Ricerche Simili:
Infobox Country
native_name =
''Chosŏn Minjujuŭi Inmin Konghwaguk''
conventional_long_name=
Democratic People's Republic of Korea
conventional_short_name=North Korea
common_name=North Korea
image_flag=Flag of North Korea.svg
image_coat=Coat of Arms of North Korea.svg
symbol_type=Coat of arms
image_map=North Korea (orthographic projection).svg
mapsize=220px
motto=강성대국
''Powerful and Prosperous Nation''
national_anthem=''
Aegukka'' (애국가)
("The Patriotic Song")
official_languages=
Korean
languages_type =
Official scripts
languages =
Chosŏn'gŭl
demonym=North Korean, Korean
capital=
Pyongyang |latd=39 |latm=2 |latNS=N |longd=125 |longm=45 |longEW=E
government_type=''
Juche''
republic,
Single-party system,
Military dictatorship
leader_title1=
Eternal President
leader_title2=
Supreme Leader
leader_title3=
Defence Commission Chairman
leader_title4=
Chairman of the Presidium
leader_title5=
Premier
leader_name1=
Kim Il-sung(deceased)
leader_name2=
Kim Jong-il
leader_name3=
Kim Jong-il
leader_name4=
Kim Yong-nam
leader_name5=
Choe Yong-rim
legislature=
Supreme People's Assembly
largest_city=
Pyongyang
area_km2=120,540
area_sq_mi=46,528
area_rank=98th
area_magnitude=1 E11
percent_water=4.87
population_estimate=24,051,218
population_estimate_year=2009
population_estimate_rank=51st
population_census=
population_census_year=
population_density_km2=198.3
population_density_sq_mi=513.8
population_density_rank=55th
GDP_PPP_year=2008
GDP_nominal_year = 2009
GDP_nominal=$28.2 billion
GDP_nominal_rank=88th
GDP_nominal_per_capita=$1,244
GDP_nominal_per_capita_rank=139th
GDP_PPP =
$40 billion
GDP_PPP_rank=94th
GDP_PPP_per_capita=$1,900 (2009 est.)
GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank=188th
Gini=n/a
Gini_year=2009
Gini_category=
low
FSI=97.7 0.4
FSI_year=2007
FSI_rank=13th
FSI_category=
Alert
sovereignty_type=
Establishment
established_event1=
Independencedeclared
established_event2=
Liberation
established_event3=Formal declaration
established_date1=March 1, 1919
established_date2=August 15, 1945
established_date3=September 9, 1948
currency=
North Korean won (₩)
currency_code=KPW
time_zone=
Korea Standard Time
utc_offset=+9
time_zone_DST=
utc_offset_DST=
date_format=yy, yyyy년 mm월 dd일
yy, yyyy/mm/dd (
CE–1911,
CE)
drives_on=right
cctld=
.kp
calling_code=
850
footnotes=
a. Died 1994, named "Eternal President" in 1998.
b.
Kim Yong-nam is the "
head of state for foreign affairs".
North Korea''', officially the '''Democratic People's Republic of Korea''' ('''DPRK ) (
Chosongul: 조선민주주의인민공화국), is a country in
East Asia, occupying the northern half of the
Korean Peninsula. Its capital and largest city is
Pyongyang. The
Korean Demilitarized Zone serves as the
buffer zone between North Korea and
South Korea. The
Amnok River and the
Tumen River form the border between North Korea and
People's Republic of China. A section of the Tumen River in the extreme northeast is the border with
Russia.
The peninsula was governed by the
Korean Empire until it was annexed by
Japan following the
Russo-Japanese War of 1905. It was
divided into Soviet and American occupied zones in 1945, following the end of
World War II. North Korea refused to participate in a
United Nations–supervised election held in the south in 1948, which led to the creation of separate Korean governments for the two occupation zones. Both North and South Korea claimed
sovereignty over the Korean Peninsula as a whole, which led to the
Korean War of 1950. A 1953
armistice ended the fighting; however, the two countries are officially still at war with each other, as a peace treaty was never signed.
