times higher than that of China, 5 times that of Russia, and 12 times that of South Korea.<ref name="cia-2091">{{cite web| title=Infant mortality rate | url=https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2091rank.html | work=The World Factbook – Country Comparisons | publisher=CIA |year=2009 | accessdate=1 May 2009}}</ref> |
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According to the UNICEF "The State of the world's Children 2003" North Korea appears ranked at the 73rd place (with first place having the highest mortality rate), between [[Guatemala]] (72nd) and [[Tuvalu]] (74th).<ref name="cia-2091"/><ref>{{cite web| title=The State of the World's Children 2003 | url=http://www.unicef.org/sowc03/tables/table1.html | publisher=UNICEF | year=2003 | accessdate=1 May 2009}}</ref> North Korea's [[total fertility rate]] is relatively low and stood at 2.0 in 2009, comparable to those of the [[United States]] and [[France]].<ref>{{cite web| title=Total fertility rate | url=https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2127rank.html | work=The World Factbook – Country Comparisons | publisher=CIA | year=2009 | accessdate=1 May 2009}}</ref> |
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===Language=== |
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{{Main|Korean language}} |
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[[File:North Korea-Pyongyang-Buildings and passengers-01.jpg|thumb|right|Prefabricated apartments house a large portion of the population.<ref>[http://www.prb.org/Articles/2010/northkorea-population.aspx North Korea Census Reveals Poor Demographic and Health Conditions], Population Reference Bureau, December 2010</ref>]] |
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North Korea shares the [[Korean language]] with South Korea. There are [[North–South differences in the Korean language|dialect differences]] within both Koreas, but the border between North and South does not represent a major linguistic boundary. Both Koreas share the phonetic writing system called [[Chosongul]] in the north and [[Hangul]] south of the DMZ. The official [[Romanization]] differs in the two countries, with North Korea using a slightly modified [[McCune-Reischauer]] system, and the South using the [[Revised Romanization of Korean]]. While prevalent in the South, the adoption of modern terms from foreign languages has been limited in North Korea. [[Hanja]] ([[Chinese character]]s) are no longer used in North Korea (ever since 1949), although still occasionally used in South Korea. The move toward prohibiting both Roman and Chinese-based characters in North Korea has led to the creation of a number of words and phrases not common in the southern half of the peninsula or in Korean communities abroad. |
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===Religion=== |
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{{Main|Religion in North Korea}} |
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Both Koreas share a [[Korean Buddhism|Buddhist]] and [[Korean Confucianism|Confucian]] heritage and a recent history of [[Christianity in Korea|Christian]] and [[Cheondoism]] ("religion of the Heavenly Way") movements. The North Korean constitution states that freedom of religion is permitted.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www1.korea-np.co.jp/pk/061st_issue/98091708.htm|title=DPRK's Socialist Constitution (Full Text)|accessdate=4 July 2009|publisher=The People's Korea|year=1998}}; see Chapter 5, Article 68</ref> According to the Western standards of religion, the majority of the North Korean population could be characterized as non-religious.{{citation needed|date=December 2012}} However, the cultural influence of such traditional religions as Buddhism and Confucianism still have an effect on North Korean spiritual life.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.everyculture.com/Ja-Ma/North-Korea.html|title=Culture of North Korea – Alternative name, History and ethnic relations|work=Countries and Their Cultures|publisher=Advameg Inc.|accessdate=4 July 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/kn.html#People |title=CIA The World Factbook – North Korea |publisher=Cia.gov |accessdate=3 November 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/2792.htm|title=Background Note: North Korea|author=Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs|date=2009-2|publisher=U.S. State Department|accessdate=4 July 2009}}</ref> |
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Nevertheless, Buddhists in North Korea reportedly fare better than other religious groups, particularly Christians, who are said to face persecution by the authorities. Buddhists are given limited funding by the government to promote the religion, because Buddhism played an integral role in traditional Korean culture.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://articles.latimes.com/2005/oct/02/world/fg-temple2|title=Buddhist Temple Being Restored in N. Korea|date=2 October 2005|publisher=[[Los Angeles Times]] | author=Barbara Demick | accessdate=20 May 2010}}</ref> |
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[[File:Myogilsang-naegeumgang.jpg|thumb|An ancient relief image of [[the Buddha]], Mount Kumgang]] |
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According to [[Human Rights Watch]], free religious activities no longer exist in North Korea, as the government sponsors religious groups only to create an illusion of religious freedom.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://hrw.org/english/docs/2004/07/08/nkorea9040.htm |title=Human Rights in North Korea |accessdate=2 August 2007 |date=July 2004 |work=[[Human Rights Watch]]}}</ref> |
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According to Religious Intelligence the situation of religion in North Korea is the following:<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.religiousintelligence.co.uk/country/?CountryID=37|title=Religious Intelligence UK report|work=Religious Intelligence|publisher=Religious Intelligence|accessdate=4 July 2009 |archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20071013201130/http://www.religiousintelligence.co.uk/country/?CountryID=37 |archivedate = 13 October 2007}}</ref> |
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* [[Irreligion]]: 15,460,000 (64.3% of population, the vast majority of which are adherents of the Juche philosophy) |
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* [[Korean shamanism]]: 3,846,000 adherents (16% of population) |
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* [[Cheondoism]]: 3,245,000 adherents (13.5% of population) |
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* [[Buddhism]]: 1,082,000 adherents (4.5% of population) |
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* [[Christianity]]: 406,000 adherents (1.7% of population) |
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Pyongyang was the center of Christian activity in Korea until 1945. From the late forties 166 priests and other religious figures were killed or disappeared in concentration camps, including [[Francis Hong Yong-ho]], bishop of Pyongyang<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.30giorni.it/us/articolo.asp?id=10278 |title=Korea, for a reconciliation between North and South |accessdate=21 April 2010 |date=24 March 2006 |work=30 Days}}</ref> and all monks of [[Territorial Abbey of Tokwon|Tokwon abbey]].<ref>{{cite web | title= The Martyrs of Tokwon: Historical Preliminary Notes | work= Missionary Benedictines of St. Ottilien | url= http://www.missionsbenediktiner.de/seligsprechung/cms/kategorie/index.php?kategorieid=59&parentid=59&languageid=1 | accessdate= 10 April 2012}}</ref> No Catholic priest survived the persecution, all churches were destroyed and the government never allowed any foreign priest to set up in North Korea.<ref>{{cite web | title= Thank You Father Kim Il Sung | work= U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, November 2005 | url= http://www.uscirf.gov/sites/default/files/resources/stories/pdf/nkwitnesses_wgraphics.pdf | accessdate= 10 April 2012}}</ref> |
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Today, four state-sanctioned churches exist, which freedom of religion advocates say are showcases for foreigners.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nautilus.org/fora/security/0434A_ReligionI.html |title=Annual Report of the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom |accessdate=2 August 2007 |author=United States Commission on International Religious Freedom |date=21 September 2004 |work=[[Nautilus Institute for Security and Sustainability|Nautilus Institute]] | archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20070311032937/http://www.nautilus.org/fora/security/0434A_ReligionI.html| archivedate = 11 March 2007 |authorlink=United States Commission on International Religious Freedom}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4431321.stm |title=N Korea stages Mass for Pope |accessdate=2 August 2007 |date=10 April 2005 |work=[[BBC News]]}}</ref> Official government statistics report that there are 10,000 [[Protestantism|Protestants]] and 4,000 [[Roman Catholic Church|Roman Catholics]] in North Korea.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.asia.msu.edu/eastasia/NorthKorea/religion.html |title=North Korean Religion |accessdate=2 August 2007 |work=Windows on Asia | archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20070702213117/http://asia.msu.edu/eastasia/NorthKorea/religion.html| archivedate = 2 July 2007}}</ref> |
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According to a ranking published by [[Open Doors]], an organization that supports persecuted Christians, North Korea is currently the country with the most severe persecution of Christians in the world.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://sb.od.org/index.php?supp_page=wwl_top_ten&supp_lang=en|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070622111852/http://sb.od.org/index.php?supp_page=wwl_top_ten&supp_lang=en|archivedate=2007-06-22|title=Open Doors International : WWL: Focus on the Top Ten|work=Open Doors International|publisher=Open Doors (International)|accessdate=4 July 2009}}</ref> Open Doors estimates that 50,000–70,000 Christians are detained in [[Human rights in North Korea#The prison system|North Korean prison camps]].<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.dailynk.com/english/read.php?cataId=nk01600&num=997 |title=50,000~70,000 North Korean Christians Detained in Gulags |accessdate=21 April 2010 |date=16 August 2006 |work=[[Daily NK]]}}</ref> Human rights groups such as [[Amnesty International]] also have expressed concerns about religious persecution in North Korea.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/ASA24/002/2009/zh/d0fc91b5-68b8-4fc8-89d1-fd59a95c7513/asa240022009en.pdf |title=North Korea: Freedom of Movement, Opinion and Expression |accessdate=4 March 2014 |year=2009 |work=[[Amnesty International]]}}</ref> |
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===Education=== |
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{{Main|Education in North Korea}} |
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[[File:Mangyondae Schoolchildrens Palace in Pyongyang 04.jpg|thumb|A young girl in a school in [[Mangyongdae-guyok|Mangyongdae]]]] |
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Education in North Korea is free of charge,<ref>[http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+kp0055) North Korea – Education Overview], Library of Congress.</ref> compulsory until the secondary level, and controlled by the government. The state also used to provide school uniforms free of charge until the early 1990s.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dailynk.com/english/read.php?cataId=nk02900&num=6466 |title=Political Life Launched by Chosun Children's Union |publisher=Daily NK |accessdate=23 June 2010}}</ref> [[Heuristics]] is actively applied in order to develop the independence and creativity of students.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+kp0056) |title=Educational themes and methods |publisher=Lcweb2.loc.gov |accessdate=23 June 2010}}</ref> Compulsory education lasts eleven years, and encompasses one year of [[preschool]], four years of [[primary education]] and six years of [[secondary education]]. The school curriculum has both academic and political content.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+kp0057) |title=Primary and Secondary education |publisher=Lcweb2.loc.gov |accessdate=23 June 2010}}</ref> North Korea is one of the most literate countries in the world, with an average literacy rate of 99%.<ref name="cia-kn"/> According to [[Shin Dong-hyuk (human rights activist)|Shin Dong-hyuk]], children imprisoned in concentration camps also receive a form of education.<ref>Radio Free Asia: [http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/docid/496234b723.html Korean gulag escapee speaks out], 30 November 2008 (accessed 12 April 2013)</ref> |
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Primary schools are known as people's schools, and children attend them from the age of 6 to 9. Then, from age 10 to 16, they attend either a regular secondary school or a special secondary school, depending on their specialties. |
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====Higher education==== |
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{{See also|List of universities in North Korea}} |
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[[Higher education]] is not compulsory in North Korea. It is composed of two systems: academic higher education and higher education for continuing education. The academic higher education system includes three kinds of institutions: [[university|universities]], [[professional school (disambiguation)|professional school]]s, and [[technical school]]s. [[Graduate school]]s for [[Master's degree|master's]] and [[PhD|doctoral]] level studies are attached to universities, and are for students who want to continue their education.<!--blacklisted link:<ref>{{cite web |url=http://education.stateuniversity.com/pages/1116/North-Korea-HIGHER-EDUCATION.html|title=North Korea – Higher Education|accessdate=18 November 2008|work=State University.com}}</ref>--> Two notable universities in the DPRK are the [[Kim Il-sung University]] and [[Pyongyang University of Science and Technology]], both in [[Pyongyang]]. The former, founded in October 1946, is an elite institution whose enrollment of 16,000 full- and part-time students in the early 1990s occupies, in the words of one observer, the "pinnacle of the North Korean educational and social system."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+kp0059) |title=North Korea – Higher education. |publisher=Lcweb2.loc.gov |accessdate=23 June 2010}}</ref> There is also a University called the [[Kim Chaek University of Technology]] that specializes in information technology and nuclear research.<ref>[http://www.nti.org/facilities/757/ Kim Chaek University of Technology | Facilities]. NTI. Retrieved on 6 April 2013.</ref> |
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===Health care=== |
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{{Main|Healthcare in North Korea}} |
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[[File:North Korea-Pyongyang Maternity Hospital-04.jpg|thumb|right|A dental clinic at one of North Korea's major hospitals]] |
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North Korea has a national medical service and health insurance system which are offered for free.{{Sfn|Country Profile|2007|pp= 7-8}} In 2001 North Korea spent 3% of its gross domestic product on health care. Beginning in the 1950s, the DPRK put great emphasis on healthcare, and between 1955 and 1986, the number of [[hospital]]s grew from 285 to 2,401, and the number of [[clinic]]s – from 1,020 to 5,644.<ref>[http://country-studies.com/north-korea/public-health.html North Korea Public Health], Country Studies</ref> There are hospitals attached to factories and mines. Since 1979 more emphasis has been put on traditional [[Korean medicine]], based on treatment with herbs and [[acupuncture]]. |
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North Korea's healthcare system has been in a steep decline since the 1990s because of natural disasters, economic problems, and food and energy shortages. In 2001, many hospitals and clinics in North Korea lack essential medicines, equipment, running water and electricity.<ref name="healthbbc2001">{{Cite news|title=N Korea healthcare 'near collapse'|work=BBC News|date=20 November 2001|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/1666806.stm}}</ref> |
