Kim Jong Il: The Great Economist and Athlete

March 19th, 2007

 

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Check out his revolutionary platform on Youtube

 

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Promo for the World Festival of Youth and Students

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Money Means Everything

March 19th, 2007

Daily NK
Kim Min Se
3/19/2007

Today, a rich person in North Korea is someone who can spend roughly US$100~$500 (300,000~1.5mn North Korean won) a month. This amount is so large, that it is a figure unfathomable to the average North Korean.

Nowadays, a small number of lower class North Koreans sell noodles at the markets and earn 1,500~2,000won a day. On average, this equates to 50,000~60,000won a month. Additionally, the living costs of a family of 4 in Pyongyang normally costs about 50,000~100,000won.

While a laborer with a stable job earns about 2,000~3,000won (approx. US$0.66~1) a month, spending more than 100,000won (approx. US$32.2) a month is an extravagant figure. Simply put, it has become difficult to live only on selling noodles.

Anyone who spends more than 100,000won a month is probably eating rice and can afford to eat nutritious vegetables. This is the middle class of North Korea today.

The distinctive nature of this middle class is the disparity of the work as well as their past background being rather simple. This class has naturally appeared simply because of their genuine skills. These people know exactly the flow of the market and know how to make money. The only thing important to them is finding the opportunity to make money. In all, they have come to an understanding that money is needed in order to buy goods and live a life to the envy of others.

This middle class is closely linked to power. If a person only takes pride in the sense that he/she can money, then that person will be hit with a severe fall. It is a characteristic of North Korean society that power is critical in living a life making lots of money without trouble.

With money, these people are earning even more by buying the supervision of low ranking safety and security agents and local administrative officers. Simply put, the small amount of money invested as bribery in securing a good location at the markets is petty compared to the income reaped. In other words, whenever a new market is established at a village, a person can be confident in having the best spot by winning over the person in charge. For example, the bidding for the best spot at the Sunam Market, Chongjin is 900,000~1.5mn won (approx. US$290~$490).

Entrepreneurs may become the rich after regime reform

In 2002, the North Korean government passed the July 1st economic reforms which gave more freedom to marketers with less control by authorities and hence, trade became more active.

The mindset of the middle are so fixated on money, that they believe that money can solve anything even if a war was to break out the following day or North Korea was to be completely overturned. Though these people conspire with those in power in order to make money, they are unconcerned with what happens or rather does not happen to the Kim Jong Il regime.

There is a definitive difference between the middle class who are rubbing hands and the central class just in case the Kim Jong Il regime did collapse, compared to the upper class. The middle class are not from any particular special background, but with the skills and guile of making wealth, they are confident that there will be no problems irrespective of regime change.

People from this class even have the freedom to save and keep some food and daily necessities in preparation of this incident. Furthermore, currency is undoubtedly being saved, this also being foreign currency such as dollars. This, they call emergency relief in preparation for the time the North Korean regime does collapse, as well as a safe deposit to use whenever trade needed.

In addition, with the change of the North Korean regime, this class will be able to celebrate and radically transform from being an entrepreneur to the newly-rich with all the wealth acquired during the Kim Jong Il regime.

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North Demands Fees for Workers in Kaesong

March 19th, 2007

Korea Times
Lee Jin-woo
3/19/2007

North Korea has demanded that South Korean visitors or residents at a joint inter-Korean industrial complex in Kaesong, just north of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ), pay registration fees, the Ministry of Unification said Monday.

The ministry, however, withheld the exact amount of money that Pyongyang demanded.

“I want you to understand it as a visa fee. It’s natural for one country to ask visitors from another nation to pay a certain amount in registration fees,’’ Unification Minister Lee Jae-joung told reporters.

Another ranking official also declined to reveal the amount of money proposed by the North, only saying there is a certain gap between the two sides.

Under an agreement on the operation of the Kaesong site signed in December 2003, South Korea is supposed to pay fees in accordance with the period of residence.

