North Korea
North Korea
North Korea
DPRK HISTORY
02/03
By July American troops had entered the Korean War on the Souths behalf.
DPRK HISTORY
DPRK HISTORY
The division of
Korean people
1592 Korea is invaded by Japan leaving
the country in ruins, this is preceded by the
invasion of Northwestern Korea in 1627 by
Manchuria who were protecting their rear-end
for their invasion of China. Up until the 1880s
Korea preserved an isolationist policy, however
at the insistence of Japan they signed The
Treaty of Kanghwa 1876, defining Korea as
an independent state, becoming a ground for
competition amongst powers.
However Japanese influence became
overpowering leading to Korean opposition
of Japanese dominance, and in 1895 the
Japanese assassinated Queen Min, wife
of King Gojong of Korea. Queen Min was
suspected of encouraging the resistance. King
Gojong remained on the throne until 1907
when he was forced to pass it onto his son.
1910 Japan officially ceased Korea,
Choson Dynasty had come to an end. Koreans
remember this period as a brutal experience.
1945 Japan is defeated in WWII,
surrendering to its allies- Great Britain, The
United States and The Soviet Union. However
The Soviet Union and the United states could
not agree on a single system of governance for
all of Korea so they agreed to split the North
and South between them, establishing the 38th
apparel.
The United states took control of the
South, handing power over to Syngman Rhee
and The soviet union took control of the North
handing power over to Kim il-Sung. 1948 both
North and South claim legitimate governments
and representatives of the entire Korean
people. Syngman declares formation of The
Republic of Korea in Seoul and Kim il-sung
declares the formation of The Democratic
Peoples Republic of Korea in Pyongyang.
Left
Sign marking the
38th parallel,
separating North
from South Korea.
04/05
DPRK HISTORY
Harry S. Truman,
April 16, 1951
DPRK HISTORY
06/07
DPRK HISTORY
Top
DPRK HISTORY
08/09
DPRK HISTORY
DPRK HISTORY
10/11
South Korean soldiers move in single file toward Koreas east-central front near Lookout Mountain,1953
DPRK HISTORY
12/13
DPRK HISTORY
DPRK HISTORY
14/15
DPRK HISTORY
Kim Dynasty
Kim II-Sung (15 April, 1912) was born in Mangyondore near
Pyongyang. He was a guerrilla fighter against Japanese occupation
as well as fighting with the Soviet union during WWII. Kim II-Sung
was handed over power by the Soviet Union in 1948 and elected
president in 1972, to be known as Great Leader.
Kim II-Sung got rid of his last rivals within the Korea Workers
Party becoming the absolute ruler of North Korea, now with
his sight on turning the DPRK into an austere, militaristic and
regimented society. His two main goals were industrialisation and
the reunification of the Korean peninsula through many devices,
particularly terrorism North Korea does not regard terrorism
as a crime, its an essential tool for completing the revolution.
Throughout his ruling he arranged terrorist attacks within South
Korea headed by his son Kim Jong-il.
The Kims remain in power through government units and
security, bodyguards, the police, the military and legal authorities.
On a psychological level they have brainwashed North Koreans as
well as nationwide surveillance to keep tight control over society.
Kim Il-sung based his rule on ruthless rights abuses,
repression of independent voices, and economic and social
controls that led to deprivation and ultimately widespread
starvation.
When Kim Jong-il came to power in 1994 after the death of
Kim II-sung, he is regarded a God just like his father and refereed
to as Dear Leader. North Koreans were required to believe they
were the life givers, the true parents of all Koreans. However Kim
Jong-il struggled to live up to his fathers image.
Kim Jong-il just doesnt have the art that his father Kim
II-Sung did. People were prepared to believe almost everything
about Kim II-Sung because of the circumstances of how he came
to power. Kim II-Sung was the George Washington of his country
who fought the Japanese and who saved North Korea from the
Americans in the Korean War
Kim Jong-il therefore made myths, one being his birth.
Legend has it that a double rainbow and a glowing new star
appeared in the heavens to herald his birth. In his biography he
states that he wrote 1,500 books during his 3 years at Kim II-Sung
University and wrote 6 full operas in 2 years all of which are better
than any in the history of music.
