Tuesday, January 17, 2012

AP Opens in North Korea: Signs of Coming Economic Liberalization?

The Associated Press (AP) recently opened in North Korea

Writes The Guardian

The Associated Press has opened its newest bureau here, becoming the first international news organization with a full-time presence to cover news from North Korea in words, pictures and video.

In a ceremony Monday that came less than a month after the death of longtime ruler Kim Jong Il and capped nearly a year of discussions, AP President and CEO Tom Curley and a delegation of top AP editors inaugurated the office, situated inside the headquarters of the state-run Korean Central News Agency in downtown Pyongyang.

The bureau expands the AP's presence in North Korea, building on the breakthrough in 2006 when AP opened a video bureau in Pyongyang for the first time by an international news organization. Exclusive video from AP video staffers in Pyongyang was used by media outlets around the world following Kim's death.

Now, AP writers and photojournalists will also be allowed to work in North Korea on a regular basis.

For North Korea, which for decades has remained largely off-limits to international journalists, the opening marked an important gesture, particularly because North Korea and the United States have never had formal diplomatic relations. The AP, an independent, 165-year-old news cooperative founded in New York and owned by its U.S. newspaper membership, has operations in more than 100 countries and employs nearly 2,500 journalists across the world in 300 locations.

The bureau puts AP in a position to document the people, places and politics of North Korea across all media platforms at a critical moment in its history, with Kim's death and the ascension of his young son as the country's new leader, Curley said in remarks prepared for the opening

This would appear like a watershed breakthrough. There appears to be a seminal trend among the remnants of communism as Burma and Cuba whom has already taken the inaugural route towards economic liberalization.

And I think North Korea could be headed this way too under the new regime. One event does not make a trend though which is why we have to keep vigil.

I am hopeful that structural changes could be underway. Having North Korea open up economically will not only reduce risks of a regional war, but importantly augment Asia’s role as an economic powerhouse.

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