At least the News of the World didn’t publish doctored North Korean photographs
It’s hard to take at face value the public ostracizing of Rupert Murdoch as a cancer within journalism even as the world’s two foremost wire services have just associated themselves with the world’s most fraudulent news organization. I refer to the AP’s announcement late last month that it had made a deal with Kim Jong Il’s own Korea Central News Agency (KCNA) to open a bureau in Pyongyang, and the more recent announcement by Reuters that it had “expanded” its “relationship” with KCNA to deliver official North Korean content to readers everywhere.
Great — that’s just what we all needed. As to why the AP and Reuters think this arrangement should not harm their journalistic reputations, I can only guess that KCNA’s official status gives it some sort of credibility, however perverse. Meanwhile, Murdoch is under attack for the closeness of his association with the British government, and vice versa. You don’t have to be a fan of Murdoch or some (any?) of his publications to see a double standard at work here.
The reflexive reaction of some observers to any North Korean arrangement with any non-North Korean entity is to portray it as a sign that North Korea is opening itself to the outside world. The problem with this view is that it’s mostly wishful thinking. The story never quite ends as those observers want it to. North Korea allows plenty of foreigners into Pyongyang. They’re easy to keep an eye on there. These foreign visitors then write overly dramatized news stories, blog posts, and “zines” about their “adventures,” as if they’re Edward R. Murrow reporting from the Blitz. In fact, the only thing stopping most foreigners from visiting Pyongyang is having a better place to go. It’s hardly an adventure, and given the degree of stage-management all around them, a visit to Pyongyang probably isn’t even very enlightening about North Korea.
I didn’t have much of a reaction to these initial announcements. I figured I’d wait a few months and see how many stories the AP was allowed to file from bylines other than Pyongyang, or without the intervention of minders before reacting to this “news.” On reflection, it was hasty of me to keep an open mind. It didn’t even take the AP a month to swallow a spoon-fed fraud:
North Korea’s KCNA news agency stands accused of digitally altering a photo distributed last Saturday to exaggerate flood damage in the Stalinist country following record summer rains. “The content of this image has been digitally altered and does not accurately reflect the scene,” the Associated Press said in a correction distancing itself from the picture.
Under a memorandum of understanding of June 29, AP will become the first western news agency to open a bureau in Pyongyang.
The photo in question was allegedly taken by KCNA last Friday and supplied to AP the following day. It shows seven people apparently wading along a flooded road near the Taedong River. [Chosun Ilbo]
You can see the actual photograph at that last link, or at this Joongang Ilbo story, which helpfully circles the suspicious regions.
Look, ma! Dry pants!
Meanwhile, the AP’s web site has plenty of Murdoch coverage, but nothing about whether the KCNA photograph it published was in fact doctored. However, the AP did quietly send this “Photo Kill” message out to editors and subscribers, acknowledging that it was taken in by KCNA’s hoax.
A photo that shows Pyongyang residents suffering from heavy rain has been digitally altered, the Associated Press said in a letter to editors and other subscribers. The news agency asked them to immediately eliminate the photo from their system and archives. “The content of this image has been digitally altered and does not accurately reflect the scene,” the news agency said in a statement titled “Photo Kill”.
The fact that North Korea would alter at least one image in this way is telling about its motives and modus operandi. Clearly, its motive was to give foreign readers a false and exaggerated view of the extent of damage caused by recent floods, and it had no compunction about using the foreign press as an instrument for its apparent deception. North Korea seems to be setting up a case to defraud foreign taxpayers, exploiting their sympathy to get aid, even as it’s reported to have squandered its resources on a “shopping spree for Armani, Gucci and other luxury goods for its ruling elites,” “Rolex and Omega watches,” and Hennessy Cognac.
Earlier reports about typhoon Meari, which hit North Korea on June 25-27, still reflected the traditional style. The Choson Sinbo, a pro-Pyongyang newspaper in Japan, on July 4 claimed the typhoon “died down” without affecting the North seriously, and damage was “not as severe as expected.”
The U-turn came on July 12, in a report about typhoon damage by the state-run KCNA news agency. “Casualties occurred in various regions. Some 160 homes were destroyed and about 21,000 farms were inundated, washed away, or buried in mudslides,” it claimed. [Chosun Ilbo]
This should serve as more warning to potential foreign donors to be suspicious of North Korean appeals for aid, and to insist on strict monitoring when we do decide to give any. Should, but won’t.