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Almost 100% of the population has access to water and sanitation, but it is not completely [[potable water|potable]]. [[Infectious disease]]s, such as tuberculosis, malaria, and hepatitis B, are considered to be [[endemic (epidemiology)|endemic]] to the country.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.state.gov/p/eap/rls/rm/2003/21269.htm|title=Life Inside North Korea|accessdate=18 November 2008|work=U.S. Department of State|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080711165256/http://www.state.gov/p/eap/rls/rm/2003/21269.htm|archivedate=11 July 2008}}</ref> [[Life expectancy]] in North Korea is 63.81 years, occupying the 169th [[List of countries by life expectancy|place in the world]], according to 2011 estimates.<ref name="Central Intelligence Agency"/> |
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Among other health problems, many North Korean citizens suffer from the after effects of [[malnutrition]], caused by famines related to the failure of its food distribution program and "military first" policy. A 1998 United Nations (UN) World Food Program report revealed that 60% of children suffered from malnutrition, and 16% were acutely malnourished. As a result, those who suffered during the disaster have ongoing health problems.{{citation needed|date=February 2013}}{{dubious|date=February 2013}} |
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==Culture and arts== |
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{{Main|Culture of North Korea|Culture of Korea|National Treasures of North Korea}} |
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{{see also|List of museums in North Korea|List of theatres in North Korea}} |
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[[File:Pyohunsa Temple - Mount Kumgang North Korea (10449400303).jpg|thumb|left|[[Pyohunsa]] Buddhist Temple, a [[National Treasures of North Korea|National Treasure of North Korea]]]] |
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North Korea shares its traditional culture with [[South Korea]], but the two Koreas have developed distinct contemporary forms of culture since the peninsula was divided in 1945. Historically, while the culture of Korea has been influenced by that of neighbouring China, it has nevertheless managed to develop a unique and distinct cultural identity from its larger neighbour.<ref name="Fairbank et al.">{{Cite book|author=John K. Fairbank, Edwin O. Reischauer & Albert M. Craig|title=East Asia: Tradition & Transformation|publisher=Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston|year=1978|isbn=0-395-25812-X}}</ref> |
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Literature and arts in North Korea are state-controlled, mostly through the Propaganda and Agitation Department or the Culture and Arts Department of the Central Committee of the KWP.<ref>[http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+kp0051) North Korea – Contemporary Cultural Expression], Country Studies.</ref> Film is also a significant artistic medium in North Korea and Kim Jong Il's manifesto ''The Cinema and Directing'' (1987) is the basis for the nation's filmmakers.<ref name="Anna">{{cite web|title=Q&A with Anna Broinowski (Aim High in Creation!)|url=http://miff.com.au/annabroinowski|work=Melbourne International Film Festival|publisher=Melbourne International Film Festival|accessdate=29 July 2013|date=July 2013}}{{dead link|date=April 2014}}</ref> |
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Korean culture came under attack during the [[Korea under Japanese rule|Japanese rule]] from 1910 to 1945. Japan enforced a [[cultural assimilation]] policy. During the Japanese rule, Koreans were encouraged to learn and speak Japanese, adopt the Japanese family name system and [[Shinto]] religion, and were forbidden to write or speak the Korean language in schools, businesses, or public places.<ref>{{Cite book| url=http://memory.loc.gov/frd/cs/kptoc.html | chapter=The Rise of Korean Nationalism and Communism | author=Bruce G. Cumings | title=A Country Study: North Korea | publisher=Library of Congress | id=Call number DS932 .N662 1994}}</ref> In addition, the Japanese altered or destroyed various Korean monuments including [[Gyeongbokgung|Gyeongbok Palace]] and documents which portrayed the Japanese in a negative light were revised. |
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[[File:Laika ac Arirang Mass Games (7934639696).jpg|thumb|right|Scene from the 2012 [[Arirang Festival|Mass Games]]]] |
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[[File:Pansanggi in the traditional way that the Koryo elite dined (11241804055).jpg|thumb|right|A set of traditional Korean dishes known as ''pansanggi'']] |
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A popular event in North Korea is the [[Mass Games]]. The most recent and largest Mass Games was called "[[Arirang Festival|Arirang]]". It was performed six nights a week for two months, and involved over 100,000 performers. Attendees to this event in recent years report that the anti-West sentiments have been toned down compared to previous performances. The Mass Games involve performances of dance, gymnastics, and [[choreography|choreographic]] routines which celebrate the history of North Korea and the Workers' Party Revolution. The Mass Games are held in Pyongyang at various venues (varying according to the scale of the Games in a particular year) including the [[Rungnado May Day Stadium]], which is the largest stadium in the world with a capacity of 150,000 people. In addition, a Kim Chaek People's Stadium was built for events at 40°41'0"N 129°11'47"E. |
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North Korea employs artists to produce art for export at the Mansudae Art Studio in Pyongyang. Over 1,000 artists are employed. Products include water colors, ink drawings, posters, mosaics and embroidery. [[Socialist realism]] is the approved style with North Korea being portrayed as prosperous and progressive and its citizens as happy and enthusiastic. Traditional Korean designs and themes are present most often in the embroidery. The artistic and technical quality of the works produced is very high but other than a few wealthy South Korean collectors there is a limited market because of public taste and reluctance of states and collectors to financially support the regime.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://nknews.org/2011/02/pyongyang%E2%80%99s-idealistic-art-impresses-the-realist-minded-moscow/|title=Pyongyang’s Idealistic Art Impresses the Realist-minded Moscow|author=Leonid Petrov|date=3 February 2011|publisher=NK News|accessdate=3 February 2011}}{{dead link|date=October 2013}}</ref> |
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In July 2004, the [[Complex of Goguryeo Tombs]] became the first site in the country to be included in the [[UNESCO]] list of [[World Heritage Site]]s. |
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In February 2008, The [[New York Philharmonic Orchestra]] became the first US orchestra to perform in North Korea,<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/asiapcf/02/26/nyphilharmonic.nkorea/index.html |title=Americans in Pyongyang Perform |accessdate=26 February 2008 |work=CNN | archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20080227042528/http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/asiapcf/02/26/nyphilharmonic.nkorea/index.html| archivedate = 27 February 2008}}</ref> albeit for a handpicked "invited audience."<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ben-rosen/letter-from-north-korea-_b_88413.html |title=Letter From North Korea – Update |accessdate=1 December 2008 |author=Ben Rosen |work=Huffington Post |date=25 February 2008}}</ref> The concert was broadcast on national television.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://uk.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUKSEO3031620080226 |title=Musical diplomacy as New York Phil plays Pyongyang| publisher=Reuters| date=26 February 2008}}</ref> The [[Christian rock]] band [[Casting Crowns]] played at the annual Spring Friendship Arts Festival in April 2007, held in Pyongyang.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.cmspin.com/newsmanager/anmviewer.asp?a=4222&z=26 |title=Casting Crowns Performs in North Korea |accessdate=16 November 2010 |work=CMSpin}}</ref> |
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Australian filmmaker Anna Broinowski gained access to North Korea's film industry through British filmmaker Nick Bonner, who facilitated meetings between Broinowski and prominent North Korean filmmakers to assist Broinowski with the production of ''Aim High in Creation!'', a film project based on Kim Jong Il's manifesto. Broinowski explained in July 2013, prior to the screening of the film at the [[Melbourne International Film Festival]]: |
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<blockquote> |
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A friend gave me Kim Jong Il's manifesto on how to make the 'perfect socialist film', The Cinema and Directing (1987). I was immediately fascinated by his often counter-intuitive (for a Westerner at least) filmmaking rules. And I began to wonder: what would a film by Westerners, strictly adhering to Kim Jong Il's rules, be like? Could it have the same power over western audiences that North Korean films have over Kim Jong Il's 23 million citizens? ... I wanted to humanise the North Koreans in the minds of viewers constantly bombarded by the mainstream Western media's depiction of North Koreans as victimised, brainwashed automatons.<ref name="Anna"/></blockquote> |
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A version of Broinowski's work was screened in Pyongyang, but the director believes that the documentary version of the film will not be allowed into the country.<ref name="Anna"/> |
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==Sports== |
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{{Main|Sport in North Korea}} |
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{{See also|List of football stadiums in North Korea}} |
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[[File:FIFA World Cup 2010 Brazil North Korea 9.jpg|thumb|left|North Korea (in red) playing against Brazil in the [[2010 FIFA World Cup]] in South Africa.]] |
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In association football, fifteen clubs compete in the [[DPR Korea League]] level-one and vie for both the Technical Innovation Contests and the Republic Championship. The national football team, [[Korea DPR national football team|Chollima]], competes in the [[Asian Football Confederation]] (AFC) and, as of 26 May 2010, is ranked 105 by [[FIFA]]. The team competed in the [[FIFA World Cup]] in [[1966 FIFA World Cup|1966]] and [[2010 FIFA World Cup|2010]]. |
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In ice hockey, North Korea's [[North Korea men's national ice hockey team|men’s team]] is ranked 43 out of 49 nations<ref>{{cite web|title=2010 Men's World Ranking|url=http://www.iihf.com/de/home-of-hockey/championships/world-ranking/mens-world-ranking/2010-ranking.html|publisher=International Ice Hockey Federation|accessdate=24 October 2010}}</ref> and competes in Division II. The women’s team is ranked 21 out of 34 nations<ref>{{cite web|title=2010 Women's World Ranking|url=http://www.iihf.com/de/home-of-hockey/championships/world-ranking/womens-world-ranking/2010-ranking.html|publisher=International Ice Hockey Federation|accessdate=24 October 2010}}</ref> and competes in Division II. |
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North Korea is also active in basketball, with a [[North Korea national basketball team|national team]] that represents the nation in international competitions. In December 2013, former American basketball professional [[Dennis Rodman]] visited North Korea to help train the national team after he developed a friendship with President Kim Jong-un during his first visit to the country in February 2013.<ref>{{cite news|title=Rodman returns to North Korea amid political unrest|url=http://www.foxnews.com/world/2013/12/19/rodman-returns-to-north-korea-amid-political-unrest/|accessdate=20 December 2013|newspaper=Fox News|date=19 December 2013}}</ref> |
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North Korea has been [[North Korea at the Olympics|competing]] in the [[Olympics]] since [[1964 Winter Olympics|1964]], and debuted at the summer games in [[1972 Summer Olympics|1972]] by taking home five medals, including one gold. To date, North Korea has won a medal at every summer Olympics event in which they have participated. The [[List of IOC country codes|International Olympic Committee (IOC) code]] for North Korea is [[North Korea at the Olympics|PRK]]. |
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North Korea boycotted the [[1988 Summer Olympics]] in neighboring [[Seoul]]. At the [[2004 Summer Olympics|Athens]] Games in 2004, the North and South marched together in the opening and closing ceremonies under the [[Unification Flag]], but competed separately. |
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[[Taekwondo]] is a [[martial arts|martial art]] that originated in Korea. In the 1950s and 1960s, modern rules were standardised and taekwondo became an official [[Olympic Games|Olympic sport]] in 2000. Other Korean martial arts include [[taekkyeon]], [[hapkido]], [[tang soo do]], [[kuk sool won]], [[kumdo]] and [[subak]]. |
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A popular sporting event in North Korea is the annual [[Arirang Festival]], known for its [[mass games|mass participation performances]] that combine gymnastics, music and "backdrop" (coloured sheets of card are held by participants to create large-scale images).<ref>{{cite news|title=North Korea's Arirang Festival begins|url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/travelnews/10195366/North-Koreas-Arirang-Festival-begins.html|accessdate=20 December 2013|newspaper=The Telegraph|date=22 July 2013|author=Oliver Smith|location=London}}</ref> The board game [[Yut]] is a team sport in North Korea and is [[television|televised]] on the country's television stations. |
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In October 2013, Kim Jong-un introduced a new [[policy]] that allows successful athletes to receive luxury [[apartment]]s in recognition for their achievements. The reward was given to Om Yun-chul, An Kum-ae and Kim Un-guk, who earned [[Olympic medal]]s at the [[2012 Summer Olympics]].<ref>{{cite news|title=North Korea rewards athletes with luxury apartments|url=http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/10/05/us-olympics-northkorea-idUSBRE99401E20131005|accessdate=20 December 2013|newspaper=Reuters|date=4 October 2013|author=Peter Rutherford|author2=Ian Ransom}}</ref> |
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==See also== |
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{{portal|North Korea|Korea|Asia}} |
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* [[Index of North Korea-related articles]] |
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* [[List of documentary films about North Korea]] |
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* [[North Korea Uncovered]] |
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* [[Outline of North Korea]] |
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* [[South Korea]] |
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* [[Kim Il-Sung]] |
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* [[Kim Jong-il]] |
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==References== |
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{{Reflist|30em}} |
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==Bibliography== |
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{{see also|Kim Il-sung bibliography|Kim Jong-il bibliography}} |
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*{{cite web|url=http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/profiles/North_Korea.pdf|title=Country Profile: North Korea |date=July 2007|publisher=Library of Congress – Federal Research Division|accessdate=4 July 2009|ref={{SfnRef|Country Profile|2007}}}} |
