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Koryo Quarterly – August
2008
Dear All,
Welcome to the
latest edition of our newsletter. Peak season for DPRK
tours is right upon us now and Mass Games begins on August
4th, running until September 30th (with a possible extension
not yet confirmed). This season looks set to be a big one
despite the Olympic madness in Beijing causing hotel prices
here to be hugely inflated - (this greediness has caused
many to remain empty), the difficulties in obtaining the
necessary Chinese visas and of course the pollution (see
pic!) which is still here (and the Olympic slogan of course
remains; ‘Beijing
Welcomes You’).
A succession of national holidays in Korea
are approaching. First we have Victory Day on
July 27th, the anniversary of the Armistice
which bought Korean War hostilities to an end (still
waiting for that peace agreement though, a mere 55 years
later!), then Liberation Day on August 15th,
the only holiday observed North and South of the DMZ
marking the surrender of the Japanese (AKA: VE day),
and finally the biggest day of this year; September
9th – National Day, an explanation of
which lies below, read on if you want to learn more!
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Once again DPRK has managed
to make headlines for good and bad reasons on recent weeks; construction,
demolition, shootings, etc
all of which are expanded upon below in our DPRK news section.
Koryo Tours also managed to wangle a mass media presence with an
extensive mention on BBC Radio 4’s Excess Baggage travel
program (in which we were described as pioneers!) a link to that
program can be found in the Koryo Tours news section also below.
A cornucopia of DPRK news awaits those brave enough to read on!
As before the big news though in terms of tourism in DPRK is the
Mass Games event – this year for the first
time two different performances have been arranged with the classic Arirang show
being performed on Mon, Wed, Fri and Sat, and the brand new, not-yet-seen
(even by the critics!) Prosper the Motherland! taking
place on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Both of these shows feature the
full complement
of 100,000 performers in the May Day Stadium and both will run
to approx 90 minutes offering anyone who s there the chance to
witness what is simply the greatest show on Earth, some information
on the events can be found here.
The Olympics will pale in comparison… a double dose of Mass
Games will undoubtedly be vastly superior to the sight of amateur
athletes running around in circles and throwing things!
Anyway before we plunge into the news items please do consider
coming on tour with us, more info can be found at our website and
below and the links to the tours pages as ever are here:
US CITIZENS and NON-US CITIZENS
OVERVIEW
Tours
update
- shameless plug for our product
- Pyongyang Film Festival
DPRK
news
- Construction of Ryugyong Hotel Resumed
- Korea vs. Korea World Cup football…again!
- Nuclear cooling tower demolished
- South Korean tourist shot
- Relief work continues
National Day
- What is it?
- What goes on?
Koryo Tours news
- Koryo Tours on BBC Radio
- Cricket comes to DPRK!
- Pyongyang Pub Quiz
- Crossing the Line available in Beijing
- Shameless appeal for help
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FULL TEXT BELOW
Tours update
- Usual Shameless Plug - Application for all
tours taking place during the Mass Games season is now underway
and some tours
are very popular and filling up fast while others still have
plenty of space on them. If you are American and would like to
travel with a smaller group then we can suggest US Tour
5 as
the tour most likely to have the least people on it. We do also
offer lower-priced tours for second timers focusing
on visiting the classic sites and the lesser visited spots, these
tours also
will have
very small groups so sign on up without further ado if this is
what you are looking for.
- Two Thumbs Up! - The Biannual Pyongyang
film festival takes place this year in September and features
a good range
of films from
a great variety of countries including France, UK, Iran, Russia,
China, and many more. Koryo Tours once again have been deeply
involved in the organisation of the festival and assisted many
filmmakers in entering their movies into the competition as well
as securing guests for the event. A mooted visit by Oscar Winning
Director Kevin
MacDonald is on the cards and those who take
part in our Pyongyang film festival tour in September will not
only see the Mass Games and
the best of the DPRK but also be able to attend the festival
itself and schmooze with the great and good of the DPRK film
industry. Nick Bonner has been to Sundance, Tribeca and more
but nothing compares to the Pyongyang silver screen. If you’re
a movie lover you can fly to Cannes anytime; try something different!
- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GwKWttrEaSM has a clip of the Mass Games, of course this doesn’t come
close to being comparable with actually seeing the event live
and in full effect;
watch to whet the appetite!
