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China-Japan-Koreas
N Korea wants imaginary wall pulled down
2007-12-31
And a Happy New Year to all of you
SCOTLAND has the Loch Ness Monster, the Himalayas has the Abominable Snowman and Pyongyang's propaganda machine has the Korean Wall, a bogus barrier that has been a mainstay of North Korea's media for nearly 20 years.

At the weekend, the North's official media called on the South to tear down a concrete wall on the border it says stretches across the peninsula, calling it a "national disgrace". "The existence of this wall is hindering the inter-Korean reconciliation, co-operation and independent reunification," the Korean Central News Agency quoted a communist party newspaper report as saying.

For a wall that is not there, North Korean propaganda has painted a vivid picture of it. It says the border wall stands 5m-8m high, ...
... that is, 3.8 to 6.8 meters taller than Kim ...
... is as thick as 19m and was built in the 1970s by a "South Korean military fascist clique".

One of the greatest hindrances to tearing down the wall is that it doesn't exist but another problem is that North Korea does not allow its citizens to freely leave the country.
Totalitarian dictatorships are like that. They lie and they shoot the people who try to leave. Go figure.
There is little to mark the actual border within the demilitarised zone (DMZ), a heavily mined no-mans-land guarded by more than a million troops. The South has put up scattered concrete, anti-tank barriers near the DMZ but not a coast-to-coast concrete wall on the border, as the North has long claimed.

A few weeks after the Berlin Wall started coming down in 1989, North Korean leader Kim Il-sung said Seoul had built a huge concrete wall to divide the two states, which are technically still at war. Analysts said Kim made the claim to rally support for his state as its communist allies faded with the end of the Cold War. At the time Seoul was working to set up formal ties with the Soviet Union, then the North's biggest benefactor.

On New Year's Day 1990 Kim, founder of one of the world's most isolated and repressive states, called it "a barrier of national division" preventing free travel between the two countries. The North's official media have never corrected Kim, who is revered at home as a god and posthumously declred the country's eternal president.
Uh-huh, you try correcting the little man.
Some international news reports accepted Kim's pronouncement as fact, prompting Seoul to invite journalists and observers a few weeks later to look into the DMZ to see for themselves that the wall did not exist.
Doesn't matter, of course, the journalists already had decided the 'narrative' to the story.
Posted by:tipper

#10  NORK is nutritionally challenged, folks. Let's not be condescending......
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2007-12-31 21:48  

#9  It's called 'over-nutrition' now...
Posted by: Pappy   2007-12-31 15:24  

#8  And overpopulation.
Posted by: gorb   2007-12-31 15:20  

#7  ...and combatting the worldwide obesity epidemic.
Posted by: tu3031   2007-12-31 14:15  

#6  Hey, lighten up on NK - at least they're doing their part to reduce greenhouse gases...
Posted by: Raj   2007-12-31 12:59  

#5  Done!
Posted by: Roh Moo-hyun   2007-12-31 12:56  

#4  And I suppose the single light in NK is Kimmie's palace.
Posted by: KBK   2007-12-31 11:45  

#3  The lights offshore are the Japanese and Korean fishing fleets

Posted by: john frum   2007-12-31 10:10  

#2  It appears there IS an invisible barrier between North and South Korea.

Posted by: doc   2007-12-31 09:18  

#1  calling it a "national disgrace"

Wouldn't this imply Kimmie thinks Korea is his?

It would take a year or two for such a wall to disappear without a trace, giving Kimmie a huge propaganda victory (if he were willing to show it to the citizens living in his workers' paradise). Suppose something is scheduled to happen in about that timeframe?
Posted by: gorb   2007-12-31 06:33  

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