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*{{cite web|url=http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/pdf/CS_North-Korea.pdf |title=North Korea – A Country Study|year=2009|publisher= [[Library of Congress]] [[Library of Congress Country Studies|Country Studies]]|ref={{SfnRef|Country Study|2009}}}} |
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*{{cite book|author=[[Brian Reynolds Myers]] |year=2011|title=The Cleanest Race: How North Koreans See Themselves and Why It Matters|publisher= Melville House|isbn= 1933633913|ref={{SfnRef|Myers|2011}}}} |
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==External links== |
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{{Sister project links|voy=North Korea}} |
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;Government sites |
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* [http://www.korea-dpr.com/ Official Webpage of The Democratic People's Republic of Korea] – maintained by the [[Korean Friendship Association]] |
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* [http://www.kcna.kp/ kcna.kp] – The website of the [[Korean Central News Agency]] (including [http://www.kcna.kp/goHome.do?lang=eng English]{{dead link|date=October 2013}} Spanish, Chinese and Japanese) |
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* [http://naenara.com.kp/en/ naenara.com.kp/en/] – The official North Korean governmental portal [[Naenara]] |
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;General sites |
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* [http://www.ohchr.org/EN/HRBodies/HRC/CoIDPRK/Pages/ReportoftheCommissionofInquiryDPRK.aspx United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights] – Report by the Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea |
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* {{dmoz|Regional/Asia/North_Korea}} |
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* {{CIA World Factbook link|kn|North Korea}} |
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* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-15256929 North Korea profile] from the [[BBC News]] |
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* [http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/322222/North-Korea North Korea] ''Encyclopædia Britannica'' entry |
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* {{Wikiatlas|North Korea}} |
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* {{osmrelation-inline|192734}} |
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* [http://ucblibraries.colorado.edu/govpubs/for/nkorea.htm North Korea] – Link Collection ([[University of Colorado at Boulder]] Libraries GovPubs) |
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*[http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/ASA24/001/2011/en/2671e54f-1cd1-46c1-96f1-6a463efa6f65/asa240012011en.pdf Amnesty International: North Korea: Political Prison Camps] - Document on conditions in North Korean prison camps |
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* [http://ashen-rus.livejournal.com/ "Show and Tell Pyongyang"] – A blog, often with images, in Russian |
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* [http://nknews.org/2011/01/christmas-and-new-years-celebrations-in-the-dprk/ Article about Show and Tell Pyongyang] in English on NK News |
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* [http://www.dailynk.com/english/index.php The Daily NK: The Hub of North Korean News] – News about North Korea and human rights |
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* The website of the [[Committee for Cultural Relations with Foreign Countries]] at [http://www.friend.com.kp/ friend.com.kp] |
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* [http://www.koredufund.org.kp/ Korea Education Fund] ({{wayback|df=yes|http://www.koredufund.org.kp/|date=20120831020221}}) |
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* The website of the digital edition of the [[Rodong Sinmun]] newspaper at [http://www.rodong.rep.kp/ rodong.rep.kp] |
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;Images |
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* Flickr tags: [http://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/northkorea/ North Korea]. Sets: [http://www.flickr.com/photos/mytripsmypics/sets/72157604812751507/], [http://www.flickr.com/photos/mytripsmypics/sets/72157627770809988/], [http://www.flickr.com/photos/mytripsmypics/sets/72157628202096001/], [http://www.flickr.com/photos/samgellman/sets/72157627661307874/], [http://www.flickr.com/photos/shining75/sets/72157631582514433/], [http://www.flickr.com/photos/mytripsmypics/sets/72157628202062371/], [http://www.flickr.com/photos/mytripsmypics/sets/72157628202040649/], [http://www.flickr.com/photos/mytripsmypics/sets/72157628201763951/]. Groups: [http://www.flickr.com/groups/dprk/pool/], [http://www.flickr.com/groups/northkorea/pool/] |
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* [http://www.thefirstpost.co.uk/45314,news-comment,news-politics,inside-north-korea-rare-insight-into-a-very-foreign-country Inside North Korea] – slideshow by ''[[The First Post]]'' |
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;Videos |
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* {{YouTube user|rodrigorojo1|DPR OF KOREA OFFICIAL주체102년}} |
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* {{YouTube user|uriminzokkiri|uriminzokkiri}} |
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* {{YouTube user|stimmekoreas|Videos from North Korea}} |
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* {{YouTube user|DPRKMusicChannel|DPRK Music}} |
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* {{YouTube user|NorthKoreaVideos|North Korea Videos}} |
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* {{YouTube user|dprkconcert|DPRK Concert}} |
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* {{YouTube user|dprktvradio|DPRK TV Radio}} |
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* {{YouTube|FJ6E3cShcVU|Documentary by film crew about one-week visit to North Korea}} |
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* [http://nknews.org/2012/03/films-on-north-korea-a-complete-collection/ Films on North Korea – A Complete Collection]{{dead link|date=October 2013}} |
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{{Korea topics}} |
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{{Regions and administrative divisions of North Korea}} |
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{{North Korean armed forces}} |
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{{Countries of Asia}} |
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{{Socialist states}} |
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{{States with limited recognition}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Korea, North}} |
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[[Category:Northeast Asian countries]] |
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[[Category:Member states of the United Nations]] |
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[[Category:North Korea| ]] |
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[[Category:Republics]] |
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[[Category:Single-party states]] |
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[[Category:States and territories established in 1948]] |
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Revision as of 16:58, 13 May 2014
40°00′N 127°00′E / 40.000°N 127.000°E
Democratic People's Republic of Korea
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Motto:
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Anthem:
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Capital and largest city | Pyongyang |
Official languages | Korean |
Official scripts | Hangul |
Demonym(s) |
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Government | Juche single-party state (de jure) Single-party totalitarian military dictatorship under hereditary dictatorship[2] (de facto) |
Kim Il-sung | |
Kim Jong-il | |
Kim Jong-un[a] | |
Kim Yong-nam[b] | |
• Premier | Pak Pong-ju |
Legislature | Supreme People's Assembly |
Establishment | |
Area | |
• Total | 120,540 km2 (46,540 sq mi) (98th) |
• Water (%) | 4.87 |
Population | |
• 2013 estimate | 24,895,000 (48th) |
• 2011 census | 24,052,231[3] |
• Density | 198.3/km2 (513.6/sq mi) (63rd) |
GDP (PPP) | 2011 estimate |
• Total | $40 billion[4] |
• Per capita | $1,800[4] |
GDP (nominal) | 2011 estimate |
• Total | $12.4 billion[5] |
• Per capita | $506[5] |
Gini (2007) | 31[6] medium inequality |
HDI (2008) | 0.733[7] high (156th) |
Currency | North Korean won (₩) (KPW) |
Time zone | UTC+9 (Korea Standard Time) |
Date format | |
Drives on | right |
Calling code | +850 |
ISO 3166 code | KP |
Internet TLD | .kp |
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North Korea (Chosŏn'gŭl: 조선민주주의인민공화국; Chosŏn Minjujuŭi Inmin Konghwaguk), is a country in East Asia, in the northern part of the Korean Peninsula. The name Korea is derived from Goryeo, a dynasty which ruled in the Middle Ages. The capital and largest city is Pyongyang. North Korea shares a land border with China to the north and north-west, along the Amnok (Yalu) and Tumen rivers. A small section of the Tumen River also forms North Korea's short border with Russia to the northeast.[8] The Korean Demilitarized Zone marks the boundary between North Korea and South Korea. The legitimacy of this border is not accepted by either side, as both states claim to be the legitimate government of the entire peninsula.
), officially the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK;The Korean Peninsula was governed by the Korean Empire from the late 19th century to the early 20th century, until it was annexed by the Empire of Japan in 1910. After the surrender of Japan at the end of World War II, Japanese rule ceased. The Korean Peninsula was divided into two occupied zones in 1945, with the northern part of the peninsula occupied by the Soviet Union and the southern portion by the United States. A United Nations-supervised election held in 1948 led to the creation of separate Korean governments for the two occupation zones: the Democratic People's Republic of Korea in the north, and the Republic of Korea in the south. The conflicting claims of sovereignty led to the Korean War in 1950. An armistice in 1953 committed both to a cease-fire, but the two countries remain officially at war because a formal peace treaty was never signed.[9] Both states were accepted into the United Nations in 1991.[10]
Although the DPRK officially describes itself as a Juche Korean-style socialist republic[11] and elections are held, it is widely considered a dictatorship that has been described as totalitarian and Stalinist[20][2][21] with an elaborate cult of personality around the Kim family. The Workers' Party of Korea, led by a member of the ruling family,[21] holds de facto power in the state and leads the Democratic Front for the Reunification of the Fatherland of which all political officers are required to be a member.[22] Juche, an ideology of self-reliance initiated by the country's first President, Kim Il-sung, became the official state ideology, replacing Marxism–Leninism, when the country adopted a new constitution in 1972.[23][24] In 2009, references to Communism (Chosŏn'gŭl: 공산주의) were removed from the country's constitution.[25]
The means of production are owned by the state through state-run enterprises and collectivized farms, and most services such as healthcare, education, housing and food production are state funded or subsidized.[26] In the 1990s North Korea suffered from a famine and continues to struggle with food production. In 2013, the UN identified North Korean government policies as the primary cause of the shortages and estimated that 16 million people required food aid.[27][28] North Korea's health care system has been a subject of controversy: the World Health Organization described it as "the envy of the developing world" while Amnesty International claims that it suffers from barely functioning hospitals, poor hygiene and epidemics.[29]
North Korea follows Songun, or "military-first" policy in order to strengthen the country and its government.[30] It is the world's most militarized society, with a total of 9,495,000 active, reserve, and paramilitary personnel. Its active duty army of 1.21 million is the 4th largest in the world, after China, the U.S., and India.[31] It is a nuclear-weapons state and has an active space program.[32][33][34] As a result of its isolation, it is sometimes known as the "hermit kingdom". The Economist Intelligence Unit ranked it as the lowest country in the Democracy Index. Amnesty International,[35][36] Human Rights Watch[37][38] and the UN's commission on human rights in North Korea[39][40] report of severe restrictions on human rights and crimes against humanity 'without parallel in the modern world'. The government rejects these claims.[41][42][43]
History
Ancient kingdoms
According to legend, Gojoseon was the first Korean kingdom founded in the north of the peninsula, in 2333 BC by Dangun.[44] Gojoseon expanded until it controlled the northern Korean Peninsula and some parts of Manchuria. Gojoseon was first mentioned in Chinese records in the early 7th century BC, and around the 4th century BC, its capital moved to Pyongyang.
After many conflicts with the Chinese Han Dynasty, Gojoseon disintegrated. A number of small states emerged in the 2nd and 1st centuries BC, leading to the Proto–Three Kingdoms of Korea period. This saw the kingdoms of Buyeo, Okjeo, Dongye, and the Samhan confederacy occupying the peninsula and southern Manchuria. Of the various states, Goguryeo in the north, and Baekje and Silla in the south, grew to control the peninsula as the Three Kingdoms of Korea. Goguryeo was the first Korean kingdom to adopt Buddhism as the state religion in 372.
The kingdom reached its zenith in the 5th century AD, when it controlled central Korea, including the present-day Seoul area. Goguryeo fought numerous wars with China and repulsed a number of Chinese invasions. However, the kingdom fell into decline in the 7th century and after internal power struggles, it was conquered by allied Silla-Tang forces. The unification of the Three Kingdoms by Silla in 676 led to the North South States Period, in which much of the Korean Peninsula was controlled by Silla. The kingdom of Balhae controlled northern areas of Korea and parts of Manchuria between the 7th and 10th centuries.
Under the rule of Unified Silla, relationships between Korea and China remained relatively peaceful. Silla weakened under internal strife, and eventually was defeated by King Taejo of Goryeo of the Goryeo Dynasty in 935.
Goryeo, with its capital at Gaegyeong in present day North Korea, gradually came to rule the whole Korean peninsula. The Mongol invasions in the 13th century greatly weakened Goryeo. Goryeo became a dependency of the Mongol Empire and was forced to pay tribute. After the Mongol Empire collapsed, Korea experienced political strife and the Goryeo Dynasty was replaced in 1388 by the long-lasting Joseon Dynasty (named in honor of the ancient Gojoseon kingdom).
Middle Ages
The capital was moved south to Hanyang (modern-day Seoul) in 1394. Joseon accepted the nominal suzerainty of China. Internal conflicts within the royal court and civil unrest plagued the kingdom in the years that followed, a situation made worse by the depredations of Japanese pirates.
After a largely peaceful 15th century, central authority declined and Korea was plagued again by coastal raids by Japanese pirates. Two Japanese attempts to conquer Korea were repulsed in 1592–1598. In the early 17th century Korea became involved in wars against the rising Manchus on the northern borders.
The 17th to 19th centuries were marked by increasing Joseon self-isolation from the outside world, dependence on China for external affairs and occasional internal faction fighting. The Joseon Dynasty tried to isolate from sea traders by closing itself to all nations except China. Slaves, nobi, are estimated to have accounted for about one third of the population of Joseon Korea.[45] By the mid-19th century the Joseon court followed a cautious policy of slow exchange with the West. In 1866, an American-owned armed merchant ship, attempted to open Korea to trade. The ship sailed upriver and became stranded near Pyongyang.