North Korea is a
single-party state under a
united front led by the
Korean Workers' Party (KWP).
cite news
url = http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/08/28/wnkorea128.xml
title = North Korea power struggle looms
accessdate=2007-10-31
last=Spencer
first=Richard
authorlink=Richard Spencer (journalist)
date=2007-08-28
work=The Telegraph (online version of UK national newspaper)
quote=A power struggle to succeed Kim Jong-il as leader of North Korea's Stalinist dictatorship may be looming after his eldest son was reported to have returned from semi-voluntary exile.
location=London
cite news
url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/article2388356.ece
title=North Korea's nuclear 'deal' leaves Japan feeling nervous
accessdate=2007-10-31
last=Parry
first=Richard Lloyd
authorlink=Richard Lloyd Parry
date=2007-09-05
work=The Times (online version of UK's national newspaper of record)
quote=The US Government contradicted earlier North Korean claims that it had agreed to remove the Stalinist dictatorship’s designation as a terrorist state and to lift economic sanctions, as part of talks aimed at disarming Pyongyang of its nuclear weapons.
location=London
cite web
url=http://socialistworld.net/eng/2003/02/08korea.html
title=The Korean crisis
accessdate=2007-10-31
last=Walsh
first=Lynn
authorlink=Lynn Walsh
date=2003-02-08
work=CWI online: Socialism Today, February 2003 edition, journal of the Socialist Party, CWI England and Wales
publisher=socialistworld.net, website of the committee for a worker’s international
quote=Kim Jong-il's regime needs economic concessions to avoid collapse, and just as crucially needs an end to the strategic siege imposed by the US since the end of the Korean war (1950–53). Pyongyang's nuclear brinkmanship, though potentially dangerous, is driven by fear rather than by militaristic ambition. The rotten Stalinist dictatorship faces the prospect of an implosion. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, which deprived North Korea of vital economic support, the regime has consistently attempted to secure from the US a non-aggression pact, recognition of its sovereignty, and economic assistance. The US's equally consistent refusal to enter into direct negotiations with North Korea, effectively ruling out a peace treaty to formally close the 1950–53 Korean war, has encouraged the regime to resort to nuclear blackmail.
cite web
url=http://www.sa.org.au/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=333&Itemid=106
title=US is threat to peace not North Korea
accessdate=2007-10-31
last=Oakley
first=Corey
authorlink=Corey Oakley
year=2006
month=October
work=Edition 109 - October-November 2006
publisher=Socialist Alternative website in Australia
quote=In this context, the constant attempts by the Western press to paint Kim Jong-il as simply a raving lunatic look, well, mad. There is no denying that the regime he presides over is a nasty Stalinist dictatorship that brutally oppresses its own population. But in the face of constant threats from the US, Pyongyang's actions have a definite rationality from the regime's point of view.
cite news
url=http://www.nytimes.com/2003/10/02/international/asia/02CND-KORE.html?ex=1380513600&en=a29d7f1e49aabee0&ei=5007&partner=USERLAND
title=North Korea Says It Is Using Plutonium to Make A-Bombs
accessdate=2007-10-31
last=Brooke
first=James
authorlink=James Brooke (journalist)
date=2003-10-02
work=The New York Times
quote=North Korea, run by a Stalinist dictatorship for almost six decades, is largely closed to foreign reporters and it is impossible to independently check today's claims.
cite web
url=http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Let_The_Music_Play_On/articleshow/2859521.cms
title=Leader Article: Let The Music Play On
accessdate=2008-03-27
last=Baruma
first=Ian
authorlink=
date=
work=The Times of India
quote=North Korea, officially known as the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, is one of the world's most oppressive, closed, and vicious dictatorships. It is perhaps the last living example of pure totalitarianism - control of the state over every aspect of human life.
though Kim Il-sung had been using it to form policy since at least as early as 1955.
cite book
|last=Martin
|first=Bradley K.
|authorlink=
|coauthors=
|title=Under the Loving Care of the Fatherly Leader: North Korea and the Kim Dynasty
|publisher=Thomas Dunne Books
|year=2004
|location=New York, NY
|page=111
|quote=Although it was in that 1955 speech that Kim gave full voice to his arguments for ''juche'', he had been talking along similar lines as early as 1948.
|doi=
|id=
|isbn=0-312-32322-0
Officially a
socialist republic,
many media organizations outside North Korea report that it is a
totalitarian Stalinist dictatorship.