It defines a short-term stay as within 90 days and a long-term stay as more than 90 days. A South Korean who stays in the complex for over a year is defined as a resident.

South Koreans, however, have not paid any registration fees to the North Korean authorities because there has been no detailed regulation since the agreement was signed.

Currently, about 800 South Korean residents live at the complex, where South Korean businesses use cheap North Korean labor to produce goods. Some 21 South Korean factories employ about 11,160 North Korean workers there.

Meanwhile, Minister Lee marks his 100th day in office today. He took office on Dec. 11 last year despite vehement opposition from the main opposition Grand National Party (GNP).

After more than a seven-month chill, inter-Korean relations have been restored recently with several talks between the two Koreas underway to improve the reconciliatory atmosphere on the Korean Peninsula.

Asked to choose the most satisfying moment he had in the past 100 days, Lee picked the 20th inter-Korean Cabinet meeting held earlier this month in Pyongyang.

During the four-day ministerial talks which ended March 2, the two Koreas agreed on several principles including the resumption of family reunions using video links from March 27 to 29.

In inter-Korean Red Cross talks, the two sides recently agreed to resume construction of the reunion center beginning March 21.

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N. Korea Has 3 Stimulant Drug Factories

March 19th, 2007

Korea Times
3/19/2007

Japan’s National Police Agency (NPA) has reported that it suspects there are at least three secret factories producing illicit stimulant drugs in North Korea, the Yomiuri Shimbun reported Saturday.

The Japanese daily said that Hiroto Yoshimura, deputy commissioner general of the NPA, mentioned the suspicion of the facilities during his speech as a Japanese representative at the U.N. Commission on Narcotic Drugs’ closed-door meeting in Vienna on Wednesday.

The commission is under the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime.

Two of the three factories are located in areas where pharmaceutical factories were situated when the Korean Peninsula was under Japanese colonial control, Yomiuri reported quoting sources.

It is highly possible that North Korea has been using the factories to produce the drugs, according to the report.

It is the first time that the NPA has mentioned at an international conference the locations of stimulant drug factories in North Korea.

Over smuggling of North Korea’s stimulant drugs, the NPA reexamined seven cases uncovered from 1997 to May last year, in which about 1,500 kilograms of stimulant drugs were seized.

As a result, the NPA determined in July that Pyongyang was involved in an organized way on the grounds:

_ Spy boats of North Korea’s secret agency have been used as a means of transportation.

_ North Koreans arrested for smuggling made confessions hinting they had been acting under the instructions of the North Korean government.

According to the authorities, the drugs seized are divided into three types, based on analyses made of the contents. Due to differences in impurities and crystalline elements, the police are increasingly under the belief the drugs were produced at different locations.

Further, the authorities analyzed confessions of suspects arrested for smuggling stimulant drugs, data from intelligence satellites and the moves of covert operations boats and cargo vessels that transported the drugs.

The police strongly believe buildings in Wonsan in North Korea’s east and Chongjin in the northeast are drug factories.

Both places are where the Japanese pharmaceutical factories were located before World War II.

Also, it has been confirmed that stimulant drugs were sent from a port at Nampo near Pyongyang and there is a building suspected to be a drug factory near the port.

In addition, the NPA has obtained information there is another factory along the Yalu River near the border with China.

In November, the NPA reported at an international conference in Bangkok on controlling drugs in the Asia-Pacific area of North Korea’s state involvement in stimulant drug smuggling.

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Taking Pulse of Herbal Medicine

March 19th, 2007

Korea Times
Andrei Lankov
3/19/2007

Herbal medicine occupies a very prominent place in the North Korean health care system.
In fact, it would be but a minor exaggeration to say that nowadays the North Korean health care system is largely built around traditional herbal medicine.

But this was not always the case. In the early years, until the mid-1950s, herbal medicine was looked upon with disapproval.

It did not appear ‘scientific’ enough, and the Soviet educated doctors saw it as a potentially dangerous superstition.

The first signs of the coming change in attitude were in 1954 when the licensing system for herbal doctors was first introduced.