After being ordered to leave by Korean officials, American crewmen killed four Korean inhabitants, kidnapped a military officer and engaged in sporadic fighting.[citation needed] The ship was finally set aflame by Korean fireships. In 1871, a US force killed 243 Korean troops on Ganghwa island. This incident is called the Sinmiyangyo in Korea. Five years later, Korea signed a trade treaty with Japan, and in 1882 signed a treaty with the United States, ending centuries of isolationism of the "Hermit Kingdom".
Japanese occupation (1895–1945)
As a result of the Sino-Japanese War (1894–1895), the 1895 Treaty of Shimonoseki stipulated the end of traditional Joseon dependency on China. In 1897, Joseon was renamed the Korean Empire. Russian influence was strong until the Russo-Japanese War (1904–1905), after which Korea became a protectorate of Japan. Korea was then annexed by the Empire of Japan in 1910, leading to 35 years of military rule.
After the annexation, Japan tried to suppress Korean traditions and culture and ran the economy primarily for the Japanese benefit. Anti-Japanese, pro-liberation rallies took place nationwide on 1 March 1919 (the 1 March Movement). About 7,000 people were killed during the suppression of this movement. Continued anti-Japanese uprisings, such as the nationwide uprising of students in 1929, led to the strengthening of military rule in 1931. After the outbreaks of the Sino-Japanese War in 1937 and World War II Japan stepped up efforts to extinguish Korean culture.
The Korean language was banned and Koreans were forced to adopt Japanese names. Worship at Japanese Shinto shrines was made compulsory. The school curriculum was radically modified to eliminate teaching in the Korean language and history. Numerous Korean cultural artifacts were destroyed or taken to Japan. Resistance groups known as Dongnipgun (Liberation Army) operated along the Sino-Korean border, fighting guerrilla warfare against Japanese forces. Some of them took part in allied action in China and parts of South East Asia.
During World War II, Koreans at home were forced to support the Japanese war effort. Tens of thousands of men were conscripted into Japan's military. Around 200,000 girls and women, many from Korea, were forced to engage in sexual services, with the euphemism "comfort women".
Division of Korea (1945)
After the surrender of Japan at the end of World War II, Japanese rule was brought to an end. The Korean peninsula was divided into two occupied zones in 1945 along the 38th parallel, with the northern half of the peninsula occupied by the Soviet Union and the southern half by the United States, in accordance with a prior arrangement between the two world powers, where United Nations–supervised elections were intended to be held for the entire peninsula shortly after the war. The Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea, which had operated in exile since 1919, was ignored, mainly because of the American perception that it was too communist-aligned.
In August 1945, the Soviet Army established a Soviet Civil Authority in the northern portion of the Korean Peninsula. The Provisional People's Committee for North Korea was set up in February 1946, headed by Kim Il-sung. He introduced sweeping land reforms and nationalized key industries. Talks on the future of Korea were held in Moscow and Seoul but without result. Initial hopes for a unified, independent Korea evaporated as the politics of the Cold War resulted in the establishment of two separate nations with diametrically opposed political, economic, and social systems.
There was sporadic unrest in the South. In September 1946, South Korean citizens had risen up against the Allied Military Government. In April 1948, an uprising of the Jeju islanders was violently crushed. The South declared its statehood in May 1948 and two months later the ardent anti-Communist Syngman Rhee became its ruler. The People's Republic of Korea was established in the North on 9 September 1948.
The Rhee regime consolidated itself through harsh persecution of all suspected opponents. It conducted a number of military campaigns against left-wing insurgents during which 30,000 to 100,000 people lost their lives. In October 1948, the Yeosu-Suncheon Rebellion occurred and on 24 December 1949, the South Korean Army massacred Mungyeong citizens who were suspected communist sympathizers and affixed the blame on communists.
Soviet forces withdrew from the North in 1948 and most American forces withdrew from the South the following year. This dramatically weakened the Southern regime and encouraged Kim Il-sung to consider an invasion plan against the South.[46][46] War proposals were rejected several times by Joseph Stalin, but along with the development of Soviet nuclear weapons, Mao Zedong's victory in China, and the Chinese indication that it would send troops and other support to North Korea, Stalin approved the invasion which led to the start of the Korean War in June 1950.[47] The Korean War broke out when North Korean forces crossed the 38th parallel to invade the South.
Korean War (1950–1953)
After Korea was divided by the UN, the two Korean powers both tried to control the whole peninsula under their respective governments. This led to escalating border conflicts on the 38th parallel and attempts to negotiate elections for the whole of Korea.[48] These attempts ended when the military of North Korea invaded the South on 25 June 1950, leading to a full-scale war. With endorsement from the United Nations, countries allied with the United States intervened on behalf of South Korea.
After rapid advances in a South Korean counterattack, North-allied Chinese forces intervened on behalf of North Korea, shifting the balance of the war. Fighting ended on 27 July 1953, with an armistice that approximately restored the original boundaries between North and South Korea. More than one million civilians and soldiers were killed in the war.
Although some have referred to the conflict as a civil war, other important factors were involved.[49] The Korean War was also the first armed confrontation of the Cold War and set the standard for many later conflicts. It is often viewed as an example of the proxy war, where the two superpowers would fight in another country, forcing the people in that country to suffer most of the destruction and death involved in a war between such large nations. The superpowers avoided descending into an all-out war against one another, as well as the mutual use of nuclear weapons. It also expanded the Cold War, which to that point had mostly been concerned with Europe. A heavily guarded demilitarized zone on the 38th parallel still divides the peninsula, and an anti-Communist and anti-North Korea sentiment remains in South Korea.
Since the Armistice in 1953, relations between the North Korean government and South Korea, the European Union, Canada, the United States, and Japan have remained tense, and hostile incidents occur often.[50][page needed] North and South Korea signed the June 15th North-South Joint Declaration in 2000, in which they promised to seek peaceful reunification.[51] On 4 October 2007, the leaders of North and South Korea pledged to hold summit talks to officially declare the war over and reaffirmed the principle of mutual non-aggression.[52] On 13 March 2013, North Korea confirmed it ended the 1953 Armistice and declared North Korea "is not restrained by the North-South declaration on non-aggression."[53]
Late 20th century
The relative peace between the South and the North following the armistice was interrupted by border skirmishes and assassination attempts. The North failed in several assassination attempts on South Korean leaders, most notably in 1968, 1974 and the Rangoon bombing in 1983; tunnels were frequently found under the DMZ and war nearly broke out over the Axe Murder Incident at Panmunjeom in 1976.[54] In 1973, extremely secret, high-level contacts began to be conducted through the offices of the Red Cross, but ended after the Panmunjeom incident with little progress having been made and the idea that the two Koreas would join international organizations separately.[55]
North Korea remained closely aligned to China and the Soviet Union until the mid-1960s. Recovery from the war was quick – by 1957 industrial production reached 1949 levels. The last Chinese troops withdrew from the country in October 1958.[56] Until the 1960s, economic growth was higher than in South Korea, and North Korean GDP per capita was equal to that of its southern neighbor as late as 1976.[57] However, by the 1980s the economy had begun to stagnate, and almost completely collapsed after the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991. Flooding in the mid-1990s exacerbated the economic crisis and led to widespread famine which the government proved incapable of curtailing.
In the late 1990s, with the South having transitioned to liberal democracy, the success of the Nordpolitik policy, and power in the North having been taken up by Kim Il-sung's son Kim Jong-il, the two nations began to engage publicly for the first time, with the South declaring its Sunshine Policy.[58][59]
Early 21st century
By the beginning of the 21st century, the worst of the devastating famine had passed, but North Korea continues to rely heavily on foreign aid for its food supply. In January 2002, U.S. president George W. Bush labeled North Korea part of an "axis of evil" and an "outpost of tyranny". The highest-level contact the government has had with the United States was with U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, who made a visit to Pyongyang in 2000,[60] but the two countries do not have formal diplomatic relations.[61] By 2006, approximately 37,000 American soldiers remained in South Korea, although by June 2009 this number had fallen to around 30,000.[62][63] Kim Jong-il privately stated his acceptance of U.S. troops on the peninsula, even after a possible reunification.[64] Publicly, North Korea strongly demands the removal of American troops from South Korea.[64]
On 13 June 2009, the Associated Press reported that in response to new U.N. sanctions, North Korea declared it would progress with its uranium enrichment program. This marked the first time the DPRK has publicly acknowledged that it is conducting a uranium enrichment program.[65] In August 2009, former U.S. president Bill Clinton met with Kim Jong-il to secure the release of two American journalists, who had been sentenced for entering the country illegally.[66] Current U.S. President Barack Obama's position towards North Korea has been to resist making deals with North Korea for the sake of defusing tension, a policy known as "strategic patience."[67]
On 23 November 2010, North Korea fired about 170 rounds of artillery on Yeonpyeong Island and the surrounding waters near the Yellow Sea border, with some 90 shells landing on the island. The attack resulted in the deaths of two marines and two civilians on the South Korean side, and fifteen marines and at least three civilians wounded.[68] South Korean forces fired back 80 shells, although the results remain unclear. North Korean news sources alleged that the North Korean actions, described as "a prompt and powerful physical strike", were in response to provocation from South Korea that had held an artillery exercise in the disputed waters south of the island.[69]
On 17 December 2011, the Supreme Leader of North Korea, Kim Jong-il died from a heart attack.[70] His death was reported by the Korean Central News Agency around 08:30 local time with the newscaster announcing his youngest son Kim Jong-un as his successor.
The announcement placed South Korean and United States troops on high alert, with many politicians from the global community stating that Kim's death leaves a great deal of uncertainty in the country's future.[71] North Korea was put into a state of semi-alert, with foreigners put under suspicion and asked to leave.[72]
Pre-emptive nuclear strike threats of 2013
On 7 March 2013, North Korea announced its intentions to launch a preemptive nuclear strike against the United States.[73] The statement called the United States, the "sworn enemy of the Korean people".[74]
On 8 March 2013, the North Korean government announced that it was withdrawing from all non-aggression pacts with South Korea in response to U.N. Resolution 2094.[75][76][77] The announcement said it was closing its joint border crossing with South Korea and cutting off the hotline to the South.[75][76][77]
On 13 March 2013, North Korea confirmed it ended the 1953 Armistice and declared North Korea "is not restrained by the North-South declaration on non-aggression.[53] Confirmation of the severing of the hotline between the North and the South—the last remaining communication link between the two countries at that time—was publicly announced on March 27, 2013, the same date that the hotline was cut off. According to the Korean Central News Agency, a senior North Korean military official stated: "Under the situation where a war may break out any moment, there is no need to keep up North-South military communications" prior to the cessation of the communication channel.[78][79]
On 30 March 2013, the North Korean government declared it was in 'a state of war' with South Korea. A North Korean statement promised "stern physical actions" against "any provocative act". The North Korean leader Kim Jong-un declared that rockets were ready to be fired at American bases in the Pacific in response to the U.S. flying two nuclear-capable B2 stealth bombers over the Korean peninsula. The United States warned North Korea that the rapidly escalating military confrontation would lead to further isolation, as The Pentagon declared that the U.S. was "fully capable" of defending itself and its allies against a missile attack.[80][81][82] On 4 April 2013 North Korea's state news agency KCNA announced "The moment of explosion is approaching fast. No one can say a war will break out in Korea or not and whether it will break out today or tomorrow."[83]
U.S. National Intelligence Director James Clapper speculated that Kim Jong-un is trying to assert his control over North Korea, and has no endgame other than gaining recognition;[84] analysts and other U.S. officials have echoed similar sentiments.[85][86][87]
Four missile launches were conducted on May 18 and 19, 2013—according to South Korea's defense ministry, three short-range guided missiles landed into the waters off the Korean peninsula on May 18, followed by a fourth on May 19. The missiles did not put any neighboring nations at risk and Pyongyang's actions were widely viewed as an exercise in fear creation to prompt other countries to consider security and aid concessions. The launches occurred during a period when relations were strained between the North and the South, as Pyongyang refused to participate in talks over the closed Kaesong plant.[88]
At the start of June 2013, the North Korean government offered to enter into talks that would represent the first dialogue of its kind in many years. The South Korean government immediately accepted the proposal.[89]
Geography
North Korea occupies the northern portion of the Korean Peninsula, lying between latitudes 37° and 43°N, and longitudes 124° and 131°E. It covers an area of 120,540 square kilometres (46,541 sq mi). North Korea shares land borders with China and Russia to the north, and borders South Korea along the Korean Demilitarized Zone.
To its west are the Yellow Sea and Korea Bay, and to its east lies Japan across the Sea of Japan (East Sea of Korea). The highest point in North Korea is Baekdu Mountain at 2,744 metres (9,003 ft). The longest river is the Amnok (Yalu) River which flows for 790 kilometres (491 mi).[90] The capital and largest city is Pyongyang; other major cities include Kaesong in the south, Sinuiju in the northwest, Wonsan and Hamhung in the east and Chongjin in the northeast.
