North Korea Threatens Senders of Leaflet Balloons as Messages “Gain Trust” of North Koreans

leaflet-balloon.jpg

Balloon-carried leaflets sent by South Korean civic groups to North Korea are unnerving the North Korean authorities as the anti-Pyongyang messages are gaining trust among North Korean citizens, a local daily said on Saturday.

In the past, when the anti-North Korean leaflets were spread in Pyongyang, North Korean residents didn’t believe their contents. However, the situation is different now. According to the Chosun Ilbo, civic groups’ leaflets these days are much more effective than in the past as they are now written by North Korean defectors who write contents that ring a bell among northerners. The leaflets also contain the private life of its leader Kim Jong-il of whom North Koreans are very curious, it said.

When leaflets fell down on the streets of Pyongyang last summer, carried by dozens of balloons, revealing the corrupt life of Kim Jong-il and criticizing the North’s repressive regime, the local security apparatus went into a state of alarm. They ordered citizens to stay in their houses. Only after all the leaflets were collected, they allowed people to come out from their residences. [Korea Times]

That would be highly significant, if true. One of the most important benefits of leafleting North Korea is the strain it puts on regime security forces, forcing them to eat up fuel, spare parts, equipment, and unit morale by redeploying those forces to pick up what would be considered harmless litter anywhere else on earth.

North Korean authorities are responding angrily. In recent days, they repeatedly told the South Korean authorities to ban the sending of anti-North Korean leaflets by the civic groups in South Korea, including the specific names and organizations involved. They threatened that if situation is not taken care of by the South authorities, the North “will take the matter on its own hands,” according to the report.

Park Sang-hak, a representative of the Coalition for Free North Korea Movement in Seoul, is undaunted. “Sending leaflets to North Korea is the least we can do for North Koreans to help them to know what is true. I will not yield to the threats.”

President Bush removed North Korea from the list of state sponsors of terrorism on October 11, 2008. Discuss among yourselves.

If you want to contribute to the South Korean-based groups that are launching these balloons, you can so do though the North Korean Freedom Coalition.

5 Responses

  1. I hope they don’t stop. Strange – why wouldn’t have defectors have written the leaflets all along, not only because they’d know details about life in the North, but because the defectors could have arguably used vocabulary (and even spelling) peculiar to the Korean spoken in the DPRK?

  2. Who would have thought that a poor shepherd boy could throw a stone and knock over the Goliath?

    If the people of NK grow to trust what they hear, and if it is true that dissension is spreading, then the collapse is very soon. The more these people are pushed to do what they don’t want to do, the more likely they will spread their distrust or even begin to rebel.

    If it is already as pervasive as it sounds, when Kim Jong Il is dead, that may be the ideal time to invade. Without a clear leader, and with troops in disarray, there is no hope they could mount an effective defense. We’d be in Pyongyang before his body is even cold.