But the revival of herbal medicine began in earnest in April 1956, when the North Korean cabinet of ministers accepted Decree No. 37, which envisioned the incorporation of herbal medicine into the official medical system. At the same time, Kim Il-sung made a very positive reference to herbal medicine in his lengthy speech delivered to the KWP Third Congress. By the end of 1956, there were 10 herbal medicine centers operating across the country, and by 1960 the number had reached 332.

I think it was not without good reason that this sudden revival of the medical tradition took place in 1956. This was when the North began to steer itself away from its Soviet patron, whose new policy of de-Stalinization met with growing disapproval in Pyongyang. It was also the time when nationalist trends began to grow in the North _ partially because nationalism served the interests of Kim Il-sung and his group, but also because it resonated with the feelings and world view of common Koreans. This created a fertile soil for the rejuvenation of hitherto neglected traditions. It is not incidental that in later eras the initial rejection of herbal medicine came to be blamed on the ‘factionalists’ _ that is, people who did not share Kim Il-sung’s nationalism and his drive for heavy industry and a powerful army at all costs.

And there was another dimension as well. We have been accustomed to thinking of herbal medicine as more expensive than its Western counterpart, but back in the 1950s the opposite was the case. Generally, East Asian medicine, which relied on local herbs, tended to be cheaper and this mattered in a poor country with limited resources.

Around the same time, herbal medicine was encouraged by the South Korean authorities as well. They also saw it as a cheap palliative, a substitute for the “real” Western medicine which only a few South Koreans could afford.

And, last but not least, the basic ideas of herbal medicine resonated quite well with Kim Il-sung’s new policy of selfreliance.

In a sense, herbal medicine was an embodiment of self-reliance in health care.

Thus, the 1960s was a period of triumphal advance for Eastern medicine in the North. For a while herbalists were trained in junior colleges, but from 1960, Pyongyang medical college opened a traditional medicine department. A number of research centers were created with the task of fusing the achievements of Western and traditional medicine. From 1960, a state evaluation committee began to operate, and in that year 239 North Korean herbalists became “Eastern medicine doctors, first class,” while 1,495 had to satisfy themselves with their inferior standing of “Eastern medicine doctors, second class.”

Of course, the growth of herbal medicine was accompanied by claims about wonder drugs and miraculous discoveries, to which the Stalinist regimes were so vulnerable (suffice to remind ourselves of the Lysenko affair in the USSR, or the improbable claims of wonder harvests in Mao’s China).

But the domination of Dr. Kim Pong-han, North Korea’s Lysenko, lasted for merely six years. In 1960 he claimed that he had discovered a new principal type of centralized system in the human body, somewhat similar to a nerve system of blood circulation. There was much talk of this alleged discovery and related medical miracles, but from 1966 all references to Professor Kim suddenly disappeared from the Pyongyang press.

The subsequent decades witnessed a continuous growth in the herbal medicine endeavor, which frequently received direct encouragement and approval from the Great Leader himself (after all, Kim Il-sung’s father once was a part-time herbalist himself). The reasons for the policy remained the same, and even some statements by Kim Il-sung were remarkably frank.

In 1988 he said, “If we produce a lot of Koryo medicine drugs, it is good not only for curing diseases, but also for solving the drug problem, since it will reduce the importation of drugs from other countries.” More than a dozen colleges now train herbalists in the North, and from 1985 would-be Western doctors have also been required to take introductory classes in Eastern medicine.

Perhaps, in some post-unification world the North will become a major source of quality herbal doctors, and their presence will help to drive down prices for this service which many Koreans take so seriously. Who knows, but there are already North Korean herbalists working in the South.