In 2013, internet users were encouraged to participate in a community based event on Google Maps. These users could use Google Map Maker along with Cartography and Telemetry skills that eventually led to a virtual map of Pyongyang.[91] In addition, the Google Map of North Korea includes political prison camp locations such as Camp 22.[92]
Topography
Early European visitors to Korea remarked that the country resembled "a sea in a heavy gale" because of the many successive mountain ranges that crisscross the peninsula.[93] Some 80% of North Korea is composed of mountains and uplands, separated by deep and narrow valleys. All of the peninsula's mountains with elevations of 2,000 meters (6,600 ft) or more are located in North Korea. The coastal plains are wide in the west and discontinuous in the east. A great majority of the population lives in the plains and lowlands.
The highest point in North Korea is Baekdu Mountain which is a volcanic mountain which forms part of the Chinese/North Korean border with basalt lava plateau with elevations between 1,400 and 2,744 meters (4,593 and 9,003 ft) above sea level.[93] The Hamgyong Range, located in the extreme northeastern part of the peninsula, has many high peaks including Kwanmobong at approximately 2,541 m (8,337 ft).
Other major ranges include the Rangrim Mountains, which are located in the north-central part of North Korea and run in a north-south direction, making communication between the eastern and western parts of the country rather difficult; and the Kangnam Range, which runs along the North Korea–China border. Mount Kumgang, or Diamond Mountain, (approximately 1,638 metres or 5,374 feet) in the Taebaek Range, which extends into South Korea, is famous for its scenic beauty.[93]
For the most part, the plains are small. The most extensive are the Pyongyang and Chaeryong plains, each covering about 500 square kilometers (190 sq mi). Because the mountains on the east coast drop abruptly to the sea, the plains are even smaller there than on the west coast. Unlike neighboring Japan or northern China, North Korea experiences few severe earthquakes.
Climate
North Korea has a continental climate with four distinct seasons.[94] Long winters bring bitter cold and clear weather interspersed with snow storms as a result of northern and northwestern winds that blow from Siberia. Average snowfall is 37 days during the winter. The weather is likely to be particularly harsh in the northern, mountainous regions.
Summer tends to be short, hot, humid, and rainy because of the southern and southeastern monsoon winds that bring moist air from the Pacific Ocean. Typhoons affect the peninsula on an average of at least once every summer.[94] Spring and autumn are transitional seasons marked by mild temperatures and variable winds and bring the most pleasant weather. Natural hazards include late spring droughts which often are followed by severe flooding. There are occasional typhoons during the early fall.
North Korea's climate is relatively temperate. Most of the country is classified as type Dwa in the Köppen climate classification scheme, with warm summers and cold, dry winters. In summer there is a short rainy season called changma.[95] On 7 August 2007, the most devastating floods in 40 years caused the North Korean government to ask for international help. NGOs, such as the Red Cross, asked people to raise funds because they feared a humanitarian catastrophe.[96]
Administrative divisions
Map | Namea | Chosŏn'gŭl | Administrative Seat | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Capital city (chikhalsi)a | |||||
1 | Pyongyang | 평양직할시 | (Chung-guyok) | ||
Special city (teukbyeolsi)a | |||||
2 | Rason | 라선특별시 | (Rajin-guyok) | ||
Provinces (do)a | |||||
3 | South Pyongan | 평안남도 | Pyongsong | ||
4 | North Pyongan | 평안북도 | Sinuiju | ||
5 | Chagang | 자강도 | Kanggye | ||
6 | South Hwanghae | 황해남도 | Haeju | ||
7 | North Hwanghae | 황해북도 | Sariwon | ||
8 | Kangwon | 강원도 | Wonsan | ||
9 | South Hamgyong | 함경남도 | Hamhung | ||
10 | North Hamgyong | 함경북도 | Chongjin | ||
11 | Ryanggang * | 량강도 | Hyesan | ||
* – Rendered in Southern dialects as "Yanggang" (양강도). |
Government and politics
Regime ideology
North Korea is a self-described Juche (self-reliant) state,[97] described by some observers as a de facto absolute monarchy[98][99][100] or "hereditary dictatorship"[101] with a pronounced cult of personality organized around Kim Il-sung (the founder of North Korea and the country's only president) and his late son, Kim Jong-il. However, the 4th Conference of the Workers' Party of Korea said that Kimilsungism-Kimjongilism was "the only guiding idea of the party".[102]
A North Korea scholar dismisses the idea that juche is North Korea's leading ideology, regarding its public exaltation as designed to deceive foreigners.[103] In the latest version of the North Korean constitution, the state and party officially rejected North Korea's founding ideology of communism.[104]
Research based on North Korea's domestic documents, and popularized in 2009 by Brian R. Myers in his book The Cleanest Race, and later supported by other academics,[105][106] characterizes North Korean ideology as being a racialist-focused nationalism, and heavily influenced by the racialist outlook of Japan before the end of the Second World War.[107][108] Charles K. Armstrong criticizes Myers for taking the Japanese comparison too far, suggesting that North Korean ideology is "actually closer to European fascism" than to Imperial Japanese fascism, since Imperial Japan lacked a charismatic leader and mass-mobilizing party.[109]
Leadership
Following Kim Il-sung's death in 1994, he was not replaced but instead received the designation of "Eternal President", and his body was interred in the vast Kumsusan Palace of the Sun in central Pyongyang.[110]
Although the office of the President is ceremonially held by the deceased Kim Il-sung,[111][112][113] the Supreme Leader until his death in December 2011 was Kim Jong-il, who was General Secretary of the Workers' Party of Korea and Chairman of the National Defence Commission of North Korea. The legislature of North Korea is the Supreme People's Assembly, currently led by Chairman Kim Yong-nam. The head of the Cabinet of North Korea is the Premier of North Korea Pak Pong-ju.
The structure of the government is described in the Constitution of North Korea.[104] The governing party by law is the Democratic Front for the Reunification of the Fatherland, a coalition of the Workers' Party of Korea and two other smaller parties, the Korean Social Democratic Party and the Chondoist Chongu Party. These parties nominate all candidates for office and hold all seats in the Supreme People's Assembly. They have negligible power, as the leader holds autocratic control over the nation's affairs.
In June 2009, it was reported in South Korean media that intelligence indicated that the country's next leader would be Kim Jong-un, the youngest of Kim Jong-il's three sons.[114] This was confirmed on 19 December 2011, following Kim Jong-il's death.[70][115] According to Cheong Seong-chang of Sejong Institute, speaking on 25 June 2012, there is some possibility that the new leader Kim Jong-un, who has greater visible interest in the welfare of his people and engages in greater interaction with them than his father did, will consider economic reforms and regularization of international relations.[116]
Controls on political expression
Political expression is tightly controlled in North Korea. Supporters of the government who deviate from the government line are subject to reeducation in sections of labor camps set aside for that purpose. Those who are successfully rehabilitated may reassume responsible government positions on their release.[117]
Troublesome political dissidents, factionalists and class enemies, who are considered irredeemable are incarcerated together with any close family members or children born in the camp in "Total Control Zones" for a life of hard labor. Labor camps in North Korea are actually areas of the country set aside for that purpose, Camp 22 (also known as Kwan-li-so No.22 Haengyong) is 31 miles by 25 miles with a population of about 50,000. Those who attempt to escape or violate camp rules are executed or sent to a separate prison within the camp. The labor camps are reserved for political prisoners; common criminals are incarcerated in a separate system.[118] There are 6 such areas in the northern and northeastern portion of North Korea.[119]
In January 2013, North Korea purchased 16,000 video cameras from China in order to conduct mass surveillance on citizens.[120]
Foreign relations
North Korea has long maintained close relations with the People's Republic of China (PRC) and Russia. The fall of communism in eastern Europe in 1989, and the disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1991, resulted in a devastating drop in aid to North Korea from Russia, although China continues to provide substantial assistance. North Korea continues to have strong ties with its socialist southeast Asian allies in Vietnam and Laos, as well as with Cambodia.[121] North Korea has started installing a concrete and barbed wire fence on its northern border, in response to China's wish to curb an overflow of illegal refugees from North Korea. Previously, the border between China and North Korea had only been lightly patrolled.[122]
As a result of the North Korean nuclear weapons program, the six-party talks were established to find a peaceful solution to the growing tension between the two Korean governments, the Russian Federation, the People's Republic of China, Japan, and the United States.
On 17 July 2007, United Nations inspectors verified the shutdown of five North Korean nuclear facilities, according to the February 2007 agreement.[123] On 4 October 2007, South Korean President Roh Moo-Hyun and North Korean leader Kim Jong-il signed an 8-point peace agreement, on issues of permanent peace, high-level talks, economic cooperation, renewal of train, highway and air travel, and a joint Olympic cheering squad.[52]
The United States and South Korea previously designated the North as a state sponsor of terrorism.[124] The 1983 bombing that killed members of the South Korean government and the destruction of a South Korean airliner have been attributed to North Korea.[125] North Korea has also admitted responsibility for the kidnapping of 13 Japanese citizens in the 1970s and 1980s, five of whom were returned to Japan in 2002.[126] On 11 October 2008, the United States removed North Korea from its list of states that sponsor terrorism.[127]
In 2009, relationships between North and South Korea increased in intensity; North Korea had been reported to have deployed missiles,[128] ended its former agreements with South Korea,[129] and threatened South Korea and the United States not to interfere with a satellite launch it had planned.[130] North and South Korea are still technically at war (having never signed a peace treaty after the Korean War) and share the world’s most heavily fortified border.[131] On 27 May 2009, North Korean media declared that the Korean Armistice was no longer valid because the South Korean government's pledge to "definitely join" the Proliferation Security Initiative.[citation needed]
To further complicate and intensify strain between the two nations, the sinking of the South Korean warship Cheonan in March 2010, killing 46 seamen, is as of 20 May 2010 claimed by a multi-national research team[132] to have been caused by a North Korean torpedo, which the North denies. South Korea agreed with the findings from the research group and President Lee Myung-bak declared in May 2010 that Seoul would cut all trade with North Korea as part of measures primarily aimed at striking back at North Korea diplomatically and financially.[133] As a result of this, North Korea severed all ties, completely abrogated the previous pact of non aggression and expelled all South Koreans from a joint industrial zone in Kaesong.[134] On 23 November 2010, North Korea attacked Yeonpyeong Island, further deteriorating the diplomatic relations with the South and other nations.[135]
Most of the foreign embassies connecting with diplomatic ties to North Korea are located in Beijing (Capital of China) rather than in Pyongyang (Capital of DPRK).[136]
Society
Ascribed status
According to North Korean documents and refugee testimonies,[137] all North Koreans are sorted into groups according to their Songbun, an ascribed status system. Based on their own behavior and the political, social, and economic background of their family for three generations as well as behavior by relatives within that range, Songbun is allegedly used to determine whether an individual is trusted with responsibility, given opportunities,[138] or even receives adequate food.[137][139]
Songbun allegedly affects access to educational and employment opportunities and particularly whether a person is eligible to join North Korea's ruling party.[138] There are 3 main classifications and about 50 sub-classifications. According to Kim Il-sung, speaking in 1958, the loyal "core class" constituted 25% of the North Korean population, the "wavering class" 55%, and the "hostile class" 20%.[137] The highest status is accorded to individuals descended from those who participated with Kim Il-sung in the resistance against Japanese occupation during and before World War II and to those who were factory workers, laborers or peasants as of 1950.[140]
While some analysts believe private commerce recently changed the Songbun system to some extent,[141] most North Korean refugees say it remains a commanding presence in everyday life.[137] However the North Korean government claims all citizens are equal and denies any discrimination on the basis of family background.[142]
Human rights
Many international human rights organizations accuse North Korea of having one of the worst human rights records of any nation.[143] Amnesty International reports of severe restrictions on the freedom of association, expression and movement, arbitrary detention, torture and other ill-treatment resulting in death, and executions.[35] The organization demands the closure of prison camps, where 200,000 political prisoners and their families exist in “the most inhuman conditions imaginable”.[36] North Koreans have been referred to as "some of the world's most brutalized people" by Human Rights Watch, because of the severe restrictions placed on their political and economic freedoms.[37][38] According to the United Nations Commission of Inquiry the crimes against humanity in North Korea entail extermination, murder, enslavement, torture, imprisonment, rape, forced abortions and other sexual violence, persecution on political, religious, racial and gender grounds, the forcible transfer of populations, the enforced disappearance of persons and the inhumane act of knowingly causing prolonged starvation.[144]
In the 1990s just listening to South Korean radio transmissions could result in capital punishment.[citation needed] Some were also allegedly sent to prison camps for singing a South Korean song.[145]
Political prison camps
The State Security Department of North Korea is responsible for several activities involving law enforcement and allegedly maintain various prison camps. North Korean defectors have testified to the existence of prisons and concentration camps[146] including "total control zones", (Kwan-li-so : 관리소), where political undesirables are imprisoned for life at hard labor and are subjected to reported torture, starvation, rape, murder, medical experimentation, forced labor, and forced abortions.[147]
According to Amnesty International, based on satellite images and testimonies, around 200,000 prisoners (about 0.85% of the population) are held in six large political prison camps,[148] being in operation since the 1950s. They are forced to work in conditions approaching slavery and are frequently subjected to torture and other cruel, inhumane, and degrading treatment.[149] Camp 14 in Kaechon,[150] Camp 15 in Yodok[151] and Camp 18 in Bukchang[152] are described in detailed testimonies.[147]
People suspected of not being loyal to the regime, e.g. because they are Christians or because they criticized the leadership,[148] are deported to these camps without trial,[153] often with their whole family and mostly without any chance of being released.[154] The International Coalition to Stop Crimes Against Humanity in North Korea (ICNK) estimates that over 10,000 people die in North Korean prison camps every year.[155] According to R.J. Rummel, forced labor, executions, and concentration camps were responsible for over one million deaths in North Korea from 1948 to 1987;[156] others have estimated 400,000 deaths in concentration camps alone.[157]
Personality cult
The North Korean government exercises control over many aspects of the nation's culture, and this control is used to perpetuate a cult of personality surrounding Kim Il-sung,[158] and, to a lesser extent, Kim Jong-il.[159] While visiting North Korea in 1979, journalist Bradley Martin noted that nearly all music, art, and sculpture that he observed glorified "Great Leader" Kim Il-sung, whose personality cult was then being extended to his son, "Dear Leader" Kim Jong-il.[160] Bradley Martin also reported that there is even widespread belief that Kim Il-sung "created the world", and Kim Jong-il could "control the weather".[160]
Such reports are contested by North Korea researcher Brian R. Myers: "divine powers have never been attributed to either of the two Kims. In fact, the propaganda apparatus in Pyongyang has generally been careful not to make claims that run directly counter to citizens’ experience or common sense."[161] He further explains that the state propaganda painted Kim Jong-il as someone whose expertise lay in military matters and that the famine of the 1990s was partially caused by natural disasters out of Kim Jong-il's control.[162]
The song "No Motherland Without You" (당신이없으면 조국도없다), sung by the North Korean Army Choir, was created especially for Kim Jong-il and is one of the most popular tunes in the country. Kim Il-sung is still officially revered as the nation's "Eternal President". Several landmarks in North Korea are named for Kim Il-sung, including Kim Il-sung University, Kim Il-sung Stadium, and Kim Il-sung Square. Defectors have been quoted as saying that North Korean schools deify both father and son.[163] Kim Il-sung rejected the notion that he had created a cult around himself, and accused those who suggested this of "factionalism".[160] Following the death of Kim Il-Sung, North Koreans were prostrating and weeping to a bronze statue of him in an organized event;[164] similar scenes were broadcast by state television following the death of Kim Jong-il.