cite web
url = http://freedomhouse.org/template.cfm?page=22&year=2006&country=6993
title=Freedom in the World, 2006|publisher=Freedom House|accessdate=2007-02-13
quote=Citizens of North Korea cannot change their government democratically. North Korea is a totalitarian dictatorship and one of the most restrictive countries in the world.
cite news
url = http://www.economist.com/media/pdf/DEMOCRACY_TABLE_2007_v3.pdf
title=Economist Intelligence Unit democracy index 2006
accessdate=2007-10-09 |year=2007 |format=PDF |publisher=
Economist Intelligence Unit
North Korea ranked in last place (167)
cite news
url=http://www.economist.com/world/asia/displaystory.cfm?story_id=11465278
title=A portrait of North Korea's new rich
accessdate=2009-06-18|date=2008-05-29|work=
The Economist
quote=EVERY developing country worth its salt has a bustling middle class that is transforming the country and thrilling the markets. So does Stalinist North Korea.
Kim Jong-il and Kim Il-sung have constructed around them a
cult of personality. It is reported as having one of the world's worst
human rights records.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, there was a
famine which killed an estimated 2-3 million people. Due to the government's secretive nature and its reluctance to allow in foreigners, North Korea is today considered the world's most isolated country. The current secretary of the KWP Central Committee Secretariat and leader of the armed forces is
Kim Jong-il, son of Kim Il-sung.
History
In the aftermath of the
Japanese occupation of Korea which ended with Japan's defeat in
World War II in 1945, Korea was divided at the
38th parallel in accordance with a
United Nations arrangement, to be administered by the
Soviet Union in the north and the
United States in the south. The history of North Korea formally begins with the establishment of the Democratic
People's Republic in 1948.
Division of Korea
In August 1945, the
Soviet Army established a Soviet Civil Authority to rule the country until a domestic regime, friendly to the USSR, could be established. The country was governed by the
Provisional People's Committee for North Korea through 1948. After the Soviet forces' departure in 1948, the main agenda in the following years was unification of Korea from both sides until the consolidation of
Syngman Rhee regime in the South with American military support and the suppression of the October 1948 insurrection ended hopes that the country could be reunified by way of
Communist revolution in the South.
In 1949, a military intervention into
South Korea was considered by the
Northern regime but failed to receive support from the Soviet Union, which had played a key role in the establishment of the country.
The withdrawal of most
United States forces from the South in June dramatically weakened the
Southern regime and encouraged
Kim Il-sung to re-think an invasion plan against the South.
Korean War
The Korean War was a war between North Korea and South Korea with major hostilities beginning on June 25, 1950, pausing with signed on July 27, 1953. The conflict arose from the division of Korea by the UN and the attempts of the two Korean powers to reunify
Korea under their respective governments. The division led to full scale civil war with a cost of more than 2 million civilians and soldiers from both sides. The period immediately before the war was marked by escalating border conflicts at the
38th parallel and attempts to negotiate elections for the entirety of Korea.
These negotiations ended when the
military of North Korea invaded the South on June 25, 1950. Under the aegis of the
United Nations, nations allied with the
United States intervened on behalf of South Korea. After rapid advances in a South Korean counterattack, North-allied
Chinese forces intervened on behalf of North Korea, shifting the balance of the war and ultimately leading to an armistice that approximately restored the original boundaries between North and South Korea.
While some have referred to the conflict as a civil war, there were many other factors at play.
The Korean War was also the first armed confrontation of the
Cold War and set the standard for many later conflicts. It created the idea of a
proxy war, where the two
superpowers would fight in another country, forcing the people in that nation to suffer the bulk of the destruction and death involved in a war between such large nations. The superpowers avoided
descending into an all-out war with one another, as well as the mutual use of
nuclear weapons. It also expanded the Cold War, which to that point had mostly been concerned with Europe. A heavily guarded
demilitarized zone on the 38th parallel continues to divide the peninsula today with anti-Communist and anti-North Korea sentiment still remaining in South Korea.
Since the ceasefire of the Korean War in 1953 the relations between the North Korean government and South Korea, the European Union, Canada, the United States, and Japan have remained tense. Fighting was halted in the ceasefire, but both Koreas are still technically at war.