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We [ROK] Could Be Left Out of a U.S.-N.Korea Deal

March 19th, 2007

Choson Ilbo
Yun Duk-min
3/19/2007

It was set off by a nuclear test. The Bush administration, which insisted it could not reward a wrong and wouldn’t conduct bilateral negotiations with North Korea, made a U-turn and promised the North political and economic compensation in bilateral talks. North Korea’s response has been equally astonishing. North Korean Vice Foreign Minister Kim Kye-kwan recently had a long meeting with former U.S. secretary of state Henry Kissinger. What he said sounds unbelievable. Expressing a deep interest in improving U.S.-China relations, he asked if the U.S. has “strategic interests” in North Korea and added, “The Korean Peninsula has been invaded by foreign powers like China and Japan. Strategic relations with the U.S. will be of help to North Korea and regional stability.”

The U.S.-China rapprochement early in the 1970s involved two factors. The U.S. wanted to use China’s strategic value to check the Soviet Union’s expansion, so it broke close relations with Taiwan in exchange for diplomatic relations with China. By the same token, it seems that North Korea is now willing to cooperate with the strategic U.S. interest of restraining China.

North Korea will inwardly have been concerned about its deepening economic reliance on China and increasing Chinese influence on its domestic affairs. In view of the rumors that China could be attempting a change in the North Korean leadership in the wake of the North’s nuclear test, the North may be trying to check the attempt by drawing in the U.S. As the U.S. abandoned Taiwan for the sake of diplomatic ties with China, North Korea may attempt to isolate and restrain South Korea through strategic relations with the U.S.

Kim Kye-gwan’s remarks suggest that the North intends to check South Korea and China by drawing in the U.S. Why does North Korea, after saying it only developed nuclear weapons because of the U.S., now embrace Washington to restrain the South and China? Having introduced a capitalist system in the 1970s, China is emerging as a serious threat to the North Korean regime. What’s more, Beijing in the wake of the collapse of the Berlin Wall forsook Pyongyang and established diplomatic ties with Seoul. South Korea’s rapid economic growth and democratization posed a threat of unification by absorption. In order to avoid either absorption by the South or becoming a Chinese satellite, Pyongyang needed two approaches; nuclear armament and establishment of strategic relations with Washington.

A close review of the 17-year process of negotiations on the North’s nuclear weapons development program clearly reveals North Korea’s intent. The only counterpart in negotiations was the U.S. But unlike the Clinton administration, which negotiated with North Korea directly, the Bush administration, with its top priority on the creation of a new order in the Middle East, had practically left the issue to China. Two aircraft carrier fleets are deployed in seas near Iran, but none came anywhere near the Korean Peninsula when North Korea test-fired missiles and tested a nuclear device. Thanks to its nuclear test, North Korea has now managed to bypass China and secure direct negotiations with the U.S.

Secondly, the North pledges to pose no threat to the U.S. if the latter tacitly approves its limited nuclear armament. It can relinquish long-range missiles capable of attacking America and will never transfer nuclear weapons or materials to third parties or terrorists, the North says. Thirdly, Pyongyang says it can recognize the U.S. forces on Korea. Already in 1991, the senior North Korean leader Kim Yong-sun, deceased in 2003, told high-ranking U.S. officials that North Korea could be a U.S. ally and recognize the USFK. Pyongyang has now only added its willingness to cooperate with Washington’s China strategy.

North Korea’s attempts failed so far because the North wanted both — strategic relations with the U.S. and nuclear armament. Without the premise of resolving the North Korean nuclear crisis, the U.S. could hardly accommodate that. But North Korea’s willingness to cooperate in restraining China must be a very interesting development for the U.S. Rumors are afoot that the U.S. may give tacit consent to the North’s nuclear armament. If the nuclear problem is shelved, it is possible for the U.S. to accommodate North Korea’s demands.

We are at a crucial juncture with denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula. While the North endeavors to build a survival framework through nuclear armament and the help of foreign powers, we are bogged down in domestic bickering as to who will benefit more from a possible inter-Korean summit and a peace agreement. We must recognize that our principle of not tolerating any nuclear weapons on the peninsula could prevent a U.S.-North Korea compromise that would be unfavorable to us. North Korea, too, should realize quickly that the survival of its regime and the happiness of its people depend on its relations not with the U.S. but with South Korea, which accounts for two-thirds of the peninsula’s population and 99 percent of its economic strength. 

