[HCDX] Seoul radio stations broadcast news to North Korea
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[HCDX] Seoul radio stations broadcast news to North Korea



Seoul radio stations broadcast news to North Korea
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-korearadio12-
2009apr12,0,4997077,full.story

John M. Glionna / Los Angeles Times

Lee Seung-han, left, and Choi Seung-hee prepare a broadcast. Open 
Radio's most popular show is "Unsent Letters," which relays messages to 
North Koreans.
The small operations in South Korea aim to be voices of change by airing 
information to counter Pyongyang's propaganda and by passing messages 
from friends and relatives to North Koreans.
By John M. Glionna
April 12, 2009
Reporting from Seoul -- They were just a jumble of conversations overhead 
on a train. But for South Korean radio station founder Young Howard, they 
represented breaking news from a hostile, inaccessible land.

When North Korea recently defied international calls for restraint and 
launched a rocket, purportedly to put a satellite in orbit, it wasn't long before 
a covert correspondent there was on her cellphone to editors in Seoul.

 

People were celebrating a colossal success, she whispered. "If we have 
starved, it has been in sacrifice of this glory," she quoted the train 
passengers as saying. "The Americans cannot dismiss North Korea's new 
weapon."

Howard knew differently: U.S. intelligence reports said the rocket never 
made it into orbit. Within hours, Open Radio for North Korea was 
broadcasting its own report to listeners across the border.

"News out of Pyongyang violates the basics of journalism," he said. "We tell 
the other side of the story."

Howard's station is among half a dozen Seoul-based operations that each 
day dispatch news and opinions into North Korea. Some, like Open Radio, 
are the work of concerned outsiders. Others are run by defectors, many of 
whom use pseudonyms because they know vengeful officials could 
persecute family and friends left behind.

Most are small shops with a few reporters, editors and newsreaders. They 
broadcast only a few hours each day over fragile shortwave radio bands, 
operating on shoestring budgets with private donations.

Considering the shortage of radios in North Korea and the penalty for 
owning one, the broadcasters don't know how many people actually hear 
their voices. For Howard, it's like putting a message in a bottle and tossing it 
out to sea.

"We don't expect any answers," said the 40-year-old father of three who was 
born in Busan, South Korea. "We're just putting information out there in the 
hope that people's loved ones will hear."

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!"

Experts are divided on the role the radio stations play in the lives of North 
Koreans. Some call them tools of change, while others say their operators 
are frustrated defectors shouting into the wind.

"They might not be able to bring the kind of change that, say, subversive 
radio played in Eastern Europe in the 1970s, but they have an effect," said 
Andrei Lankov, a professor specializing in North Korean history at Seoul's 
Kookmin University.

Others dismiss the dispatches as a stream of invective against North Korean 
leader Kim Jong Il and his minions.

"You have to look at the origin of a lot of these refugee broadcasters," said 
Brian Myers, an assistant professor at Dongseo University in Busan and an 
expert on the North's propaganda.

"What somebody from the poorest part of North Korea says is not relevant 
to the elite in Pyongyang," he said. "It's like if someone from Appalachia fled 
the U.S. and began broadcasting their opinions into the U.S. from Canada. I 
don't think they do a very sophisticated job."

Howard became interested in the nation's plight while a student in China. It 
was the 1990s and North Koreans were enduring a devastating famine.

"They were starving to death, and yet they were still praising Kim Jong Il," he 
said. "I realized that the problem was not in people's stomachs but in their 
brains. They needed information."

Howard launched his station in 2005, and there were problems from the 
start. The South Korean government resisted giving him a license, worried 
that the upstart anti-Pyongyang stations would further complicate relations 
between North and South.

North Korea presented problems as well. Early on, Howard said, a Russian 
company, under pressure from Pyongyang, canceled a contract to transmit 
his broadcasts.

Today, Howard transmits from an undisclosed country. With a staff of 15, 
including four defectors, Open Radio broadcasts daily, offering hourlong 
programs with material from volunteer producers.

Defectors who are now radio journalists insist that the medium is the best 
way to influence events back home.

Kim Dae-sung, station director for Free North Korea Radio in Seoul, says his 
life changed in 1996 when, as a young engineer in the North, he bought a 
radio on the black market.

It was a Sony, small enough to fit in the palm of his hand. He tucked it inside 
his clothes and hid his earphones under a wool cap. He became addicted to 
the radio's connection to the world outside.

"I would see things that were wrong in North Korea, but I couldn't speak out," 
said Kim, who uses a pseudonym. "The radio spoke out."

His radio also showed him a way out. One report mentioned a South Korean 
consulate that had just opened in a nearby city in China. He defected there 
and years later settled in Seoul.

Now, more than half of his 20 radio station employees are fellow defectors.

"Radio changed my life, my philosophy, my ideas," he said.

Concrete rewards for the radio operators' efforts are infrequent but 
inspirational, like the day Howard heard from a North Korean defector in 
China who said he had been a frequent listener to his station.

"I realized," Howard said, "that someone out there was hearing us."

john.glionna@xxxxxxxxxxx
Please read and distribute this 15 year research article 
http://tinyurl.com/5vzg7e 

Please read my article on SINPO at http://tinyurl.com/yt7qjd
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