Late 20th century
The relative peace between the south and the north was punctuated by border skirmishes and assassination attempts. The North failed in several assassination attempts on South Korean leaders, most notably in 1968, 1974 and the
Rangoon bombing in 1983; tunnels were frequently found under the DMZ and war nearly broke out over the
Axe Murder Incident at
Panmunjeom in 1976.
In the late 1990s, with the South having transitioned to democracy, the success of the
Nordpolitik policy, and power in the North having been taken up by Kim Il-sung's son
Kim Jong-il, the two nations began to engage publicly for the first time, with the South declaring its
Sunshine Policy.
21st century
In 2002, United States president
George W. Bush labeled North Korea part of an "
axis of evil" and an "
outpost of tyranny". The highest-level contact the government has had with the United States was with
U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, who made a visit to Pyongyang in 2000,
Publicly, North Korea strongly demands the removal of American troops from Korea.
On June 13, 2009, the
Associated Press reported that in response to new UN sanctions, North Korea declared it would progress with its
uranium enrichment program. This marked the first time the DPRK has publicly acknowledged that it is conducting a uranium enrichment program.
Geography
North Korea occupies the northern portion of the
Korean Peninsula, covering an area of .
North Korea's climate is relatively
temperate. Most of the country is classified as type ''Dwa'' in the
Köppen climate classification scheme, with warm summers and cold, dry winters. In summer there is a short rainy season called ''changma''.
The capital and largest city is
Pyongyang; other major cities include
Kaesong in the south,
Sinuiju in the northwest,
Wonsan and
Hamhung in the east and
Chongjin in the northeast.
Topography
Early
European visitors to Korea remarked that the country resembled "''a sea in a heavy gale''" because of the many successive
mountain ranges that crisscross the peninsula.
Some 80% of North Korea is composed of
mountains and
uplands, separated by deep and narrow
valleys, with all of the peninsula's mountains with elevations of or more located in North Korea. The coastal
plains are wide in the west and discontinuous in the east. A great majority of the population lives in the plains and
lowlands.
The highest point in North Korea is
Baekdu Mountain which is a
volcanic mountain near the Chinese border with
basalt lava plateau with elevations between .
Other major ranges include the
Rangrim Mountains, which are located in the north-central part of North Korea and run in a north-south direction, making communication between the eastern and western parts of the country rather difficult; and the
Kangnam Range, which runs along the North Korea–China border.
Geumgangsan, often written Mt Kumgang, or Diamond Mountain, (approximately ) in the
Taebaek Range, which extends into South Korea, is famous for its scenic beauty.
For the most part, the plains are small. The most extensive are the
Pyongyang and
Chaeryong plains, each covering about . Because the mountains on the east coast drop abruptly to the sea, the plains are even smaller there than on the west coast. Unlike neighboring Japan or northern China, North Korea experiences few severe
earthquakes.
Climate
North Korea has a
continental climate with four distinct seasons.
Long winters bring bitter cold and clear weather interspersed with snow storms as a result of northern and northwestern winds that blow from
Siberia. Average snowfall is 37 days during the winter. The weather is likely to be particularly harsh in the northern, mountainous regions.
Summer tends to be short, hot, humid, and rainy because of the southern and southeastern
monsoon winds that bring moist air from the
Pacific Ocean. Typhoons affect the peninsula on an average of at least once every summer. Spring and autumn are transitional seasons marked by mild temperatures and variable winds and bring the most pleasant weather. Natural hazards include late spring droughts which often are followed by severe flooding. There are occasional
typhoons during the early fall.
Administrative divisions
_
Based on estimates in 2002, the dominant sector in the North Korean economy is industry (43.1%), followed by
services (33.6%) and agriculture (23.3%). In 2004, it was estimated that agriculture employed 37% of the workforce while industry and services employed the remaining 63%. Major industries include military products, machine building, electric power, chemicals, mining, metallurgy, textiles, food processing and tourism.
In 2005, North Korea was ranked by the
FAO as an estimated 10th in the production of fresh fruit
Other major natural resources in production include
lead,
tungsten,
graphite,
magnesite,
gold,
pyrites,
fluorspar, and
hydropower.