The Kims have brainwashed the Korean people into believing
they are Gods. Images of the Kims are considered sacred, folding
of their faces is considered disrespectful even with newspapers
and money. Each home has to have a pair of portraits of the Kims
hung high on the wall so nothing can be higher then the leaders,
often with home checks to see if dust is found on the portraits,
if so they have to pay a fine, the more dust the higher the fine.
Newly married couples receive a pair of portraits. Thats why we
have to have their portraits, in order to be with them all the time. It
is equivalent to having the cross or statues of Jesus at Church.
DPRK HISTORY
16/17
DPRK HISTORY
Kim II-sung
DPRK HISTORY
18/19
Kim Jong-il
DPRK HISTORY
Kim Jong-un
DPRK HISTORY
20/21
DPRK HISTORY
DPRK CENSORSHIP
Freedom of
Information
North Korea is one of the most oppressive
states in the world. Censorship implemented by
the government restricts North Koreans from
receiving or attaining information from the
outside world and attempting to do either is
extremely dangerous.
Independent newspapers are very limited,
the government decide what they allow North
Koreans to see and read Online or on broadcast
news, even feeding them lies to keep control
of them. In North Korea nearly all of its 12 main
newspapers, 20 periodical and broadcasters
come from the official Korean central news
agency.
Free speech is not a luxury North Koreans
have the pleasure of acting out, they have to be
extremely careful on what they say and to who,
many people have been sent to prison camps
or executed for speaking out against the regime
because in North Korea they are not allowed to
express their own opinion.
Left
Kim Jong-un posing for photos with
soldiers of the Seoul Ryu Kyong Su
105 Guards
22/23
DPRK CENSORSHIP
DPRK CENSORSHIP
Eric Lafforgue
Eric Lafforgue is a French
journalist who has taken photos
in countries that many would
consider off-limits. He has been
given access to North Korea on
a number of occasions with his
first impression being a negative
one due to the lack of freedom
he saw everywhere. On his 6th
trip in 2012 he shot photos of
North Koreans going about their
daily lives and shared them
online.
Lafforgue when asked
to remove them by the
government refused and
consequently was banned.
The photos were considered
offensive.
From the many visits to
North Korea Lafforgue has
noticed some changes, such
as the younger generation
speaking English and not being
so shy towards foreigners. Most
significant, the use of mobile
phones, believing this to be the
influence of China.
24/25
DPRK CENSORSHIP
We North Koreans
are truly happy.
Tell everyone how very
happy we really are
Top
It is forbidden to
take pictures of
the daily life of
the North Korean
people if they are
not well dressed.
Bottom
Officials forbid
photos showing
malnutrition.
Far right
Kim Jongun during an
inspection of a
military drill.
DPRK CENSORSHIP
26/27
DPRK CENSORSHIP
DPRK CENSORSHIP
28/29
Cameraman filming at the April Spring Friendship Art Festival in Pyongyang, North Korea.
DPRK CENSORSHIP
Guides love it if you take pictures to show the world that kids have computers, but there is no electricity.
DPRK CENSORSHIP
The Internet
North Korea does not allow its citizens to
have the use of the Internet, instead they have
the intranet (Kwangmyong) opening in 2000,
it is an internal collection of networked servers
and computers that is only accessible from
inside North Koreas borders. They dont have
windows but Redstar, North Koreas custom
made operating system that was reportedly
commissioned by Kim Jong-il.
Normal citizens do not have access to the
Internet, and they need to have permission to
own a computer and for it to be registered with
the government. Only a handful of selected
people are allowed, and tend to be elites or
academics and scientists. It is believed however
that some families have full unrestricted access to
the Internet but they are believed to be relatives
to Kim Jong-un.
What little Internet access North Koreans
do have is used to make their world smaller
30/31
DPRK CENSORSHIP
DPRK CENSORSHIP
Mobile Phones
Mobile phone use was banned in 2004
but a service was re-introduced in 2008.
Mobile phones in North Korea are now
becoming a central component for everyday life,
with more than 2.5million cellphones registered.
However the cost to buy a cell phone together
with the call rates means that wealth is no longer
based on visible wealth but is now based on how
many cell phone users there are in a household.