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North Korea’s Middle Class…“Money is Power”

March 18th, 2007

Daily NK
Kim Min Se
3/18/2007

In socialism, the laborer and the peasant dominate the nation and society. However, since the late `60’s, the role of the laborer and peasant has decreased with the bureaucracy taking power, to the extent that a country can no longer remain in traditional socialism.

Currently, North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Il with a minority of the central class surround this core power. In North Korea, the laborers and peasants are rather subject to extortion.

Amidst a North Korean market economy, a middle class is being established. The middle class comprises of people who have assets that the average citizen cannot afford and own medium-sized businesses or engage in wholesale trade.

Undoubtedly, this group of people are dominating the middle class as well as playing a vital role in the lifeline of North Korean citizens and market, a fact that could not have been fathomable in North Korea’s past.

Until the 80’s, North Korea’s economy was a planned economy. Supply and demand of goods was distributed according to the national plan. However, in the late-80’s, small holes began to emerge in the socialist planned economic system and with a lack of daily necessities, people began to rely on the black market.

Arising from the major cities, goods were secretively traded in the black market and eventually the majority of North Koreans acquired their needed goods through this system. This system operated evading the control and regulation of North Korean authorities, but when caught, a person was condemned to severe punishment and the goods confiscated.

However, the mass food crisis of the mid-90’s completely collapsed the remnants of a socialist planned economy that had subsided unto the time. What had happened was the end of the national food distribution system.

In particular, the collapse of the food distribution meant the death sentence. Tens and hundreds of thousands of North Koreans began to die of starvation and as a means to live, people became active in the market and trade began to emerge in different regions of North Korea.

Mass starvation which created expert tradesmen

The immobilization of a socialist planned economy activated Jangmadang (North Korea’s integrated markets) which then led to the formation of a new class within North Korea’s own expert tradesmen. North Korean authorities who had no other countermeasures had little choice but to comply as the lives of the citizens were now left to the hands of trade.

In the mid-90’s, North Korean authorities approved personal trade to occur between North Korea and China and then permitted markets to exist along the border districts. Simply put, the mass food crisis created a new class which actually gave North Koreans an opportunity to trade.

At first, people would sell goods that they already had such as household appliances, television, recorder and bicycle. Furthermore, any type of stock accessible, particularly clothing, candy and other foods coming from China such as rice, flour and corn were also traded.

As people gained more experience and came to know the basics of marketing, tradesmen became more specialized. People who sold rice, only sold rice, whereas people who traded fabric only sold fabric.

North Koreans began to realize that specializing in a particular field was the way to make money and the people who were unable to assimilate to this culture broke away penniless.

Accordingly, the market gradually became a center for specialized tradesmen to provide goods and daily necessities. The goods sold by these tradesmen eventually became the mark for the middle class merchant. During this time, stabilized distributors began to dominate the market and more individualized entrepreneurs surfaced.

People skilled at cooking, baked decorative and delicious bread in their homes and then sell them at the markets. In addition, candy distributors have made a mark at the markets with candy making having become an advanced skill. People who once made candy in their homes now brag that they have been able to produce a small-scale sugar factory. In particular, clothes making and candy making has become enterprises leading to great money.

Today, 50% of candy, home-made clothing and 30% of uniforms, sold at North Korean markets are products made from home. Through goods such as these, Chinese merchants, tradesmen and the middle class are earning money through North Korea’s markets supplying the customers, the majority of the lower class.

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One Ton of Coals Let Them Rest at Home

March 18th, 2007

Daily NK
Park Choel Yong
3/18/2007

Rigorous Military Training is Killing North Korean Students
Buying food from outside the camps is, however, the privilege only for the wealthy students. Students who came from privileged families often are excluded from the military trainings for one or two months. The training is notorious for hardness, and hence students from the high authorities offer bribes with money or goods to military officers in return for taking rests at home.