Critics maintain this Kim Jong-il personality cult was inherited from his father, Kim Il-sung. Kim Jong-il was often the center of attention throughout ordinary life in the DPRK. His birthday is one of the most important public holidays in the country. On his 60th birthday (based on his official date of birth), mass celebrations occurred throughout the country.[165] Kim Jong-il's personality cult, although significant, was not as extensive as his father's. One point of view is that Kim Jong-il's cult of personality was solely out of respect for Kim Il-sung or out of fear of punishment for failure to pay homage.[166] Media and government sources from outside of North Korea generally support this view,[167][168][169][170][171] while North Korean government sources say that it is genuine hero worship.[172]
B. R. Myers also argues that the worship is real and not unlike worship of Adolf Hitler in Nazi Germany.[173] In a more recent event – on 11 June 2012 – a 14-year-old North Korean schoolgirl drowned while attempting to rescue portraits of Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-il from a flood.[174]
Korean reunification
North Korea's policy is to seek reunification without what it sees as outside interference, through a federal structure retaining each side's leadership and systems. In 2000, both North and South Korea signed the June 15th North–South Joint Declaration in which both sides made promises to seek out a peaceful reunification.[51] The Democratic Federal Republic of Korea is a proposed state first mentioned by then North Korean president Kim Il-sung on 10 October 1980, proposing a federation between North and South Korea in which the respective political systems would initially remain.[175]
Military
The Ministry of the People's Armed Forces maintains the Korean People's Army (KPA), which serves as the military force of the country.[176] The Korean People's Army (KPA) is the name for the collective armed personnel of the North Korean military. It has five branches: Ground Force, Naval Force, Air Force, Special Operations Force, and Rocket Force. According to the U.S. Department of State, North Korea has the fourth-largest army in the world, at an estimated 1.21 million armed personnel, with about 20% of men aged 17–54 in the regular armed forces.[31] North Korea has the highest percentage of military personnel per capita of any nation in the world, with approximately one enlisted soldier for every 25 citizens.[32][177] North Korea also has a Defense Industry that is responsible for engineering military equipment. In 1994, North Korea received 10 Golf II Class Submarines from Russia.[178]
Military strategy is designed for insertion of agents and sabotage behind enemy lines in wartime,[31] with much of the KPA's forces deployed along the heavily fortified Korean Demilitarized Zone. The Korean People's Army operates a very large amount of equipment, including 4,060 tanks, 2,500 APCs, 17,900 artillery pieces, 11,000 air defense guns and some 10,000 MANPADS and anti-tank guided missiles[179] in the Ground force; at least 915 vessels in the Navy and 1,748 aircraft in the Air Force,[180] of which 478 are fighters and 180 are bombers.[181]
North Korea also has the largest special forces in the world, as well as the largest submarine fleet.[182] The equipment is a mixture of World War II vintage vehicles and small arms, widely proliferated Cold War technology, and more modern Soviet or locally produced weapons. In line with its asymmetric warfare strategy, North Korea employs a wide range of unconventional techniques and equipment, such as GPS jammers,[183] stealth paint,[184] midget submarines and human torpedoes,[185] a vast array of chemical and biological weapons,[186] and blinding laser weapons.[187] According to official North Korean media, military expenditures for 2010 amount to 15.8% of the state budget.[188]
North Korea has active nuclear and ballistic missile weapons programs and has been subject to United Nations Security Council resolutions 1695 of July 2006, 1718 of October 2006, and 1874 of June 2009, for carrying out both missile and nuclear tests. North Korea probably has fissile material for up to nine nuclear weapons,[189] and has the capability to deploy nuclear warheads on intermediate-range ballistic missiles.[190] The launch of a North Korean satellite in December 2012 was seen as a weapons development step by South Korea and its allies[191] and condemned by the UN Security Council.[192]
Weapons manufacturing
In North Korea, weapons are manufactured in roughly 1,800 underground defense industry plants scattered throughout the country. Most of these facilities are located in Chagang Province.[193]
Nuclear capabilities
In the 1990s, North Korea sold medium-sized nuclear capable missiles to Pakistan in a deal facilitated by China.[194] In 2005, North Korea admitted to having nuclear weapons but vowed to close their nuclear programs.[195][196] The promise of a reduction in nuclear programs has also been reinforced at various Inter-Korean Summit meetings between North and South Korea since the year 2000. However, nuclear plants in North Korea have caused international concern since the 1950s as they are capable of assisting in the development of nuclear arms. International issues involving North Korea's refusal to discontinue nuclear projects have prevented Russia based Gazprom from developing a $2.5 billion pipeline to South Korea through Pyongyang. The revenue generated from Gazprom is intended to provide North Korea with $100 million per year in transit fees.[197][198]
The Japan Meteorological Agency has been able to use technological advances in seismology to detect various nuclear weapons tests.[199]
Following North Korea's withdrawal from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty in 2003, it was subject to series of sanctions against by the UN Security Council, including Resolution 1695, Resolution 1718, Resolution 1874, and Resolution 2087.
Economy
The economy of North Korea operates under the Central Bank of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea and issues the North Korean won. North Korea has an industrialized, highly centralized command economy with a high priority on self-sufficiency and independence. North Korea and Cuba are the only two states with an almost entirely government-planned, state-owned economy. The Central Planning Committee prepares, supervises and implements economic plans, while a General Bureau of Provincial Industry in each region is responsible for the management of local manufacturing facilities, production, resource allocation, and sales.[202]
North Korea's isolation policy means that international trade is highly restricted. North Korea passed a law in 1984 allowing for foreign investment through joint ventures,[203] but failed to attract any significant investment. In 1991, it established the Rason Economic Special Zone,[204] in an attempt to attract foreign investment from China and Russia. Chinese and Russian companies have purchased rights to use the ports at Rason. Chinese investors are renovating a road from Rason to China,[205] and Russian railway workers are renovating the railway from Rason to Russia, from where it continues onto the Trans-Siberian Railway.[206]
Until 1998, the United Nations published HDI and GDP per capita figures for North Korea, which stood at a medium level of human development at 0.766 (ranked 75th) and a GDP per capita of $4,058.[207] The average salary was about $47 per month in 2004.[208] The average official salary in 2011 was equivalent to $2 per month while the actual monthly income seems to be around $15 because most North Koreans earn money in illegal small businesses: trade, subsistence farming, and handicrafts. The illegal economy is dominated by women because men have to attend their places of official work even though most of the factories are non-functioning.[209] It is estimated that in the early 2000s, the average North Korean family drew some 80% of its income from small businesses that are legal in market economies but illegal in North Korea.[210]
Despite substantial economic problems, quality of life was improving and wages were rising steadily in 2007.[211] Small-scale private markets, known as janmadang, exist throughout the country and provide the population with imported food and commodities ranging from cosmetics to motorcycles in exchange for money.[212][213] In 2009, the government carried out a currency redenomination with the aim to curb free market activity across the country, but the attempt failed, causing inflation rates to skyrocket, and eventually led to the lifting of the ban on free market trade.[214]
Food rations, housing, healthcare, and education are offered from the state for free,[215] and the payment of taxes has been abolished since 1 April 1974.[216] In order to increase productivity from agriculture and industry, since the 1960s the North Korean government has introduced a number of management systems such as the Taean work system.[217] In the 21st century, following a recovery in 1999, North Korea's GDP growth was slow but steady until 2005. Between 2006 and 2011 the majority of years have had negative growth.[218] In 2012, the Bank of Korea published the following estimates of North Korea's GDP growth:[219][220]
2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.3% | 3.8% | 1.2% | 1.8% | 2.1% | 3.8% | −1.0% | −1.2% | 3.1% | −0.9% | −0.5% | 0.8% |
According to estimates from 2002, the dominant sector in the North Korean economy is industry (43.1%), followed by services (33.6%) and agriculture (23.3%). In 2004, it was estimated that agriculture employed 37% of the workforce while industry and services employed the remaining 63%.[61] Major industries include military products, machine building, electric power, chemicals, mining, metallurgy, textiles, food processing and tourism. Iron ore and coal production are among the few sectors where North Korea performs significantly better than its southern neighbor – the DPRK produces about 10 times larger amounts of each resource.[221] In the agricultural sector, Potato production in North Korea is a major activity that provides for food security in the country.
Rice yields are about 2.8 tons per hectare, about half that in most countries, with soil degradation, lack of fertilizers, and limited mechanization blamed.[28] In 2005, North Korea was ranked by the FAO as an estimated 10th in the production of fresh fruit[222] and as an estimated 19th in the production of apples.[223] It has substantial natural resources and is the world's 18th largest producer of iron and zinc, having the 22nd largest coal reserves in the world. It is also the 15th largest fluorite producer and 12th largest producer of copper and salt in Asia. Other major natural resources in production include lead, tungsten, graphite, magnesite, gold, pyrites, fluorspar, and hydropower.[61]
Private commerce
In 1991, North Korea started experimenting with private capitalism in the Rajin-Sonbong Economic Special Zone, and in 2002 also set up the Kaesong Industrial Region.[224] A small number of other areas have been designated as Special Administrative Regions.
A small number of capitalistic elements are gradually spreading from the trial area, including a number of advertising billboards along certain highways. Recent visitors have reported that the number of open-air farmers' markets has increased in Kaesong and Pyongyang, as well as along the China-North Korea border, bypassing the food rationing system. In addition to food aid, China reportedly provides an estimated 80% to 90% of North Korea's oil imports at "friendly prices" that are sharply lower than the world market price.[225]
North Korea also has a cartoon animation industry, sub-contracting work from South Korean animation studios.[226]
International trade
China and South Korea are the largest trade partners of North Korea.[227] China is North Korea's closest economic partner, accounting for around 70% North Korea's foreign trade in 2011.[228][229] Chinese statistics for 2013 indicate that North Korean exports to China were nearly $3 billion, with imports of about $3.6 billion. Trade with South Korea declined after Lee Myung-bak was elected President of South Korea in 2008, who reduced trade to put pressure on North Korea over nuclear matters. Trade with South Korea fell from $1.8 billion to $1.1 billion between 2007 and 2013, most of remaining being through the Kaesŏng Industrial Park.[230]
In 2000, the Centre for the Study of the Capitalist System was established.[231] Increasingly more foreign-invested joint ventures have been set up since 2002.[232] The Pyongyang Business School was established by the Swiss government to help teach students business management.[233]
European investors have worked alongside North Korea to develop freelance computer programming employment opportunities.[234]
Tourism
Tourism in North Korea is organized by the state-owned Korea International Travel Company. All tourists/visitors are constantly accompanied by one or two guides, who usually speak the tourist's native language. While tourism has increased over the last few years, tourists from Western countries remain few.
