Open Radio Comes Into Its Own

Open Radio for North Korea is getting plenty of publicity recently, and it’s also cranking out plenty of interesting reporting about (and often from) North Korea. First, I’ll link to a CNN interview with Open Radio’s founder, Young Howard, a/k/a Ha Tae-Keung a story on Open Radio at the L.A. Times.

By far the most popular program for Howard’s station is “Unsent Letters,” which broadcasts messages from outsiders seeking to get word to friends and family in North Korea.

It’s an electronic bulletin board of sorts. Often the missives are sentimental reminiscences, bits and pieces of memory, raw emotion.

One recent installment told of two South Korean fishermen who family members say were kidnapped by the North Koreans in the 1970s, never to be heard from again. The announcer asked for details of the men, then played a popular song called “Memory of a Drink” in remembrance.

Another message came from a woman looking for word of her father, who she says was kidnapped 37 years ago. She says she grew up thinking he died in a shipping accident. But in 2005 she got word that he was alive in North Korea.

She says she hopes to meet him one day.

“If it is true that he is alive, he would be in old age,” she says. “Poor Daddy! Seventy-two years old!” [L.A. Times]

Open Radio also e-mailed several interesting dispatches:

* This one talks about Kim Jong Il succession rumors in the North Korean military.

* A report on North Korea’s exploding meth problem, how the underground drug market works, and the proliferation of home meth labs in North Korea.

* A report on the rumored restoration of long-distance phone service in North Korea, but with improved surveillance capabilities.

1 Response

  1. I’m glad they’re getting more attention, I usually find their stories more compelling and eclectic than most media outlets’.