For instance, if one ton of coals were offered to a training camp, a student can rest for a month; a box of cigarette, the “Cat” which costs 1,500 won (approx. US$4.8), is worth a day’s break.

With wealthy students out of training, the rest of students suffer from more than double the hardness. Often, poor students end up patrolling for 8 to 10 hours during national holidays and New Year’s Day.

Girl students in the training have their hair cut shortly and cannot keep private things; even cosmetics are not allowed. Therefore, wealthy girl students take their time at home with bribery.

Even during the training period, the students must take lectures. The basic subjects taught during the training are “The Unification History of the Fatherland” and “History of the Invasion of Japanese Imperialism,” and also includes a few majors.

The lectures, however, are often cut off to make room for the farm supporting activity and national performances.

According to the educational schedules, the college lasts four years, not including the training period; however, the time for lectures generally take only two of those years.

In spring and fall, students take part in the farm supporting activity to transplant rice for 40 days in spring and to harvest for 30 to 40 days during fall. Additionally, students from nationally renowned universities are often brought to various national performances. For six to eight months, students do not take lectures in order to practice military parades for Kim Jong Il’s birthday on the 16th of February and Kim Il Sung’s birthday on the 15th of April.

For torchlight processions, students take practices for two to three months. The torchlight processions are held usually in the Foundation Day of the State and the North Korean Workers’ Party, with more than ten thousand university students participating in the event. Students also practice dancing for another two to three months for students’ dancing party at the Kim Il Sung Plaza, which is held during the Chinese New Years’ Day.

That is not all, however. Working in the subsidiary farms that belong to the universities takes students a few months. Students who make the survey on the revolutionary historic spots and the Korean War landmarks are also exempt from the lectures for a few months.

In the end of a semester, reducing the day for lectures is not a special thing. The students do take lectures more intensively and even on Sundays to remedy this as necessary.

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Seoul to resume North Korea aid

March 16th, 2007

BBC
3/16/2007

South Korea is to resume shipments of fertiliser aid to the North later this month in a further sign of progress after a recently-agreed nuclear deal.

The South Korean Red Cross said the first of some 50 shipments would be sent on 27 March.

Seoul had suspended humanitarian aid to its secretive Communist neighbour after Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile tests.

Separately, the ending of a US probe into a bank linked to North Korea has been welcomed by a pro-Pyongyang paper.

The Japan-based Choson Sinbo described as a “very positive sign” the US Treasury’s announcement that it had ended its 18-month investigation into the Macau bank Banco Delta Asia (BDA).

The US found the BDA complicit in alleged North Korean money-laundering and counterfeiting activities and has barred the bank from accessing the US banking system.

But the Treasury decision does mean the Macau authorities could now remove the bank from receivership and return some of North Korea’s money.

North Korea had insisted the freeze on its assets – estimated to be up to $25m (£13m) – be lifted as part of any agreement on ending its nuclear programme.

“We can call this a truly epochal event because the most arrogant and violent regime ever in the United States did so as if it knelt before a small country in the east,” the Choson Sinbo said.

While North Korea itself has yet to comment on the US Treasury decision, China on Thursday said it “deeply regretted” the move.

The BDA denies it ever intentionally handled illicit funds.

‘Fully committed’

Nuclear negotiators are in Beijing for preparatory discussions ahead of more high-level talks next week.

They will discuss progress on the agreement of 13 February, which was reached during talks involving the two Koreas, China, the US, Japan and Russia.

Under the deal, the North has pledged to “shut down and seal” its Yongbyon nuclear reactor within 60 days in exchange for energy aid.

The UN nuclear chief, Mohamed ElBaradei, travelled to North Korea earlier this week to discuss the resumption of international inspections.

He said Pyongyang was still “fully committed” to giving up its nuclear programme.

Since 13 February various bilateral meetings have been taking place.

The two Koreas held their first talks in several months soon after the nuclear deal was reached, and discussed a number of issues including the resumption of reunions for families split since the division of the Korean peninsula.