I can’t resist closing with a few words about the lovely Mrs. Murdoch, who can smack a hippie as skillfully as any of Richard J. Daley’s finest. Just watch it. BAM!
I sure am glad I’m not Johnny Marbles today. He has to live with the ineradicable stigma of attacking an 80 year-old man, and then losing the fight to a little Chinese lady in a pink jacket. It’s bad enough that he’ll have to explain that to his friends. He’ll also need years of therapy to sort out his strange-yet-haunting feelings of arousal. So have we all learned our lesson about stereotypes today?
Speaking of stereotypes, Wendy Deng is 6’0″ tall and a former amateur volleyball player. The following I disclaim any credit for thinking up, just comments heard from a couple of broadcasts.
“You’ve heard of the Tiger Mom, now we have the Tiger Wife.” Jimmy Kimmel did say that the bobby running over to help reminded him of a Benny Hill skit.
Six feet? Well, you have a point, sir.
Too bad. It makes the story slightly less funny.
I think rather the British government is under attack for their involvement with Murdoch, not the other way around, diminishing the suggestion that AP and Reuters execs should be in the ‘hot seat’ for their relations with North Korea. I also don’t think anyone really is applauding these new relationships they’ve formed as great steps forward for the news companies, nor does anyone important or intelligent see it as North Korea opening up. The photoshop gaffe seems fairly unimportant compared to the hacking schemes of News of the World and other News Corp involvement in hacking, so why the great grabbing of straws towards a comparison with North Korea? I just don’t see it. And the least of the news would definitely be the so-called attack on Murdoch, unless it’s about Scotland Yard’s [willful] incompetence, which has been well established through their actions regarding their investigations of News of the World and other current related matters. I don’t know how to read into this post, but I won’t try too hard. Just seems like you have something against the coverage of the Murdoch story or maybe against the negligence of coverage towards the continuing mind-numbingness of different organizations’ actions and cooperation with the Kim regime, but that’s a given.
You vile, vile man. Either you have not been following the British news, or your extreme bias for hating on everything North Korea related supersedes any sympathy for the many victims of NOTW’s absurd “journalism”.
Don’t forget Murdoch’s papers had the tenacity to eavesdrop on a MURDERED SCHOOLCHILD’s voicemail, deleting messages so they could get more dirt – something that gave hope to the dead child’s parents that she might still be alive. Sure, printing a picture of a fake flooded river is far, far worse.
And they did the same to the families of dead UK soldiers, they did the same to Gordon Brown – revealing that his son had cystic fibrosis. I think all of this is worse than anything KCNA publishes.
You mean worse than manipulating the sympathy of the world in furtherance of policies that starve millions of people? Really? When did NOTW, scumbags they may be, do anything on that scale? Is NOTW’s evil really so vast that we must hate it to the exclusion of all other evils, given that a choice of evils is about all we have?
I realize how much people loathe Murdoch — for a reasons that are partly ethical, ideological, and commercial — but it’s a selective and disproportionate loathing driven by competitors whose own journalistic ethics are more than a little bit compromised. Personally, I can’t stand watching Fox News, but it’s stories like this that convince me they’re a necessary balance.
Great post!
The News of the World and Metropolitan Police problems can and will be cured by public hearings, public outrage and a common desire for national improvement. There are no such constraints for the DPRK. We can be infuriated by the excesses of a free press — but we have also the benefit of a free press.
Joshua, I disagree with James. You aren’t vile at all. But I don’t understand how Fox, which you can’t stand to watch, is a necessary balance for stories like this.
Alright, so the KCNA has f**ked up royally right off the bat, right? So that is a no-brainer, and none of us are shocked; they’ve revealed their true colors, as we all knew they would, and they’ve managed to do it in a very silly and easily revealed way. Did you never wonder why pictures of Kim Jong-il on onsite inspections in sunny locations with dodgy shading were so, well, dodgy? It’s because they can’t pull it off, but they thought they could. Now, they have gotten burned.
My point? That these links with AP and Reuters will do the NK authorities more harm than good in the medium run, you can be sure of that. Just as long as we keep watching carefully. To that extent, I support them.
Meanwhile, however, it should be noted that both agencies were in North Korea in some capacity long before these agreements. To that extent, they are now using North Korea for their own publicity, and on that score it is important that they not receive any real kudos for making hay out of their links with the world’s least fair and balanced news agency.