Foreign commerce
, North Korea's light industry center.
China and South Korea remain the largest donors of food aid to North Korea. The U.S. objects to this manner of donating food due to lack of supervision.
On September 19, 2005, North Korea was promised fuel aid and various other non-food incentives from South Korea, the U.S., Japan, Russia, and China in exchange for abandoning its nuclear weapons program and rejoining the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. Providing food in exchange for abandoning weapons programs has historically been avoided by the U.S. so as not to be perceived as "using food as a weapon".
Humanitarian aid from North Korea's neighbors has been cut off at times to provoke North Korea to resume boycotted talks. For example, South Korea's had the "postponed consideration" of 500,000 tons of rice for the North in 2006 but the idea of providing food as a clear incentive (as opposed to resuming "general humanitarian aid") has been avoided.
province.
In 1991, North Korea started experimenting with private capitalism in the
Rajin-Sonbong Economic Special Zone, and in 2002 also set up the
Kaesong Industrial Region.
A small number of other areas have been designated as
Special Administrative Regions. China and South Korea are the biggest trade partners of North Korea, with trade with China increasing 15% to US$1.6 billion in 2005, and trade with South Korea increasing 50% to over 1 billion for the first time in 2005.
It is reported that the number of mobile phones in
Pyongyang rose from only 3,000 in 2002 to approximately 20,000 during 2004.
A small number of capitalistic elements are gradually spreading from the trial area, including a number of advertising billboards along certain highways. Recent visitors have reported that the number of open-air farmers' markets has increased in
Kaesong and
Pyongyang, as well as along the China-North Korea border, bypassing the food rationing system.
In 2000, North Korea established the Centre for the Study of the Capitalist System.
In a 2003 event dubbed the "
Pong Su incident", a North Korean cargo ship allegedly attempting to smuggle heroin into Australia was seized by Australian officials, strengthening Australian and United States' suspicions that Pyongyang engages in international drug smuggling. The North Korean government denied any involvement.
Tourism
was popular among South Korean tourists until its suspension in 2008
Tourism in North Korea is organized by the state owned Korea International Travel Company. Every group of travelers as well as individual tourists/visitors are permanently accompanied by one or two "guides" who normally speak the mother language of the tourist. While tourism has increased over the last few years, tourists from Western countries remain few.
The majority of the tourists who visit come from China, Russia and Japan. Russian citizens from the Asian part of Russia prefer North Korea as a tourist destination due to the relatively low prices, lack of pollution and the warmer climate. For citizens of South Korea, it is practically impossible to obtain a
visa for North Korea; however, they can still obtain "entry permits" to special tourist areas designated for South Koreans, such as Kaesong. US citizens were also subject to visa restrictions, only able to visit during the yearly
Arirang Festival; however, these restrictions were lifted in January 2010.
In the area of the
Kŭmgangsan-mountains, the company
Hyundai established and operates a special Tourist area. Traveling to this area is also possible for South Koreans and US citizens, but only in organized groups from South Korea. A special administrative region known as the
Kŭmgangsan Tourist Region exists for this purpose. However, trips to the region were suspended after a South Korean woman who wandered into a controlled military zone was shot dead by border guards in late 2008.
Famine
In the 1990s North Korea faced significant economic disruptions, including a series of natural disasters, economic mismanagement and serious resource shortages after the collapse of the
Eastern Bloc. These resulted in a shortfall of staple
grain output of more than 1 million tons from what the country needs to meet internationally accepted minimum dietary requirements.
The deaths were most likely caused by famine-related illnesses such as
pneumonia,
tuberculosis, and
diarrhea rather than
starvation.
In 2006,
Amnesty International reported that a national nutrition survey conducted by the North Korean government, the
World Food Programme, and
UNICEF found that 7% of children were severely
malnourished; 37% were chronically malnourished; 23.4% were underweight; and one in three mothers was malnourished and
anaemic as the result of the lingering effect of the famine. The inflation caused by some of the 2002 economic reforms, including the Songun or
"Military-first" policy, was cited for creating the increased price of basic foods.
The history of Japanese assistance to North Korea has been marked with challenges; from a large pro-
Pyongyang community of Koreans in Japan to public outrage over the 1998 North Korean missile launch and revelations regarding the abduction of Japanese citizens.
