{"id":5929,"date":"2022-08-25T11:06:05","date_gmt":"2022-08-25T02:06:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.02.asiapress.org\/rimjin-gang\/?p=5929"},"modified":"2022-08-29T11:21:25","modified_gmt":"2022-08-29T02:21:25","slug":"kansin","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.02.asiapress.org\/rimjin-gang\/2022\/08\/society-economy\/kansin\/","title":{"rendered":"S. Koreans are immensely fatigued about N. Korea\u2026But continued interest in the N. Korean people is necessary.\u3000ISHIMARU Jiro"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Kim Yo-jong and Kim Jong-un want to continue the rule of the Kim family into perpetuity. (Rodong Sinmun, February 2018)<\/p><\/div>\n

I have found it increasingly frustrating to report and write on North Korea these days. That\u2019s because the Kim Jong-un regime has turned to isolation without any intention to change its ways, and because the world\u2019s attention toward North Korea has dramatically decreased.<\/p>\n

North Korea\u2019s vulnerable groups of people are facing a humanitarian crisis, including the spread of malnutrition. Despite ASIAPRESS\u2019s publishing of articles in Japanese, Korean and English, there\u2019s very little reaction to them from the world. It feels like there\u2019s nothing that can be done.<\/p>\n

\u25c6 From enthusiasm and hope to disappointment and hatred<\/h2>\n

In July, I held a meeting with South Korea-based researchers, journalists and human rights activists in Seoul. They replied to my sense of disappointment with one voice, \u201cNo, South Korea is even worse.\u201d<\/p>\n

The Kim Jong-un regime raised tensions in the region with nuclear and missile tests before changing its tune and engaging in dialogue from 2018. Kim Yo-jong went to Seoul and observed the PyeongChang Winter Olympics, and in April of that year Moon Jae-in and Kim Jong-un hugged at Panmunjom, later followed by a meeting between Kim Jong-un and Donald Trump.<\/p>\n

The entire world seemed to be focused on what was happening in North Korea and it felt like the state of affairs on the Korean Peninsula were going through dramatic changes. However, the enthusiasm and hopes South Koreans showed at that time seemed now to have completely disappeared.<\/p>\n

The blame falls on South Koreans\u2019 \u201cfatigue toward North Korea\u201d<\/strong><\/p>\n

Park In-ho, a researcher with the NK Investment Development Research Center who has been working on North Korean human rights issues for more than 20 years, explained why this was.<\/p>\n

In February 2019 when the US-DPRK Hanoi summit ended in failure, North Korea returned to throwing insults toward South Korea and, and in June 2020, the country blew up the inter-Korean joint liaison office in Kaesong. In September 2020, North Korean soldiers killed a South Korean public official who floated into waters under North Korea\u2019s control, pouring gasoline on the corpse and setting it alight. North Korea has not stopped launching test missiles, either.<\/p>\n

\u201cThe Moon Jae-in government worked hard, but gave the South Korean people an exaggerated sense of hope. Ultimately, Kim Jong-un didn\u2019t try to change. South Koreans are now just sick and tired of it,\u201d<\/strong> Park explained.<\/p>\n

Clearly, South Korean media\u2019s interest in North Korea has decreased dramatically. There\u2019s barely any North Korea-related articles worth referencing. Much of the reporting is simply the parroting of news already covered in foreign media outlets, official statements by the South Korean government, and reprints of North Korea\u2019s state-run media outlets. There\u2019s few news agencies that engage in independent reporting, a reflection of South Korean society\u2019s diminished interest in North Korea.<\/p>\n

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A bundle of flyers create with the intention to level insults on South Korea and President Moon Jae-in. (Rodong Sinmun, June 2021)<\/p><\/div>\n

Every year, KBS conducts a survey measuring awareness about unification among South Koreans that is published around August 15, the day Korea was liberated from Japanese colonial rule. This year\u2019s results, published on August 14, clearly showed the \u201cfatigue\u201d toward North Korea that exists in South Korean society today.<\/p>\n

Only 2.7% of the respondents said that they have \u201cpositive feelings\u201d toward the Kim Jong-un regime. Meanwhile, 78.1% said they have \u201cnegative feelings\u201d toward the regime, with 43.1% of these respondents saying they have \u201cextremely negative feelings\u201d toward North Korea\u2019s government. The survey results show a dramatic negative shift in public perception toward North Korea when compared with the 20.6% of respondents who said they have \u201cpositive feelings,\u201d 35.4% who had \u201cnegative feelings,\u201d and 15.3% who had \u201cextremely negative feelings\u201d in the survey in 2018, when inter-Korean talks were ongoing.<\/p>\n

Meanwhile, 80% of respondents to this year\u2019s survey said that South Korea must provide aid to help North Korea during the COVID-19 pandemic. The results show the relaxed and mature nature of South Korean society when it comes to North Korea, reflecting both the society\u2019s general hatred of the regime and the imperative it feels for providing the country with humanitarian aid.<\/p>\n

\u25c6 Reflecting on North Koreans\u2019 secret crush on South Korea<\/h2>\n

Then, what about perceptions among North Koreans? Based on my own long reporting experience on the lives of ordinary North Koreans, I have found that, despite the fact North Korea churns out propaganda aimed at treating South Korea as the enemy, North Koreans have strong expectations and hopes for South Korea.<\/p>\n

My colleague, defector-journalist Kang Ji-won, knows the thinking of the North Korean people better than most. He has told me earnestly that:<\/p>\n

\u201cThe lives of North Koreans are at their worst due to the controls implemented by the regime under the pretext of preventing the spread of COVID-19. It\u2019s not clear when trade with China will resume. North Koreans hold out hope that their South Korean compatriots will offer them assistance, no matter how slim that hope may be. If they knew that South Koreans are losing interest in North Korea, they\u2019d be devastated. We must continue to report on and inform the world about the North Korean people\u2019s poverty-stricken realities.\u201d<\/strong><\/p>\n

After hearing Kang\u2019s words, I felt like it wasn\u2019t yet time to lose my motivation to soldier on.<\/p>\n

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