North Korea: Crazy Facts About Kim friend's Kingdom

In the 1990 ' s, it became mandatory for all teachers in North Korea to learn how to play harmony. The accordion has often been called the people's body because it was easy to keep it everywhere. There were more or less songs like: “We don't have any envy in the world”. One [...]
The accordion has often been called the people's body because it was easy to keep it everywhere. There were more or less songs like: “We don't have any envy in the world”.
A false propagandistic village called Kyong-dong was built in the 1950s after the Korean War to create the facade of a peaceful and prosperous country and to encourage people from the South to desert.
Over the past 60 years, over 23,000 North Koreans have fled to South Korea, while only two South Koreans have gone north. According to the official history of the North Korean government, Kyong-dong is a collection of multistory buildings hosting 200 families, who spend their days happily engaging in normal daily activities. In reality, buildings have no glass, and electric lights - a luxury unknown to North Koreans in the countryside - are lit with an automatic programmer. The only ones shown are maintenance workers, who used to sweep roads once to give the impression of continued activity.
North Korea follows a rule of “three generations sentence”, which means that if a person has violated the law or been sent to prison, children, parents and grandparents are sent to work with him.
Anyone convicted of committing a crime (which may even be an escape attempt from North Korea) is sent to the Kaecho exile camp with the entire family. The next two generations will be born in the camp and also have to live their entire lives in captivity and die there.
Kim Jong-il kidnapped the renowned South Korean director Shin Sang-ok and forced him to remake Hollywood famous names in propaganda style.
The kidnapping plot was ordered by Kim Jong-il, who was responsible for North Korea's Imm industry before taking office as head of the country. He ordered that Shing Sang-ok and actress Choi Eun-hee be kidnapped and both were kept separate from each other in prison for five years until the first repented. Kim Jong-il's goal was to force them to create Imma that would impress the world. They worked together and produced a series of Imash, the most important was Pulgashar, a socialist version, promoted by the Hollywood Godzilla.
North Korean's most famous tourist attraction is visiting Kim Jong-il's preserved body.
The embalmed body of the dictator of North Korea is located in a state mausoleum and is open for visits even to foreign tourists. Local tours have extensive knowledge of Kim's life and eagerly point to details about his great achievements as well as divine abilities.
Elections are held every 5 years in North Korea, but only one name appears on the voting list. If a selector wants to choose someone else, they can do so by putting a cross on the name, but without any anonymity or privacy.
The elections have a nearly 100% turnout and countries are essentially non-competitive, since all have been elected by the Democratic Front for Homeland Reunification.
It's 105 in North Korea, not 2016 because it takes the leader's birthday first year, not Jesus'.
It is 105 in North Korea, not 2016, because the country marks the years from east North Korea, the Juche calendar, which was introduced in 1997 and is based on the date of Kim Il-sung's birth: April 15, 1912. The year 1912 is used as Juche 1 and there is no Yuche 0. However, the calendar holds the traditional months of the Gregorian calendar and the number of days per month.
The distribution, possession and consumption of cannabis is legal in North Korea, and is, in fact, recommended as a healthier alternative to tobacco.
According to Sokeel Park, director of research and strategy of “Leary in North Korea”, cannabis grows everywhere in North Korea, even sold abroad by government agencies to sell foreign currency. Marijuana is legal, since there is no punishment or fetishum as far as west.
North Korea includes some 2,000 attractive women as part of a pleasure team that offer fun and sexual services to high officials.
The existence of Kim Jong-il's harem has been known for the South Korean intelligence community. According to the fall of a deserter, Mi Hyang from the pleasure team, groups of young and attractive women regularly registered to provide fun and sexual services for senior government officials.
North Korea's regime has long implemented strict rules on the style of the oks; most barbers in Penianan proclaim photographs of government - sponsored ophthic styles.
After Kim Jong took power in 2011, the rules softened slightly. It is still popular for men and women to hold to conservative haircuts. Older women may carry only brief oks, while young people are allowed to keep a little longer.
There are about 34,000 statues of Kim Il Sung in North Korea, one per 3.5 km, or one per 750 people.
All North Koreans are also required to wear a symbol presenting his face as a sign of loyalty to the nation's founder. The coating on their jackets is a daily ritual for all and a place where people rarely carry expensive or valuable items and credit cards are very valuable to thieves. /The world.al
















