It’s not just Dennis Rodman. North Korea has
supporters across the world
Former NBA star Dennis Rodman may be portrayed as an oddball
for his unexpected friendship with North Korea’s dictator Kim Jong-Un. But he
is far from the only Westerner with affection for the isolated Communist
country and its political system.
All across the world, friendship associations and political
lobby groups stand up for the Kim regime and its domestic and international
actions. Despite being branded “naive” and “untrustworthy” by academics, the
pro-North Korea groups are said to attract new members every day.
The Stockholm-based Swedish-Korean Friendship Association, a
300-strong organization founded in 1969, states that it “denounce[s] US imperialism and
wholeheartedly support the Korean people’s struggle for independence and
national reunification.”
Chairman Christer Lundgren joined the organization in 1975
as a reaction to reports of war crimes committed by U.S. armed forces in Korea
and Vietnam. He argues that the Americans are to blame for the current turmoil
in the region.
“The basics of the conflict is that the Americans are
running the politics in South Korea with the aim to take military and political
control of the entire Korean peninsula,” he tells The Diplomat in an
interview. “The North, on the other side, has managed to maintain its
independence. Our ambition is to support the North’s struggle for national
freedom and peaceful reunification.”
The politically independent association regularly gathers
for study meetings, conferences, rallies and exhibitions. It organizes
workshops and trips to North Korea. A magazine has been published every quarter
for 39 years running.
In 1983, Lundgren visited the Democratic People’s Republic
of Korea – North Korea – for the first time as a journalist, meeting in
Pyongyang with Kim Il-Sung. Since then, he has been to the country five times,
and has taken part in mass meetings with both Kim Jong-Il and Kim Jong-Un.
“Over the years I’ve been visiting the DPRK, there has been
a tremendous progress in standard of living,” he says. “You clearly see a rapid
development with residential buildings, mobile phones, etc. Food security is
much better and industry is on the rise. It’s very encouraging.”
Also, the high profile visits by Google’s Executive Chairman
Eric Schmidt and Denis Rodman are a positive sign that the Kim regime is
reaching out to the world, he says. The fact that U.S. news agency the
Associated Press opened a bureau in Pyongyang and tourists and businessmen are
flowing into the country are indications of the country’s development, he
explains.
The negative image of North Korea portrayed in Western
media, especially American and South Korean, is for the most part based on
lies, exaggerations and misunderstandings, Lundgren argues.
“What you read in Western media is American war propaganda,”
he says. “They try to ridicule the Korean society and undermine all
possibilities of the DPRK to normalize the situation. The image is
characterized by a colonial thinking, and hidden political motives.”
The Swedish group is just one of several associations across
the world supporting North Korea.
The biggest group is the Korean Friendship Association, KFA, with some
15,000 members worldwide and official delegates in 38 countries, according to
its website. Compared to other friendship-groups, the KFA is more radical.
Italy’s representative, Cristian Pivetta, calls Western
media “scum” that are spreading lies about North Korea. “American and European
press is rubbish, enslaved and financed by big business,” he says.
Mikel Vivanko, head of the Spanish group, says North Korea’s
socialistic model is “working very well” and claims that the country’s gross
domestic product is enjoying a staggering growth rate of 15 percent, something
he says can be seen in the people’s improved daily life.
The U.K.’s representative, Dermot Hudson, who’s been to
North Korea nine times since 1992, tells The Diplomat that the Western
media’s reporting on North Korea is “completely surreal” and only focuses on
negative news.
He recalls an event in April 2002, walking along a street in
North Korea with his guide. “There were children eating ice creams and people
doing karaoke on street corners. Then I remembered reading in British
newspapers and the Internet that everyone in the DPRK was meant to be starving!
What a lie. I told my guide and she tutted, ‘Ah, the problem of the Westerners’.”
He says that new members join the friendship association
every day.
Study groups dedicated to Juche ideas – a form of political
religion based on Kim Il-Sung’s ideologies – are also attracting followers internationally,
especially in the developing world.
Most people, however, are somewhat less supportive of the
North Korean regime. In a report released this month, the United Nations said
North Korea had committed wide-ranging crimes against humanity to
sustain its political system.
Crimes included “extermination, murder, enslavement,
torture, imprisonment, rape, forced abortions and other sexual violence,
persecution on political, religious, racial and gender grounds, forcible
transfer of persons, enforced disappearance of persons and the inhumane act of
knowingly causing prolonged starvation.” The report also noted “a systematic
and widespread attack against all populations that are considered to pose a
threat to the political system and leadership.”
According to Hudson, the report is untrustworthy and biased
with the aim to “slander and defame the socialist system of the DPRK.” He also
accuses the North Korean defectors interviewed in the report, who are giving
testimony about hellish conditions in labor camps, of being South Korean fakes.
“At the end of the day the UN is a marionette, a plaything
of the U.S. imperialists,” Hudson says. “I think that to some extent it is true
to say that the UN represents the 1 percent not the 99 percent.”
South Korea is also violating human rights, Lundgren points
out, referring to the country’s much criticized 1948 National Security Law.
Last year, UN special rapporteur on human rights Margaret
Sekaggya slammed the security act as a “seriously problematic” challenge to
freedom of expression. Amnesty International has also accused South Korea of
systematically abusing the security act in order to silence political
opposition.
On February 17, leftwing lawmaker Lee Seok-ki was sentenced to 12 years in prison by a South Korean
court for plotting an armed rebellion in support of North Korea. Lee called the
trial a “witch hunt.”
Lundgren says both the North and South would be better off
if the U.S. stopped its military threats and attempts to dominate the Korean
peninsula.
Dr. Brian Bridges, a Hong Kong-based North Korea expert who
has been researching the Korean issue for more than two decades, agrees that
the U.S. is to blame. But so are the Russians, he adds. In the aftermath of World
War II and Japan’s surrender, Korea was partitioned along the 38th parallel,
with the north under Soviet occupation and the south under U.S. occupation.
Still today, the two Koreas are technically in a state of war, even if a truce
ended their 1950-53 conflict.
However, the North Korean friendship associations and
political support groups aren’t really trusted and their members are “naively
believing the propaganda from North Korea,” Bridges says.
“These groups have no credibility among Korea watchers or
academics,” he says. “We don’t take them seriously. They have no leverage.”
Energy supply is still a big problem, especially in the
countryside, he says. And although the situation has improved somewhat in
Pyongyang he “just can’t believe” the overall food situation to be as rosy as
the friendship associations claim. (UN’s World Food Program noted in a November
report that child malnutrition has steadily declined over the past 10 years,
but that 84 percent of households were having borderline or poor food
consumption.)
Many of the people attracted to these groups, Bridges
speculates, don’t necessarily fully agree with North Korean ideals and actions.
Rather, it could be seen as a statement against capitalism and U.S. foreign
policies. “They join their enemy’s enemy,” he says.
Johan Nylander is a Hong Kong based China and Asian
correspondent.
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