But Seoul had linked the resumption of deliveries of rice and fertiliser to North Korean progress on dismantling its nuclear programme in accordance with the February deal.

South Korea’s Red Cross chief Han Wang-sang said the organisation would send its first shipment of 300,000 tonnes of fertiliser on 27 March.

“It will take about three months to complete the whole process, which will consist of about 50 separate shipments,” he said.

The fertiliser shipments will arrive in time for the impoverished North’s spring planting season.

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Cause of Barren Mountains: Imperialism-Natural Disaster-Officers

March 16th, 2007

Daily NK
Han Young Jin
3/16/2007

“I ordered trees to be planted. Why are the mountains bare!”

North Korean authorities released a publication on the 6th which summarized that, “We must work hard in forestry in order to make our country beautiful.” This order was made by Kim Jong Il on March 6th 2002 to authorities, the state, military and the elite. 5 years on, authorities now honor and remember the words spoken by the dear leader through a propagandist publication that is published whenever the state deems necessary. The content of this publication was also revealed on the official North Korean website “Uriminzokkiri (amongst our nation).”

The document usually contains the comprehensive ideologies and theories made by Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il that need to be passed on to the people.

Following are a few of the decrees found in the publications.

“The nation is experiencing economic difficulty due to coupling natural disasters and imperialists who are trying to isolate us. Trees are growing sporadically in the hills and mountain regions. The mountains are also becoming barren….”

“For the past few years, I have been telling you to work hard afforestation and have encouraged you at every opportunity.”

“However, an forestation has not met the criteria of authorities and is not going according to plan.”

Kim Jong Il’s Analysis

What Kim Jong Il is trying to say is that, “The reason afforestation is not working is because of the people’s reckless slash-and-burn cultivation, as well as the inefficiency of officers unable to block it.”

After the food crisis in ’95, people uprooted vines and trees to suffice their underfed diets, as well as cultivating illegal farms for food. Further, to save themselves from freezing to death, people used trees as firewood.

At the time, people were desolate, battling between life and death. If, however, these people were controlled and prohibited from such actions at the time, defectors say that many of those people would not be alive today.

The destruction of mountains Kim Jong Il argues resulted from cunning imperialists isolating North Korea and the severe natural disasters that continued to plague the country. Yet, there is no evidence to support this claim.

The international community did not enforce pressure to the extent that North Korea could not resolve its problem of firewood. Rather, after the 1994 Geneva Agreement, 50,000 tons of fuel was provided annually. Despite this, Kim Jong Il always redirects the responsibility of lack of energy on the international community and the failure of public welfare on the U.S.

Even evidence to support that natural disasters caused a downfall to the economy has become obscure. It is true that North Korea was hit with drought and flood during 1995~1997, however there has not been any major natural disasters since this time and in 2002 when these decrees were first made. Instead, North Korea should have re-planted much of the mountain trees, though reality is not the case. Rather, Kim Jong Il is blaming the failure of national construction and forestation on mother nature.

Without resolving the food crisis, the mountains will remain bare

Every year, for about a month during the spring (early March~April) and fall (early Nov~Dec) seasons, North Korea enters a time of national construction where the rivers and waterways are cleared and trees planted. This national construction first began in March 1996.

North Korea has aimed to plant a billion trees and has been planting this number of trees every year. Following 10 years of national construction, what is the current state of North Korea?

If national construction had worked as planned, North Korea’s mountains should be dense in trees. However, the cause of North Korea’s mountains being so bare is evidence that the food crisis has not yet been solved.

North Korean authorities ordered citizens that they had the right to eat the tree saplings and cereals as it had been cultivated on the mountains which were illegal grounds. On the other hand, the people are continuously angry as trees are overtaking the land in which their grains should be planted. As a result, whenever a tree has grown a certain height, people uproot the trees and plant a smaller sapling in its place. In the end, though the idea of planting trees has been fulfilled, the mountains are still barren.

Ultimately, it seems that North Korea’s empty mountains will continue until the food issue is resolved.

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An affiliate of 38 North