Smart-phones cost around $400 in North
Korea with a basic mobile phone costing up to
a fifth of the average annual salary, a price that
means smart-phones are out of reach for a lot of
people in reclusive areas of North Korea.
The department of state security and people
security inspects registrants of cellphones to
find out a person or persons financial situation
to discover whether they can afford to own a
cellphone, if they grow suspicious they will begin
surveillance to discover if they have connections
with Chinese or South Koreans.
However according to defectors from North
Korea, the use of unregistered cell phones are
almost as prevalent as registered. Unofficial
cell phones avoid surveillance as long as users
are discreet because they originate from China,
therefore are not registered with North Korean
authorities. However authorities have set up
moving signal detection units along the border to
obstruct such usage.
In 2010 a North Korean man only known as
Jung was executed for calling a friend in South
Korea who had defected in 2001 to tell him about
the harsh living conditions and the price of rice. It
has be seen as a warning to people, that contact
with the South is punishable by prison or death.
32/33
Left
Kim Jong-un gives field
guidance to the newly
built Wisong Scientists
Residential District,Oct.
14, 2014.
34/35
Hooded North Korean defectors at a Seoul rally protesting against North Korean human right abuses.
36/37
North Korean soldiers take part in training with military dogs at an undisclosed
location, April 6, 2013.
38/39
Hyeonseo Lee
Yeonmi Park
40/41
DPRK History
DPRK HISTORY
South Korean soldiers patrol inside the barbed-wire fence near the border village of Panmunjom
DPRK HISTORY
Political Prison
Camps
Guilt by association
3 generations
44/45
46/47
Extermination, murder,
enslavement, torture,
imprisonment, rape,
forced abortions and
other sexual violence,
persecution on political,
religious, racial and
gender grounds, and
the forcible transfer of
populations.
United Nations detailed crimes
against humanity.
48/49
Families separated
by war
After the Korean war families were separated by the 38th parallel, majority of
them never to see or hear from each other for over 60 years. North and South Korea
are still technically at war as it only ended in armistice, therefore arranging reunions
is a difficult task with North Korea pulling out last minute on a few occasions.
Meetings are organsied by Red cross who held one in 2014 and the last one being
in 2015 and are very popular with tens of thousands of people signing up, the ones
chosen tend to be elderly on both sides. In South Korea they use a computer to
randomly pick people based on age and family history. The picked ones then have
to under go medical examinations and interviews to determine whether they are
fit to travel. Around 250 people were allowed to travel from the south for 3 days,
for many it is the first contact they have had with family in over 60 years. Many
separated are brothers and sisters or fathers and sons and are extremely emotional
occasions as for many it will be the last time they see them.
Kim Myeong-do
Kim Myeong-do was a 21 year old school
teacher from North Koreas South Hwanghae
province who was given the chance to study
Korean literature at university in Seoul, South
Korea. He remembers his mothers last words
Take care, study hard and come back, she said
as his ferry pulled out of the harbour. However
Kims hopes of returing home were shattered
when in 1950 the Korean War began, halving the
peninsula.
Kim now 93 years old has never returned
home to North Korea, never seeing his mother or
father again with no idea what happened to them
If this isnt a tragedy, I dont know what is.
Kim took part in a rare reunion of families from
the North and South finally laying eyes on his
younger brother Kim Heung-do who he last saw
when he was 4 years old. Seeing him after such
a long time felt like I was meeting a man from
the neighbourhood, Kim said, We wouldnt
have recognised each other if we had met on the
street.
Although the reunion was one of joy it brough
some sad news I just heard news about my
family in the North, that my parents had passed
away, what my younger siblings are doing for a
living and so on. Then we parted, he said.
Before his brother left he gave Kim a gift, a
colour photograph of his long-lost family, a small
token of affection. In the picture, 31 North Korean
faces, young and old, stare into the camera, they
are Kims in-laws, cousins, nephews and nieces,
condemned by history to be eternal strangers.
I look at it all the time, he said.
50/51
52/53
Top
Bottom
North Korean Kim Jin-won, 80, cries as he bids farewell to his South Korean relatives.
South Korean Lee Jeong-suk 68, wipes the tears of her North Korean father Ri Heung-jong, 88.
