Shortwave radio broadcasting to North Korea is nothing new. The Voice of 
America has done it for decades, and many other organizations have sprouted up 
in recent years. The content is often a collaborative effort between South 
Koreans and North Korean escapees who have taken up residence in the South. But 
one broadcaster is giving North Korea residents an opportunity to hear from 
each other.

The broadcaster in Seoul, called Free North Korea Radio, is taking an 
innovative and risky step: it records the voices of people living in North 
Korea, then broadcasts those voices back into the North.

"We have at least one stringer, or reporter, in every North Korean province. We 
throw them issues to talk about, like 'currency reform', or 'market 
conditions.' They go out and do interviews, and put together a sort of news 
report," said Kim Seong Min, the broadcaster's director, who is himself a 
defector from North Korea.

The result is a program called "Voices of the People," an unfiltered sample of 
what some North Korean citizens have to say about their leadership.

"Kim Jong-il is such a hypocrite. He only cares about himself. He makes 
everyone obey him and praise him, as if that is such a good thing to do. 
Sometimes he hands out presents. But those presents all came from the sweat and 
blood of the people," said one person heard on the broadcast.

Such criticism of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il is a potentially capital 
offense.

Free North Korea Radio connects with North Korean citizens via mobile phones. 
But conversations have to be brief to avoid tracing.

Longer reports are recorded onto tiny digital devices similar to these. The 
devices are passed hand-to-hand in a chain that smuggles them across North 
Korea's border with China.

Director Kim says getting the sound to Seoul is accomplished in less than a 
month. There is risk, and stress, for everyone involved.

Voices are electronically distorted to protect identities. However, not all 
reporters are told their recordings will be broadcast back into North Korea. 
Kim downplays concerns about journalistic ethics. "We are doing this for the 
democratization of North Korea. Since what we are dealing with here is unlike 
any other ordinary state, and considering how much oppression the North Korean 
people are suffering from, we cannot condemn this as a violation of media 
ethics," he said.

Kim says all of the contributors to "Voices of the People" are individuals he 
and his team have known for at least five years. The recording devices, he 
says, are supplied by American and Japanese activists.(VOA News)


---[Start Commercial]---------------------

Order your WRTH 2009:
http://www.hard-core-dx.com/redirect2.php?id=wrth2009
---[End Commercial]-----------------------
________________________________________
Hard-Core-DX mailing list
Hard-Core-DX@hard-core-dx.com
http://montreal.kotalampi.com/mailman/listinfo/hard-core-dx
http://www.hard-core-dx.com/
_______________________________________________

THE INFORMATION IN THIS ARTICLE IS FREE. It may be copied, distributed
and/or modified under the conditions set down in the Design Science License
published by Michael Stutz at
http://www.gnu.org/licenses/dsl.html

Reply via email to