Most visitors come from China, Russia, and Japan. For citizens of South Korea, it is almost impossible to get a visa to North Korea; they can get entry permits to special tourist areas designated for South Koreans, such as Kaesong. United States citizens were also subject to visa restrictions, allowed to visit only during the yearly Arirang Festival; these restrictions were lifted in January 2010. Fewer than 2,500 United States citizens have visited North Korea since 1953.[235]
In the area of Mount Kumgang, the company Hyundai established and operates a special tourist area. Travel to this area is possible for South Koreans and United States citizens, but only in organized groups from South Korea. A special administrative region, the Mount Kumgang Tourist Region, exists for this purpose. Trips to the region were suspended after a South Korean woman who wandered into a controlled military zone was shot dead by border guards in late 2008.[236] When tours had not resumed by May 2010, North Korea announced that it would seize South Korean real estate assets in the region.[237]
There are hotels throughout the country, the largest currently operating being the Yanggakdo International Hotel.[238]
Famine
In the 1990s North Korea faced significant economic disruptions, including a series of natural disasters, economic mismanagement and serious resource shortages after the collapse of the Eastern Bloc. These resulted in a shortfall of staple grain output of more than 1 million tons from what the country needs to meet internationally accepted minimum dietary requirements.[239] The North Korean famine known as the "Arduous March" resulted in the deaths of between 300,000 and 800,000 North Koreans per year during the three-year famine, peaking in 1997.[240] The deaths were most likely caused by famine-related illnesses such as pneumonia, tuberculosis, and diarrhea rather than starvation.[240]
In 2006, Amnesty International reported that a national nutrition survey conducted by the North Korean government, the World Food Programme, and UNICEF found that 7% of children were severely malnourished; 37% were chronically malnourished; 23.4% were underweight; and one in three mothers was malnourished and anemic as the result of the lingering effect of the famine. The inflation caused by some of the 2002 economic reforms, including the Songun or "Military-first" policy, was cited for creating the increased price of basic foods.[241]
The history of Japanese assistance to North Korea has been marked with challenges; from a large pro-Pyongyang community of Koreans in Japan to public outrage over the 1998 North Korean missile launch and revelations regarding the abduction of Japanese citizens.[242] In June 1995, an agreement was reached that the two countries would act jointly.[242] South Korea would provide 150,000 tons of grain in unmarked bags, and Japan would provide 150,000 tons free and another 150,000 tons on concessional terms.[242] In October 1995 and January 1996, North Korea again approached Japan for assistance. On these two occasions, both of which came at crucial moments in the evolution of the famine, opposition from both South Korea and domestic political sources quashed the deals.[242]
Beginning in 1997, the U.S. began shipping food aid to North Korea through the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) to combat the famine. Shipments peaked in 1999 at nearly 700,000 tons making the U.S. the largest foreign aid donor to the country at the time.[243] Under the Bush Administration, aid was drastically reduced year after year from 350,000 tons in 2001 to 40,000 in 2004.[244] The Bush Administration took criticism for using "food as a weapon" during talks over the North's nuclear weapons program, but insisted the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) criteria were the same for all countries and the situation in North Korea had "improved significantly since its collapse in the mid-1990s." Agricultural production had increased from about 2.7 million tons in 1997 to 4.2 million tons in 2004.[245]
In 2013, there were reports of famine returning to parts of North Korea and driving some to cannibalism, with the claims that one man dug up his grandchild's corpse to eat and another boiled his child and ate the flesh.[246] Another man was allegedly executed after murdering his two children for food.[246] However, the World Food Program reported malnutrition and food shortages, but not famine.[247]
Crime and law enforcement
The Ministry of People's Security maintains all law enforcement activities at the local level, which includes police and other initiatives. There is also a State Security Department that operates in a similar way to an "Office of the Interior" located in other countries.
Media and telecommunications
Media
North Korean media are under some of the strictest government control in the world. The North Korean constitution provides for freedom of speech and the press, but the government prohibits the exercise of these rights in practice. In its 2013 report, Reporters without Borders ranked freedom of the press in North Korea as 177th out of 178, above only that of Eritrea.[248][249] Only news that favors the regime is permitted, while news that covers the economic and political problems in the country, and foreign criticism of the government, are not allowed.[250] The media upholds the personality cult of Kim Jong-un, regularly reporting on his daily activities. The main news provider to media in the DPRK is the Korean Central News Agency.
North Korea has 12 principal newspapers and 20 major periodicals, all of varying periodicity and all published in Pyongyang.[251] Newspapers include the Rodong Sinmun, Joson Inmingun, Minju Choson, and Rodongja Sinmum. No private press is known to exist.[252]
In January 2012, the Associated Press opened a bureau in Pyongyang for full news coverage within North Korea.[253][254]
A study commissioned by the U. S. State Department shows that, despite extremely strict regulations and draconian penalties, North Koreans, particularly elite elements, have increasing access to news and other media outside the state-controlled media authorized by the government.[255] While access to the Internet is tightly controlled, listening to the radio and viewing DVDs is increasing, and receiving television broadcasts from neighboring states is also possible in border areas.[255][256] A South Korean professor claimed that the spread of cheap, Chinese-made "portable TVs" (EVD players) in North Korea is making it harder for authorities to crack down on citizens watching South Korean-made videos.[257][258] Uriminzokkiri is a Korean news website that frequently posts propaganda including the United States attack video published in 2013.[259]
Radio
It has been reported that North Korea uses "radio jamming" techniques in order to prevent access to non-nationalist broadcasts. However, a group by the name of Free North Korea Radio conducts numerous activities that focus on providing a free radio station to North Koreans. The broadcasts often include instructions on methods to leave the country and their faction has contact with underground reporters within North Korea. The group primarily consists of numerous North Korean refugees and defectors.[260][261]
Telephones and mobiles
In North Korea, the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications maintains the phone systems within the country and oversees the Postal Service. North Korea has an adequate telephone system, with 1.18 million fixed lines available in 2008.[262] However, most phones are only installed for senior government officials. Someone wanting a phone installed must fill out a form indicating their rank, why he wants a phone, and how he will pay for it.[263] The number of mobile phones in Pyongyang rose from 3,000 in 2002 to approximately 20,000 in 2004.[264]
North Korea has a 3G network for cell phones that provides service to over 1 million subscribers as of February 2012. The service is provided by Koryolink, a venture between the North Korean government and Egypt based Orascom Telecom Holding which is owned by Naguib Sawiris. In May 2010, more than 120,000 North Koreans owned mobile phones;[265] this number had increased to 301,000 by September 2010,[266] 660,000 by August 2011,[267] and 900,000 by December 2011.[268] Restrictions have included a ban on cell phones from 2004–2008 and the removal of Internet access from individual phones.[269][270] According to a report, there are an estimated 1.5 million mobile phone users in North Korea in 2013.[271] From 1 March 2013, Koryolink will authorize full internet access on mobile phones for foreign nationals visiting North Korea.
Internet
North Korea's first Internet café opened in 2002 as a joint venture with a South Korean Internet company, Hoonnet. The former CEO of Hoonnet was Kim Beom-hoon.[272] Ordinary North Koreans do not have access to the global Internet network, but are provided with a nationwide, public-use Intranet service called Kwangmyong, which features domestic news, an e-mail service, and censored information from foreign websites (mostly scientific).[273] The computers primarily use Red Star OS as an operating system.[270]
Transportation
Two of the few ways to enter North Korea are over the Sino-Korea Friendship Bridge or via Panmunjeom, the former crossing the Amnok River (Yalu) and the latter crossing the Demilitarized Zone.
On 13 October 2011 a train from the Russian border settlement of Khasan made an inaugural run to Rajin in North Korea. The 54 kilometer newly repaired link of the Trans-Korean Main Line was the first step in an effort to rebuild the Trans-Korean rail and integrate it into the Trans-Siberian railroad.[274]
Cars are relatively rare, but as of 2008[update] some 70% of households used bicycles, which also play an increasingly important role in small-scale private trade.[275] Very few cars and light trucks are made in a joint-venture between Pyeonghwa Motors of South Korea, and the North Korean Ryonbong General Corp at a facility in Nampo, North Korea.[276] Another local producer of vehicles is Sungri Motor Plant, which manufactures civilian vehicles and heavy trucks.
There is a mix of locally built and imported trolleybuses and trams in urban centers in North Korea. Earlier fleets were obtained in Europe and China, but the trade embargo has forced North Korea to build their own vehicles.[citation needed]
Rail transport
Choson Cul Minzuzui Inmingonghoagug is the only rail operator in North Korea. It has a network of 5,200 km (3,200 mi) of track with 4,500 km (2,800 mi) in standard gauge.[277] There is a small narrow gauge railway in operation in Haeju peninsula.[277] The railway fleet consists of a mix of electric and steam locomotives. Cars are mostly made in North Korea using Soviet and Chinese designs. There are some locomotives from Imperial Japan, the United States, and Europe remaining in use. Second-hand Chinese locomotives (early DF4Bs, BJ Hydraulics, etc.) have also been spotted in active service.
People traveling from the capital Pyongyang to other regions in North Korea typically travel by rail. However, in order to travel out of Pyongyang, people need an official travel certificate, ID, and a purchased ticket in advance. Because of lack of maintenance on the rail infrastructure and vehicles, the travel time by rail is increasing. It has been reported that the 190 km (120 mi) trip from Pyongyang to Kaesong can take up to 6 hours.[278]
Marine transport
Water transport on the major rivers and along the coasts plays a growing role in freight and passenger traffic. Except for the Yalu and Taedong rivers, most of the inland waterways, totaling 2,253 kilometers (1,400 mi), are navigable only by small boats. Coastal traffic is heaviest on the eastern seaboard, whose deeper waters can accommodate larger vessels. The major ports are Nampho on the west coast and Rajin, Chongjin, Wonsan, and Hamhung on the east coast. The country's harbor loading capacity in the 1990s was estimated at almost 35 million tons a year.[279][failed verification]
In the early 1990s, North Korea possessed an ocean-going merchant fleet, largely domestically produced, of 68 ships (of at least 1,000 GRT), totaling 465,801 GRT GRT uses unsupported parameter (help)/709,442 t DWT DWT uses unsupported parameter (help), which includes 58 cargo ships and 2 tankers. There is a continuing investment in upgrading and expanding port facilities, developing transportation—particularly on the Taedong River—and increasing the share of international cargo by domestic vessels.[280]
Air transport
There are several North Korean Airports, although international air connections are limited. There are regularly scheduled flights from the Pyongyang Sunan International Airport – 24 kilometers (15 mi) north of Pyongyang – to Moscow, Khabarovsk, Vladivostok, Bangkok, Beijing, Dalian, Kuala Lumpur, Shanghai, Shenyang along with seasonal services to Singapore and charter flights from Pyongyang to numerous Asian and European destinations including Tokyo and Nagoya. Regular charters to existing scheduled services are operated as per demand. An agreement to initiate a service between Pyongyang and Tokyo was signed in 1990. Internal flights are available between Pyongyang, Hamhung, Haeju, Kaesong, Kanggye, Kilju, Nampho, Sinuiju, Samjiyon, Wonsan, and Chongjin.[281]
All civil aircraft are operated by Air Koryo: 38 aircraft in 2010, which were purchased from the Soviet Union and Russia. From 1976 to 1978, four Tu-154 jets were added to the seven propeller-driven An-24s and two Ilyushin Il-18s; afterwards adding 4 long-range Ilyushin Il-62M, three Ilyushin Il-76MD large cargo aircraft. In 2008, a long range Tupolev Tu-204-300 was purchased along with, in 2010, a larger version the Tupolev Tu-204-100B.[279]
Demographics
North Korea's population of roughly 24 million is one of the most ethnically and linguistically homogeneous in the world, with very small numbers of Chinese, Japanese, Vietnamese, South Korean, and European expatriate minorities.
According to the CIA World Factbook, North Korea's life expectancy was 63.8 years in 2009, a figure roughly equivalent to that of Pakistan and Burma and slightly lower than Russia.[282] Infant mortality stood at a high level of 51.3, which is 2.5 times higher than that of China, 5 times that of Russia, and 12 times that of South Korea.[283]
According to the UNICEF "The State of the world's Children 2003" North Korea appears ranked at the 73rd place (with first place having the highest mortality rate), between Guatemala (72nd) and Tuvalu (74th).[283][284] North Korea's total fertility rate is relatively low and stood at 2.0 in 2009, comparable to those of the United States and France.[285]
Language
North Korea shares the Korean language with South Korea. There are dialect differences within both Koreas, but the border between North and South does not represent a major linguistic boundary. Both Koreas share the phonetic writing system called Chosongul in the north and Hangul south of the DMZ. The official Romanization differs in the two countries, with North Korea using a slightly modified McCune-Reischauer system, and the South using the Revised Romanization of Korean. While prevalent in the South, the adoption of modern terms from foreign languages has been limited in North Korea. Hanja (Chinese characters) are no longer used in North Korea (ever since 1949), although still occasionally used in South Korea. The move toward prohibiting both Roman and Chinese-based characters in North Korea has led to the creation of a number of words and phrases not common in the southern half of the peninsula or in Korean communities abroad.
