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China-Japan-Koreas
Disorder in the North Accelerates
2004-12-30
December 30, 2004: In North Korea, the government is trying to suppress growing enthusiasm for South Korean clothing, mannerisms and accents. Special police units are inspecting stores, especially the new free markets, for South Korean clothing (often second hand) brought over from China. VCR tapes and CDs of South Korean television shows and movies are already illegal, but the trade in them continues despite the risks. The South Korean influences began appearing ten years ago, and has reached far more of the population than the North Koreans ever thought possible. In 2004, some 1,900 North Koreans made it to South Korea. Many more (over ten times more) made it out of North Korea into China and Russia. One South Korean is known to have fled to North Korea.
Posted by:Steve

#2  The harder you try to suppress people and keep from them the things they want, the faster you find yourself cut out of the loop. Imagine what sort of bribe is necessary to get a NorK border guard to look the other way for some illicit goods. Almost nothing in real money...
Posted by: .com   2004-12-30 8:13:44 PM  

#1  mannerisms and accents

It's too late for the Norks, those are free.
Posted by: Shipman   2004-12-30 5:51:37 PM  

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