DPRK news
- Construction Time Again – Despite
standing derelict since 1992 (work began in 1988) Pyongyang’s
giant Ryugyong
Hotel which was once memorably (and inaccurately) described
as “the world’s worst building” has seen
work recommence on its upper stories. Although details are
sketchy it is known that a subsidiary of the Egyptian telecoms
giant Orascom (who recently signed a deal to run the proposed
DPRK mobile phone network) has taken control of completion
of the building, a 105-story pyramid that dominates the Pyongyang
skyline. The timescale for completion is unclear, but work
is definitely taking place there, during a visit in May Koryo
Tours staff and tourists saw a red flag flying from the crane
perched at the top of the building, this denotes the presence
of a work unit at the site, and recently the top few floors
(designed to be a series of revolving restaurants) have been
covered in construction tarpaulins. Watch this space for updates
and as soon as the hotel is up and running we’ll be offering
you the chance to stay there, see you in the bar on the 105th
floor!
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- A Game (and country) of Two Halves – As
you may be aware recently North and South Korea faced each
other in home and away matches (although the North’s ‘home’ game
was played in Shanghai in front of a crowd of mainly South
Koreans) in qualifying matches for the 2010 football world
cup, both matches ended in 0-0 draws and both teams managed
to get through to the next stage of qualification where they
were lucky (!) enough to be drawn together once more. The
group can be seen on FIFA’s
website the top two teams from each group go through
to the World Cup in South Africa, the third place teams play
off for a chance to compete. The first Korean derby match
is due to be played in Pyongyang on September 10th and if
this does indeed go ahead (the match will definitely be played
but it may be moved to China as was the last one, although
since then South Korea has hosted the North without incident
to the favour may be returned) then we will be offering the
chance to attend to all our tourists who are there at the
time, get your DPRK scarves now (available at Koryo Tours’ office
only!) , Underdogs vs. Running dogs part 2!
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- No More Nukes – In late June the DPRK
publicly demolished the cooling tower at their Yongbyon Nuclear
power plant, foreign
reporters were invited to view the event which, due to the redundant
nature of the tower anyway, was little more than a gesture but
has had the desired effect of opening up channels for DPRK to
be more widely accepted into the international community. US
response was guardedly welcoming of the move and the wait for
a timetable for the proposed steps forward along the road to
international recognition and a scaling back of the sanctions
regime against DPRK (Conditions of the demolition) now begins.
A report can be read here and
a video of the actual demolition itself can be seen here
- Bad
News - On a more tragic note a South Korean tourist
at the Hyundai Asan-run Kumgangsan (Geumgangsan
in South Korean transliteration) resort was shot dead
by a Korean People’s Army sentry after somehow trespassing
into a secure military area on July 11th. Exact details of the
story are still slowly emerging and at this time it is still
unclear exactly what happened other than that a woman was fatally
shot, the Kumgang resort has been closed down for the time being.
A frequently updated report can be found here.
This tragedy has not affected tours to DPRK-proper (ie: anywhere
other than the Kumgangsan resort)
- Relief work for areas damaged
by last year’s catastrophic
flooding is ongoing in DPRK, as before we would ask anyone interested
in donating towards assistance projects to contact the Rotaract
Club who continue their vital work in Korea. Best is to contact
Randal Eastman on dprk.projects@mac.com The
Rotaract Club are collecting funds for medical aid as well as
several other long-running
projects in the DPRK, please give generously if you can.
- also
at http://www.nkeconwatch.com run by our good friend Curtis you
can get hold of a recently updated patch for Google Earth which
labels pretty much everything there is to label in North Korea,
very useful for those going on a tour, very interesting for just
about anybody, load it up and enjoy the view, for the ground
level version you’ll have to join a tour though! http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded.php?Cat=&Number=861907&page=&vc=1&PHPSESSID=#Post8619077
National Day
- What is it? - September 9th 1948 is the date
of the foundation of the DPRK; the Democratic People’s
Republic of Korea. Although Japanese rule of the Korean peninsular
ended
in 1945 the country was divided along the 38th parallel by the
occupying armies of the United States (in South Korea), and the
Soviet Union (in the North). The Korean Workers’ Party
had been established in 1945 with Kim Il Sung as party leader
and it was under this Party that the Republic began life less
than 3 years later (the Workers’ Party to this day rules
the DPRK) just before the withdrawal of the US army (who would
return soon thereafter though for the Korean war, and have not
yet fully left since) and the establishment of the Republic of
Korea in the Southern part of the country (seen as a puppet state
by the DPRK)
- What goes on? - Every September 9th is a big occasion
marked by a national holiday but this year is a particularly
big event
as it is the 60th anniversary with 60 being an auspicious number
in Korea. So big celebrations are expected; the new Mass Games
performance Prosper the Motherland! has been created (first new
Mass Games since 2002) to mark the occasion and there is even
a chance that DPRK Leader Kim Jong Il will attend the shows on
the day itself. A Military Parade is also a possibility although
tourists are not permitted to attend these (they are very infrequently
held in fact despite being featured on every news report on DPRK
ever shown on BBC or CNN!) and all will combine to create an
electric atmosphere in the usually quiet and restrained Pyongyang.
