A view of downtown Pyongyang in early December, centered on the 150m high Juche Tower, built to commemorate North Korea’s principle philosophy of humanism and self-sufficiency developed by the nation’s late founder, Kim il Sung.
December 16, 2012 (Nile Bowie for RT) - Pyongyang's recent rocket launch has placed North Korea in the cross-hairs of the international community. The current standoff with the "Hermit Kingdom" threatens to stifle very real reforms already underway, as well as peace in the region.
The world’s attention has once again focused on North Korea following its controversial missile launch on December 12th, 2012 that successfully put a satellite into orbit to study crops and weather patterns. While Pyongyang maintains its right to develop a peaceful civilian space program, the launch has wrought condemnation from the international community and its biggest ally, China, for defying UN resolutions that ban it from operating ballistic missile technology. While the launch coincides with upcoming elections in both Japan and South Korea, it is domestically perceived as the centerpiece of the North’s efforts to commemorate the year 2012 as the one-hundredth- anniversary of Kim Il-sung’s birth, the deceased nation’s founder who holds the title of “Eternal President.”
Over the past year, North Korea’s third generation of leadership under the 29-year-old Kim Jong-un has focused on building “a thriving socialist nation” to coincide with the anniversary of his grandfather’s birth by issuing a series of incremental agricultural and economic reforms. The skyline of Pyongyang is slowly changing as renovated apartment complexes rise and Chinese-financed building projects become more prominent. Perhaps the most commendable accomplishment of Kim Jong-un is the construction of a new wing in Pyongyang’s maternity hospital, outfitted with modern medical equipment likely supplied by China. Agricultural reforms have allowed farmers to keep up to half their yields for private sale, mirroring the climate of China prior to its industrial reforms in the 1980s.
For people living north of the Korean demilitarized zone, especially those in cooperative farms and rural areas, winter is an arduous time. Most apartment complexes do not have modern heating systems and electricity shortages are a normal occurrence. In Pyongyang, the purchasing power of individual citizens has increased, with many brandishing mobile phones, Chinese-made digital cameras, and automobiles. Although the lives of North Koreans have noticeably improved since the late 1990s under the late Kim Jong-il when the country experienced natural disasters and famine, it is clear that more can be done. North Koreans are generally not permitted to travel abroad and make international phone calls; they have no access to the Internet and the state maintains a total monopoly on information and news broadcasted into the country.
While Western policy makers dismiss these minor reforms as insubstantial, there may still yet be hope that Kim Jong-un will indeed introduce more significant reforms down the line. Through his speeches and carefully constructed public image, the young Kim has won the hearts and minds of North Korea’s public by channeling the nostalgia surrounding his grandfather’s patriotism and grandeur. Needless to say, Kim Jong-un has a golden opportunity to deliver more substantial economic reforms by heeding the advice of Beijing and incrementally liberalizing North Korea’s economy while building up the nation’s weak industrial sector. The slow pace of reforms may likely be attributable to reactionary elements in the upper echelons of the Korean Workers Party and other conservative figures that surround the young leader.
The North Korean leadership maintains its total monopoly on information in fear of its citizens knowing too much about the wealthy South, and as unethical as this intelligence cordon seems, it may be temporarily necessary to preserve social stability if serious reforms are pursued in the future. If the Korean Workers Party is able to increase the nation’s standard of living and incrementally expand people’s civil liberties, propaganda would not be necessary for Kim Jong-un to be perceived as a revered figure. Economic reforms must be catered not only toward the citizens of Pyongyang, but the majority rural population. At present, Pyongyang acts in defiance of international law and UN resolutions in the hope that its behavior will trump policymakers in Washington, who appear to be incapable of securing any diplomatic accomplishments with North Korea. It is clear that a policy of economic engagement, not international pressure, is the only way to ensure peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula.
If North Korea’s recently launched satellite is truly for peaceful purposes, the regime must be more transparent about the exact nature of the device. As the international community demands that the North behave more responsibly, the same must be required of the South. During the five-year tenure of South Korean President Lee Myung Bak, the nation has repeatedly staged military drills and has provocatively fired live rounds into North Korean territorial waters, conduct that is also against international law. As South Koreans head to the polls, it is clear that the nation needs a leader who will abandon hardline policies and work to emulate the South’s Sunshine Policy spearheaded by the late Kim Dae Jung. Military conflict in prosperous North East Asia would hold unacceptable consequences for the global economy, and more importantly, the people of the region. All parties who have a stake in the Korean conflict must keep a level head and abandon the kind of policies that will only drive the North deeper into isolation and unpredictability.
Nile Bowie for RT
Heavy snowfall blankets the Pyongyang Opera House prior to citizens communally taking to the streets with shovels.
Pyongyangers battle the harsh winter elements during their morning commute.
Residents of North Korea’s capital descend into an underground walkway to avoid icy conditions on the surface.
A traffic enforcement officer at work in treacherous conditions; automobile traffic has steadily increased in Pyongyang in recent months.
Soldiers shovel the Mansudae Grand Monument before two 20m high statues of President Kim il Sung who passed in 1994 and the late General Kim Jong il who died on December 17th, 2011.
.The monument to the founding of the Korean Workers Party, featuring the hammer, sickle and brush, symbolizing the worker, farmer and intellectual.
German-manufactured MIR equipment has recently been installed in a new wing of Pyongyang’s maternity hospital.
New medical technology to conduct CAT scans has been installed, in addition to equipment designated for research into cardiology and mammography (not pictured).
Nurses look after newborn babies in a Pyongyang’s maternity hospital.
A moment of rare and haunting intimacy as a child opens its eyes for the first time.
A North Korean solider at the demilitarized zone (DMZ) explains how the two Korean states were separated along the 38th parallel.
A solider stands just inches from the demarcation line separating North and South Korea.
An ominous street sign pointing toward the South Korean capital, Seoul, just before the last military checkpoint in North Korea.
Commuters return home from their daily activities in Kaesong, once a major flashpoint during the Korean War, one of North Korea’s largest cities located just minutes from the DMZ.
Party propaganda praising Kim Jong Un in the stairwell of an elementary school in Pyongyang.
Shivering elementary school students perform revolutionary songs as a blizzard rages outdoors.
Men relax in a Korean-style sauna at a newly constructed health complex.
Pyongyang residents pass the time at the Golden Lanes bowling alley.
Residents read books at the Grand People’s Study House, a free public University building which boasts over 30 million titles, making it one of the largest libraries in the world.
An artist at the Mansudae Art Studio paints the Monument to the Party Foundation; the center cultivates local artistic talent by providing free studio space and a free day care center for the artist’s children.
Commuters return from work in the evening on the Pyongyang Metro, the deepest subway train system in the world.
North Korea’s Arch of Triumph stands 60m high, 11m higher than the Arch in Paris, and was erected in 1982 to commemorate the 70th birthday of late President Kim il Sung.
Pyongyangers fill the auditorium at the local circus, where acrobats perform impressive stunts.
Farmers lay plastic sheets over spinach crops for insulation at one of several thousand cooperative farms located throughout North Korea.
Renovated flats in Pyongyang built to commemorate the 100th anniversary of President Kim il Sung’s birth; designated for doctors, teachers, and individuals proficient in revolutionary studies.
The sun sets over Kaesong’s Schoolchildren’s Palace, where the talents of the brightest students are cultivated for performance and other activities.