54/55
Top
Bottom
South Korean Lee Jung-ho reunites with his elder brother Lee Kwae Seok
South Koreans cry near the buses outside the resort.
Nuclear Weapons
The only way for defending the sovereignty of our nation and its right
to existence under the present extreme situation is to bolster up nuclear
force both in quality and quantity and keep balance of forces.
North Korea then reported on January 7,
2016 that it had launched a long range rocket
that had put an Earth observation satellite into
orbit which had been a complete success. The
Kwangyoungsong-4 satellite was named after his
father Kim Jong-il and orbits the Earth every 94
minutes and announced that North Korea plan
further satellite launches.
However the US and its allies believe it uses
satellite launches as covert tests of technology
that could be used to develop a missile capable
of striking the US mainland.
The UN secretary general, Ban Ki-moon,
condemned the launch as deeply deplorable
and urged North Korea to halt its provocative
actions. Despite the latest moves, Pyongyang
has remained defiant, releasing a statement via its
Moscow embassy saying it intends to continue
launching rockets carrying satellites into space.
58/59
Sanctions on
North Korea
International reaction to the nuclear test and
the rocket launch was swift, Japan imposed new
sanctions on Pyongyang, South Korea closed
an inter-Korean industrial park and American
lawmakers passed a bill to tighten economic
sanctions against the regime which was signed
into law by Obama.
Obama consulted with Chinese President
Xi Jinping after the nuclear test and separately
with the President of South Korea after the rocket
launch to reaffirm the United States commitment
to their security.
It imposes mandatory sanctions on
individuals who contribute to North Koreas
nuclear and ballistic missile program, its
malicious cyber-attacks, its censorship activities,
and the regimes continued human rights
abuses.
However Russia has imposed unilateral
sanctions against North Korea, with Russian
foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova
arguing that pressuring any countries by
imposing unilateral sanctions on them for political
reasons is illegal. We recognize only sanctions
imposed by UN security council.
60/61
Top
Parade photo that was posted on the internet in April 2012.
Bottom Visitors look at replicas of North Korean Scud-B missile and
South Korean Nike missiles at the Korean War memorial in Seoul.
62/63
64/65
Right
The North released a
photo of leader Kim
Jong-un standing
beside what appears
to be a mock up of a
nuclear bomb.
66/67
Top
Washington DC under a nuclear attack.
Bottom Ends with a clip of a burning American flag.
North Korean
Threats
North Korea is well known for its threats
and has as expected issued more threats and
warnings to both the United States and South
Korea. They come in retaliation to the joint
U.S.-South Korean military drill that is held
annually in South Korea.
However the difference with this year is the
number of troops involved has increased and
they have included a simulated training for a
decapitation strike targeting Kim Jong-un.
The warning and threat this time was
through a North Korean propoganda video
posted on its propoganda website DPRK Today
on 26 March 2016 called Last Chance. The
visually manipualted video shows a submarine
launched nuclear missile soaring through the
clouds, and back to Earth before destroying
Washington, concluding with the US flag
in flames. A message flashes up at the end
in Korean if US imperialists budge an inch
toward us, we will immediately hit them with
nuclear (weapons).
Shortly after threats to attack South Korean
Presidential palace were issued. North Korea
wants South Korean President Park Geun-hye
to aplogise for treason and punish those
who formulated the decapitation strategy
against Kim Jong-un. If matchless traitor Park
Geun-Hye and her group do not respond...
the long-range artillery force of the KPA large
combined unit on the front will move over to
merciless military action said the Koreans
peoples army (KPA) in a statment.
68/69
70/71
Michael Kirby
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Bibliography
Admin (2016) Seoul: N. Korea conducted
artillery drill near sea border At: http://xbox360asylum.ca/world/seoul-n-korea-conductedartillery-drill-near-sea-border/2378 (Accessed on
24.02.16)
Admin (2011) Famous Quotes Cold War at:
http://www.historyinanhour.com/2011/11/22/famous-quotes-cold-war/ (Accessed on 25.02.16)
Adwar, C (2015) Eritrea Is The Last Place In
The World You Would Want To Serve In The
Military In: Task & Purpose [Online] At: http://
taskandpurpose.com/eritrea-is-the-last-place-inthe-world-you-would-want-to-serve-in-the-military/ (Accessed on 09.02.16)
Alonso, N. (n.b.) What Happened to Korea After Japan Lost Control of It at the End of WWII?