There won’t be another date as big as this until August
15th 2010, the 65th anniversary of Liberation from Japan.
Cricket coaching from the experts
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Pyongyang's First ever Pub Quiz
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DPRK's 1st batsman |
Koryo Tours News
- Koryo Tours features in BBC’s Excess
Baggage: - a discussion on tourism to DPRK who goes
and why!
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/excessbaggage/
- Hannah's
Cricket Tour report - May Day Holiday was a week of
several ‘firsts’ in
Pyongyang – the first ever cricket match and the first
ever pub quiz (see below)! The cricket match was held in Taesongsan
Park and comprised of the Juche Team & Reunification team
(both made up of members from Shanghai cricket club) and the
Pyongyang Cricket Club – newly formed for the event. The
latter was made up of 4 Koreans who had never played or seen
cricket before, the Koryo Tours staff, a few tourists and a delegate
from the British Embassy in Pyongyang. The event was sponsored
by DHL who paid for the shipment of a roll of coconut matting
from the UK to Pyongyang and had support from the DPRK Ministry
of Sport. The match went superbly. The opening batsmen were 2
Koreans who played incredibly well especially considering they
had only picked up a cricket bat once before at a practise in
Moranbong park a few days earlier. Picnic lunch was provided
by accordian-playing waitresses and after the 2nd match we had
a traditional cucumber tea. Despite not getting the highest scores,
the PCC were the clear winners that day (trophy in the Koryo
Tours office!). The day rounded off with a sunset boat trip along
the Taedonggang followed by a black-tie dinner in the Yanggakdo
Revolving Restaurant.
- Simon’s pub quiz report - On May 1st
this year I organised the first ever pub quiz in Pyongyang, 12
teams competed for the
coveted title of quiz masters of the DPRK in the Yanggakdo Golf
course bar, over a couple of hours the brave contestants wrestled
with questions on diverse topics including a current events (a
particularly hard round in a place without internet access).
it was a hard and fairly-fought quiz and the winning team was
presented with a bottle of Pyongyang’s famous Adder Liquor
- Our latest film Crossing the Line is now available
for purchase the film presents the previously untold story of
James Dresnok – the
last living American defector still living in DPRK – the
film’s website is http://www.comradejoe.com Hope
you have had a chance to see the film, let us know what you think!
The
film is also available on DVD in Koryo Tours’ office in
Beijing or www.verymuchso.co.uk We also have all 3 films in a
gift box for that ideal Christmas present for those fascinated
with all things Korean!
- Comrade Kim goes Flying - we are in development
with our new romantic comedy feature film…to be filmed
in Pyongyang with Korean cast and crew….more about this
later – but a coal
miner dreams of flying on the trapeze until she is thwarted by
the strong man….
- HELP!!! - We have been asked by our partners
in Pyongyang to help find travel agencies in France and Canada
who would be interested
in starting up tours to the DPRK. If you know of any who you
think would be potential candidates we’d be really grateful
of any suggestions. Also, we are always looking for new channels
of promotion and one good way is to get our name in travel magazines
or expat magazines. If you are an avid reader of a particular
travel magazine/expat magazine that you think would be interested
in hearing from us then do let us know.
THANK YOU FOR READING THIS NEWSLETTER – PLEASE
PASS ON THE LINK TO ANYONE WHO MAY BE INTERESTED AND OF COURSE
WE
WELCOME YOUR
COMMENTS!
Nick, Hannah, Simon and Emily at Koryo Tours.
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