In June 1995 an agreement was reached that the two countries would act jointly. South Korea would provide 150,000 MT of grain in unmarked bags, and Japan would provide 150,000 MT gratis and another 150,000 MT on concessional terms. In October 1995 and January 1996, North Korea again approached Japan for assistance. On these two occasions, both of which came at crucial moments in the evolution of the famine, opposition from both South Korea and domestic political sources quashed the deals.
Beginning in 1997, the U.S. began shipping food aid to North Korea through the United Nations
World Food Programme (WFP) to combat the famine. Shipments peaked in 1999 at nearly 700,000 tons making the U.S. the largest foreign aid donor to the country at the time. Under the
Bush Administration, aid was drastically reduced year after year from 350,000 tons in 2001 to 40,000 in 2004.
Media
The media of North Korea are under one of the most strict government controls in the world. The North Korean constitution provides for
freedom of speech and the
press; however, the government prohibits the exercise of these rights in practice. In its 2008 report,
Reporters Without Borders classified the media environment in North Korea as 172 out of 173, only above that of
Eritrea.
Only news that favors the regime is permitted, while news that covers the economic and political problems in the country, or criticisms of the regime from abroad, is not allowed.
The media upholds the personality cult of
Kim Jong-il, regularly reporting on his daily activities. The main news provider to media in the DPRK is the
Korean Central News Agency.
North Korea has 12 principal newspapers and 20 major periodicals, all of varying periodicity and all published in
Pyongyang.
Transportation
.
car.
There is a mix of locally built and imported trolleybuses and trams in urban centers in North Korea. Earlier fleets were obtained in Europe and China, but the trade embargo has forced North Korea to build their own vehicles.
Choson Cul Minzuzui Inmingonghoagug is the only rail operator in North Korea. It has a network of in
standard gauge.
There is a small narrow gauge railway in operation in Haeju peninsula. The railway fleet consists of a mix of electric and steam locomotives. Cars are mostly made in North Korea using Soviet designs. There are some locomotives from Imperial Japan, the United States, and Europe remaining in use. Second-hand Chinese locomotives (early DF4Bs, BJ Hydraulics, etc.) have also been spotted in active service.
,
Tu-204,
Il-62 and
Tu-154 of
Air Koryo at
Sunan International Airport.
Water transport on the major rivers and along the coasts plays a growing role in freight and passenger traffic. Except for the Yalu and Taedong rivers, most of the inland waterways, totaling , are navigable only by small boats. Coastal traffic is heaviest on the eastern seaboard, whose deeper waters can accommodate larger vessels. The major ports are
Nampho on the west coast and
Rajin,
Chongjin,
Wonsan, and
Hamhung on the east coast. The country's harbor loading capacity in the 1990s was estimated at almost 35 million tons a year.
In the early 1990s, North Korea possessed an oceangoing merchant fleet, largely domestically produced, of sixty-eight ships (of at least 1,000 gross-registered tons), totaling 465,801 gross-registered tons (), which includes fifty-eight cargo ships and two tankers. There is a continuing investment in upgrading and expanding port facilities, developing transportation—particularly on the Taedong River—and increasing the share of international cargo by domestic vessels.
North Korea's international air connections are limited. There are regularly scheduled flights from the
Sunan International Airport – north of Pyongyang – to
Moscow,
Khabarovsk,
Beijing,
Macau,
Vladivostok,
Bangkok,
Shenyang,
Shenzhen and charter flights from Sunan to Tokyo as well as to East European countries, the Middle East, and Africa. An agreement to initiate a service between Pyongyang and Tokyo was signed in 1990. Internal flights are available between
Pyongyang,
Hamhung,
Wonsan, and
Chongjin.
All civil aircraft are operated by
Air Koryo: 34 aircraft in 2008, which were purchased from the Soviet Union and Russia. From 1976 to 1978, four
Tu-154 jets were added to the small fleet of propeller-driven An-24s afterwards adding four long range Ilyushin Il-62M, three Ilyushin Il-76MD large cargo aircraft and two long range Tupolev Tu-204-300's purchased in 2008.