Religion
Both Koreas share a Buddhist and Confucian heritage and a recent history of Christian and Cheondoism ("religion of the Heavenly Way") movements. The North Korean constitution states that freedom of religion is permitted.[287] According to the Western standards of religion, the majority of the North Korean population could be characterized as non-religious.[citation needed] However, the cultural influence of such traditional religions as Buddhism and Confucianism still have an effect on North Korean spiritual life.[288][289][290]
Nevertheless, Buddhists in North Korea reportedly fare better than other religious groups, particularly Christians, who are said to face persecution by the authorities. Buddhists are given limited funding by the government to promote the religion, because Buddhism played an integral role in traditional Korean culture.[291]
According to Human Rights Watch, free religious activities no longer exist in North Korea, as the government sponsors religious groups only to create an illusion of religious freedom.[292] According to Religious Intelligence the situation of religion in North Korea is the following:[293]
- Irreligion: 15,460,000 (64.3% of population, the vast majority of which are adherents of the Juche philosophy)
- Korean shamanism: 3,846,000 adherents (16% of population)
- Cheondoism: 3,245,000 adherents (13.5% of population)
- Buddhism: 1,082,000 adherents (4.5% of population)
- Christianity: 406,000 adherents (1.7% of population)
Pyongyang was the center of Christian activity in Korea until 1945. From the late forties 166 priests and other religious figures were killed or disappeared in concentration camps, including Francis Hong Yong-ho, bishop of Pyongyang[294] and all monks of Tokwon abbey.[295] No Catholic priest survived the persecution, all churches were destroyed and the government never allowed any foreign priest to set up in North Korea.[296]
Today, four state-sanctioned churches exist, which freedom of religion advocates say are showcases for foreigners.[297][298] Official government statistics report that there are 10,000 Protestants and 4,000 Roman Catholics in North Korea.[299]
According to a ranking published by Open Doors, an organization that supports persecuted Christians, North Korea is currently the country with the most severe persecution of Christians in the world.[300] Open Doors estimates that 50,000–70,000 Christians are detained in North Korean prison camps.[301] Human rights groups such as Amnesty International also have expressed concerns about religious persecution in North Korea.[302]
Education
Education in North Korea is free of charge,[303] compulsory until the secondary level, and controlled by the government. The state also used to provide school uniforms free of charge until the early 1990s.[304] Heuristics is actively applied in order to develop the independence and creativity of students.[305] Compulsory education lasts eleven years, and encompasses one year of preschool, four years of primary education and six years of secondary education. The school curriculum has both academic and political content.[306] North Korea is one of the most literate countries in the world, with an average literacy rate of 99%.[61] According to Shin Dong-hyuk, children imprisoned in concentration camps also receive a form of education.[307]
Primary schools are known as people's schools, and children attend them from the age of 6 to 9. Then, from age 10 to 16, they attend either a regular secondary school or a special secondary school, depending on their specialties.
Higher education
Higher education is not compulsory in North Korea. It is composed of two systems: academic higher education and higher education for continuing education. The academic higher education system includes three kinds of institutions: universities, professional schools, and technical schools. Graduate schools for master's and doctoral level studies are attached to universities, and are for students who want to continue their education. Two notable universities in the DPRK are the Kim Il-sung University and Pyongyang University of Science and Technology, both in Pyongyang. The former, founded in October 1946, is an elite institution whose enrollment of 16,000 full- and part-time students in the early 1990s occupies, in the words of one observer, the "pinnacle of the North Korean educational and social system."[308] There is also a University called the Kim Chaek University of Technology that specializes in information technology and nuclear research.[309]
Health care
North Korea has a national medical service and health insurance system which are offered for free.[26] In 2001 North Korea spent 3% of its gross domestic product on health care. Beginning in the 1950s, the DPRK put great emphasis on healthcare, and between 1955 and 1986, the number of hospitals grew from 285 to 2,401, and the number of clinics – from 1,020 to 5,644.[310] There are hospitals attached to factories and mines. Since 1979 more emphasis has been put on traditional Korean medicine, based on treatment with herbs and acupuncture.
North Korea's healthcare system has been in a steep decline since the 1990s because of natural disasters, economic problems, and food and energy shortages. In 2001, many hospitals and clinics in North Korea lack essential medicines, equipment, running water and electricity.[311]
Almost 100% of the population has access to water and sanitation, but it is not completely potable. Infectious diseases, such as tuberculosis, malaria, and hepatitis B, are considered to be endemic to the country.[312] Life expectancy in North Korea is 63.81 years, occupying the 169th place in the world, according to 2011 estimates.[282]
Among other health problems, many North Korean citizens suffer from the after effects of malnutrition, caused by famines related to the failure of its food distribution program and "military first" policy. A 1998 United Nations (UN) World Food Program report revealed that 60% of children suffered from malnutrition, and 16% were acutely malnourished. As a result, those who suffered during the disaster have ongoing health problems.[citation needed][dubious – discuss]
Culture and arts
North Korea shares its traditional culture with South Korea, but the two Koreas have developed distinct contemporary forms of culture since the peninsula was divided in 1945. Historically, while the culture of Korea has been influenced by that of neighbouring China, it has nevertheless managed to develop a unique and distinct cultural identity from its larger neighbour.[313]
Literature and arts in North Korea are state-controlled, mostly through the Propaganda and Agitation Department or the Culture and Arts Department of the Central Committee of the KWP.[314] Film is also a significant artistic medium in North Korea and Kim Jong Il's manifesto The Cinema and Directing (1987) is the basis for the nation's filmmakers.[315]
Korean culture came under attack during the Japanese rule from 1910 to 1945. Japan enforced a cultural assimilation policy. During the Japanese rule, Koreans were encouraged to learn and speak Japanese, adopt the Japanese family name system and Shinto religion, and were forbidden to write or speak the Korean language in schools, businesses, or public places.[316] In addition, the Japanese altered or destroyed various Korean monuments including Gyeongbok Palace and documents which portrayed the Japanese in a negative light were revised.
A popular event in North Korea is the Mass Games. The most recent and largest Mass Games was called "Arirang". It was performed six nights a week for two months, and involved over 100,000 performers. Attendees to this event in recent years report that the anti-West sentiments have been toned down compared to previous performances. The Mass Games involve performances of dance, gymnastics, and choreographic routines which celebrate the history of North Korea and the Workers' Party Revolution. The Mass Games are held in Pyongyang at various venues (varying according to the scale of the Games in a particular year) including the Rungnado May Day Stadium, which is the largest stadium in the world with a capacity of 150,000 people. In addition, a Kim Chaek People's Stadium was built for events at 40°41'0"N 129°11'47"E.
North Korea employs artists to produce art for export at the Mansudae Art Studio in Pyongyang. Over 1,000 artists are employed. Products include water colors, ink drawings, posters, mosaics and embroidery. Socialist realism is the approved style with North Korea being portrayed as prosperous and progressive and its citizens as happy and enthusiastic. Traditional Korean designs and themes are present most often in the embroidery. The artistic and technical quality of the works produced is very high but other than a few wealthy South Korean collectors there is a limited market because of public taste and reluctance of states and collectors to financially support the regime.[317]
In July 2004, the Complex of Goguryeo Tombs became the first site in the country to be included in the UNESCO list of World Heritage Sites.
In February 2008, The New York Philharmonic Orchestra became the first US orchestra to perform in North Korea,[318] albeit for a handpicked "invited audience."[319] The concert was broadcast on national television.[320] The Christian rock band Casting Crowns played at the annual Spring Friendship Arts Festival in April 2007, held in Pyongyang.[321]
Australian filmmaker Anna Broinowski gained access to North Korea's film industry through British filmmaker Nick Bonner, who facilitated meetings between Broinowski and prominent North Korean filmmakers to assist Broinowski with the production of Aim High in Creation!, a film project based on Kim Jong Il's manifesto. Broinowski explained in July 2013, prior to the screening of the film at the Melbourne International Film Festival:
A friend gave me Kim Jong Il's manifesto on how to make the 'perfect socialist film', The Cinema and Directing (1987). I was immediately fascinated by his often counter-intuitive (for a Westerner at least) filmmaking rules. And I began to wonder: what would a film by Westerners, strictly adhering to Kim Jong Il's rules, be like? Could it have the same power over western audiences that North Korean films have over Kim Jong Il's 23 million citizens? ... I wanted to humanise the North Koreans in the minds of viewers constantly bombarded by the mainstream Western media's depiction of North Koreans as victimised, brainwashed automatons.[315]
A version of Broinowski's work was screened in Pyongyang, but the director believes that the documentary version of the film will not be allowed into the country.[315]
Sports
In association football, fifteen clubs compete in the DPR Korea League level-one and vie for both the Technical Innovation Contests and the Republic Championship. The national football team, Chollima, competes in the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) and, as of 26 May 2010, is ranked 105 by FIFA. The team competed in the FIFA World Cup in 1966 and 2010.
In ice hockey, North Korea's men’s team is ranked 43 out of 49 nations[322] and competes in Division II. The women’s team is ranked 21 out of 34 nations[323] and competes in Division II.
North Korea is also active in basketball, with a national team that represents the nation in international competitions. In December 2013, former American basketball professional Dennis Rodman visited North Korea to help train the national team after he developed a friendship with President Kim Jong-un during his first visit to the country in February 2013.[324]
North Korea has been competing in the Olympics since 1964, and debuted at the summer games in 1972 by taking home five medals, including one gold. To date, North Korea has won a medal at every summer Olympics event in which they have participated. The International Olympic Committee (IOC) code for North Korea is PRK.
North Korea boycotted the 1988 Summer Olympics in neighboring Seoul. At the Athens Games in 2004, the North and South marched together in the opening and closing ceremonies under the Unification Flag, but competed separately.
Taekwondo is a martial art that originated in Korea. In the 1950s and 1960s, modern rules were standardised and taekwondo became an official Olympic sport in 2000. Other Korean martial arts include taekkyeon, hapkido, tang soo do, kuk sool won, kumdo and subak.
A popular sporting event in North Korea is the annual Arirang Festival, known for its mass participation performances that combine gymnastics, music and "backdrop" (coloured sheets of card are held by participants to create large-scale images).[325] The board game Yut is a team sport in North Korea and is televised on the country's television stations.
In October 2013, Kim Jong-un introduced a new policy that allows successful athletes to receive luxury apartments in recognition for their achievements. The reward was given to Om Yun-chul, An Kum-ae and Kim Un-guk, who earned Olympic medals at the 2012 Summer Olympics.[326]
See also
- Index of North Korea-related articles
- List of documentary films about North Korea
- North Korea Uncovered
- Outline of North Korea
- South Korea
- Kim Il-Sung
- Kim Jong-il
References
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{{cite web}}
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EVERY developing country worth its salt has a bustling middle class that is transforming the country and thrilling the markets. So does Stalinist North Korea.
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Although it was in that 1955 speech that Kim gave full voice to his arguments for juche, he had been talking along similar lines as early as 1948.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - ^ DPRK has quietly amended its Constitution (Template:Webcite)
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{{cite news}}
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- ^ "The Martyrs of Tokwon: Historical Preliminary Notes". Missionary Benedictines of St. Ottilien. Retrieved 10 April 2012.
- ^ "Thank You Father Kim Il Sung" (PDF). U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, November 2005. Retrieved 10 April 2012.
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Bibliography
- "Country Profile: North Korea" (PDF). Library of Congress – Federal Research Division. July 2007. Retrieved 4 July 2009.
- "North Korea – A Country Study" (PDF). Library of Congress Country Studies. 2009.
- Brian Reynolds Myers (2011). The Cleanest Race: How North Koreans See Themselves and Why It Matters. Melville House. ISBN 1933633913.
External links
- Government sites
- Official Webpage of The Democratic People's Republic of Korea – maintained by the Korean Friendship Association
- kcna.kp – The website of the Korean Central News Agency (including English[dead link ] Spanish, Chinese and Japanese)
- naenara.com.kp/en/ – The official North Korean governmental portal Naenara
- General sites
- United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights – Report by the Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea
- Template:Dmoz
- "North Korea". The World Factbook (2024 ed.). Central Intelligence Agency.
- North Korea profile from the BBC News
- North Korea Encyclopædia Britannica entry
- Wikimedia Atlas of North Korea
- Geographic data related to North Korea at OpenStreetMap
- North Korea – Link Collection (University of Colorado at Boulder Libraries GovPubs)
- Amnesty International: North Korea: Political Prison Camps - Document on conditions in North Korean prison camps
- "Show and Tell Pyongyang" – A blog, often with images, in Russian
- Article about Show and Tell Pyongyang in English on NK News
- The Daily NK: The Hub of North Korean News – News about North Korea and human rights
- The website of the Committee for Cultural Relations with Foreign Countries at friend.com.kp
- Korea Education Fund (Archived 2012-08-31 at the Wayback Machine)
- The website of the digital edition of the Rodong Sinmun newspaper at rodong.rep.kp
- Images
- Flickr tags: North Korea. Sets: [1], [2], [3], [4], [5], [6], [7], [8]. Groups: [9], [10]
- Inside North Korea – slideshow by The First Post
- Videos
- DPR OF KOREA OFFICIAL주체102년 on YouTube
- uriminzokkiri on YouTube
- Videos from North Korea on YouTube
- DPRK Music on YouTube
- North Korea Videos on YouTube
- DPRK Concert on YouTube
- DPRK TV Radio on YouTube
- Documentary by film crew about one-week visit to North Korea on YouTube
- Films on North Korea – A Complete Collection[dead link ]