At: http://classroom.synonym.com/happenedkorea-after-japan-lost-control-end-wwii-23026.
html (Accessed on 26.02.16)
Aljazeera (2016) Japan readies to destroy
North Korea rocket In: Aljazeera [Online] At:
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2016/02/
japan-readies-destroy-north-korea-rocket-160203041831114.html (Accessed on
18.02.16)
Amnesty International UK (n.b.) North Korea: Life in the camps [online] At: https://www.
amnesty.org.uk/north-korea-life-camps?gclid=CjwKEAiApOq2BRDoo8SVjZHV7TkSJABLe2iDMeRC1_2d1zCEINaAAsG6V5EeMKd16MzlliwuSA6w2BoCiRrw_wcB (Accessed on 05.03.16)
BBC News (2011) North Koreas tightly
controlled media In:BBC News [Online] At:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-16255126 (Accessed on 03.02.16)
BBC News (2015) Second Korean family reunion in North At: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/
world-asia-34627189 (Accessed on 11.02.16)
BBC News (2015) Korean families divided
by war reunite in North At: http://www.bbc.
co.uk/news/world-asia-34578320 (Accessed on
11.02.16)
BC News (2013).Ethiopia police torture and
abuse political prisoners In BBC News [Online]
At: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-24576942 (Accessed on 13.02.16)
Beauchamp, Z. (2016) North Koreas scarily
plausible claim to have a miniaturized nuclear warhead, explained at: http://www.vox.
com/2016/3/9/11186964/north-korea-nuclear-warhead (Accessed on 11.03.16)
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Shim, E (2016) Former North Korea bodyguard accuses Kim Jong Un of rights
abuses At: http://www.upi.com/Top_News/
World-News/2016/02/23/Former-North-Korea-bodyguard-accuses-Kim-of-rights-abuses/4131456281084/ (Accessed on 25.02.16)
Shim, E. (2015) Demand for mobile phones
in North Korea means two per household
At: http://www.upi.com/Top_News/WorldNews/2015/07/01/Demand-for-mobilephones-in-North-Korea-means-two-per-household/5391435728640/(Accessed on 02.03.16)
Shears, R (2010) North Korean man executed
for calling a friend in South Korea on mobile
phone In:Mailonline [Online] At: http://www.
dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1255375/North-Korean-man-executed-calling-friend-South-Koreamobile-phone.html (Accessed on 03.02.16)
Sitthipat, D (2016) Sworn out of secrecy In:
Bangkok Post [Online] at: http://www.bangkokpost.com/lifestyle/social-and-lifestyle/874720/
sworn-out-of-secrecy (Accessed on 25.02.16)
Sinmum, R (2014) Kim Jong Uns executed
uncle was eaten alive by 120 hungry dogs: report In: NBC News [online] At: http://worldnews.
nbcnews.com/_news/2014/01/03/22156917kim-jong-uns-executed-uncle-was-eaten-aliveby-120-hungry-dogs-report?lite (Accessed on
12.02.16)
Sung-Yoo, K (2015) Ask a North Korean:
Whats life like in the army? In: the guardian
[Online] at: http://www.theguardian.com/
world/2015/sep/11/north-korea-army-life-defector-question (Accessed on 04.02.16)
Tertitskiy, F (2015) Songbuns and the five
castes of North Korea In: NK News [Online] At:
https://www.nknews.org/2015/02/songbunand-the-five-castes-of-north-korea/ (Accessed on
04.02.16)
Tertitskiy, F (2015) Life in North Korea-the
adult years In: the guardian [Online] At: http://
www.theguardian.com/world/2015/dec/23/
life-in-north-korea-the-adult-years (Accessed on
04.02.16)
The national committee on North Korea
(2016) 2015 New Years Address At: http://
www.ncnk.org/resources/news-items/kim-jonguns-speeches-and-public-statements-1/2015new-years-address (Accessed on 14.03.16)
72/73
BIBLIOGRAPHY