Two of the few ways to enter North Korea are over the
Sino-Korea Friendship Bridge or via
Panmunjeom, the former crossing the
Amnok River and the latter crossing the
Demilitarized Zone.
Private cars in North Korea are a rare sight, but some 70% of households used
bicycles, which also play an increasingly important role in small-scale private trade.
Demographics
of North Korea
North Korea's population of roughly 23 million is one of the most ethnically and linguistically homogeneous in the world, with very small numbers of Chinese,
Japanese, Vietnamese, South Korean, and European expatriate minorities.
According to the
CIA World Factbook, North Korea's life expectancy was 63.8 years in 2009, a figure roughly equivalent to that of
Pakistan and
Burma and slightly lower than Russia.
According to the UNICEF "The State of the world's Children 2003" North Korea appears ranked at the 73rd place (with first place having the highest mortality rate), between
Guatemala (72nd) and
Tuvalu (74th).
Language
North Korea shares the
Korean language with South Korea. There are dialect differences within both Koreas, but the border between North and South does not represent a major linguistic boundary. While prevalent in the South, the adoption of modern terms from foreign languages has been limited in North Korea.
Hanja (
Chinese characters) are no longer used in North Korea, although still occasionally used in South Korea. Both Koreas share the phonetic writing system called
Chosongul in the north and
Hangul south of the DMZ. The official
Romanization differs in the two countries, with North Korea using a slightly modified
McCune-Reischauer system, and the South using the
Revised Romanization of Korean.
Religion
Both Koreas share a
Buddhist and
Confucian heritage and a recent history of
Christian and
Cheondoism ("religion of the Heavenly Way") movements. The North Korean constitution states that freedom of religion is permitted.
, mount Kumgang
Nevertheless, Buddhists in North Korea reportedly fare better than other religious groups, particularly Christians, who are said to face persecution by the authorities. Buddhists are given limited funding by the government to promote the religion, because Buddhism played an integral role in traditional Korean culture.
According to
Human Rights Watch, free religious activities no longer exist in North Korea, as the government sponsors religious groups only to create an illusion of religious freedom.
According to Religious Intelligence the situation of religion in North Korea is the following:
Irreligion: 15,460,000 (64.31% of population, the vast majority of which are adherents of the Juche philosophy)
Korean shamanism: 3,846,000 adherents (16% of population)
Cheondoism: 3,245,000 adherents (13.50% of population)
Buddhism: 1,082,000 adherents (4.50% of population)
Christianity: 406,000 adherents (1.69% of population)
Pyongyang was the center of Christian activity in Korea until 1945. From the late forties 166 priests and religious were killed or kidnapped (disappeared without trace), including
Francis Hong Yong-ho, bishop of Pyongyang.
No catholic priest survived the persecution, all churches were destroyed and the government never allowed any foreign priest to set up in North Korea.
Today, four state-sanctioned churches exist, which freedom of religion advocates say are showcases for foreigners.
According to a ranking published by
Open Doors, an organization that supports persecuted Christians, North Korea is currently the country with the most severe persecution of Christians in the world.
Education
Education in North Korea is controlled by the government and is compulsory until the secondary level. Education in North Korea is free.
Primary schools are known as people's schools and children attend this school from the age of six to nine. They are later enrolled in either a regular secondary school or a special secondary school, depending on their specialities. They enter secondary school at the age of ten and leave when they are sixteen.
Higher education is not compulsory in North Korea. It is composed of two systems: academic higher education and higher education for continuing education. The academic higher education system includes three kinds of institutions:
universities,
professional schools, and
technical schools.
Graduate schools for master's and doctoral level studies are attached to universities, and are for students who want to continue their education.
north korea attacks hawaii

north korea attacks hawaii
US, South Korea postpone anti-submarine exercise - Stars and StripesThe Chosun IlboUS, South Korea postpone anti-submarine exerciseStars and StripesThe exercise, designed to “send a clear message of deterrence to North Korea,” was to have started Sunday and run through Sept. 9, according to a USFK news ...South Korea, US To Launch Anti-Submarine Exercises SundayEurasia ReviewS. Korea, US To Hold Anti-Submarine ExerciseDefenseNews.com (subscription)US, S. Korea to hold more naval drillsNavyTimes.comtutte le notizie (681) »
