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Home » Country » 100 Photos Inside North Korea – Part 1

100 Photos Inside North Korea – Part 1

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In a Nutshell: I visited North Korea in late 2014 and over 16 days ventured to all corners of this mysterious nation on one of the longest itineraries ever executed for foreigners. Here are 100 photos (part 1) taken during this visit to North Korea.

About: I’m Elliott. I’m the tour director at North Korea tour operator Uri Tours. I travel a lot myself, sometimes to the unusual, weird and wacky. Earth Nutshell is where I share my experiences. Interested in visiting North Korea for yourself? Shoot me an email at [email protected].




1-pyongyang-skyline
The morning skyline of North Korea’s capital city, Pyongyang. This photo was taken from the Yanggakdo Hotel. The pointed building is the unopened Ryugyong Hotel.
2-pyongyang Sunan-airport
The fleet of North Korean airline ‘Air Koryo’ at Pyongyang Sunan airport. Air Koryo is the only airline rated by Skytrax as ‘one-star’, and until 2010 was banned from flying into the EU after failing to meet regulatory safety standards.
3-mansudae-grand-monument
This is the Mansudae Grand Monument in Pyongyang, North Korea’s most sacred monument. Locals will visit here to lay flowers and bow in respect for their past two Great Leaders, President Kim Il-Sung and General Kim Jong-Il, who are revered as the guiding fathers of the Korean people. These statues overlook the city and remain illuminated at night.
4-kaesong-countryside
A countryside town we drove past east of Kaesong along the DMZ.
5-pyongyang-traffic-lady
Smartly-dressed traffic ladies are iconic in North Korea and their profession is highly respected. Their movements are definitive and militaristic and they hold authority over the road like a traffic light. Traffic ladies will salute those vehicles driven by Worker’s Party of Korea delegates, indicated by their number plates.
6-fatherland liberation-war-museum
A local guide giving us a recap on the Korean War from the North Korean perspective, a version of events often discredited or unheard. These perfectly manicured gardens serve as the gateway to the ‘Victorious Fatherland Liberation War Museum’.
7-music-appreciation-room
Music Appreciation Room. That’s what the sign said on the door. Photo taken inside the Grand Peoples Study House, Pyongyang.
8-kimilsung-square-slogans
The main ministerial building in Kim Il-Sung Square, Pyongyang. Translations: “Long live our glorious Songun (military-first) revolutionary idea!” and “Long live our Democratic People’s Republic!”




9-kaesong-morning
Early morning in Kaesong, an industrial city near the DMZ. Kaesong was once the capital of Korea and remains a hub of ancient tradition. It’s also famous for its ginseng cultivation.
10-panmunjom-dmz
This is the military checkpoint at Panmunjom within the DMZ. In the distance, you can spot the infamous 160m flagpole erected inside the village of Kijong-dong. Kijong-dong is referred to by South Korea as ‘propaganda village’, built to lure South Korean soldiers to defect across to the North during the 1950’s. The village can be seen with binoculars from South Korea and despite North Korea’s claims of Kijong-dong being an inhabited collective farm, evidence suggests the buildings are empty concrete shells with lighting on timers to give the impression of activity.
11-wonsan-childrens-camp-lobby
Why not send your child to summer camp in North Korea? In Wonsan, a port city on North Korea’s east coast, there is the Songdowon International Children’s Union Camp. This photo is of the lobby. Signage here is in Korean, English, Russian and Chinese, and the camp can accommodate 1200 children.
12-north-korean-bus
In countryside North Korea, buses as we know them don’t exist.
13-north-korean-art
Talented North Korean artists have become excellent at painting their Great Leaders. Subject matter aside, the DPRK has some of the most spectacular artworks I’ve seen.
14-kaesong-kimilsung-janam-hill
A monument of President Kim Il-Sung on Janam Hill in Kaesong. This is the best vantage point of the city, with a magnificent view of Kaesong’s old town filled with preserved traditional-style housing.
15-wonsan-locals
Bicycles are the primary means of transport in North Korea. Cars represent an astronomical expense for the average North Korean and it’s cost prohibitive to purchase one. Gasoline shortages make them further expensive to run. Photo taken in Wonsan.
16-socialist-revolution-monument
A 50m-long monument on Mansu Hill in Pyongyang depicting the Anti-Japanese Revolutionary Struggle. Men, women and children; soldiers, intellectuals or farmers – everyone fought for the successful liberation of Korea from the Japanese. The scale of this monument is truly massive, each figure is on average 5 metres high.




17-haeju-propaganda
“Total concentration, total mobilisation. All head to the harvest battle!” A propaganda billboard motivating this years ‘harvest battle’, a campaign where soldiers, office workers, labourers and even elementary school students are mobilised into the countryside for farm work. This is to boost agriculture productivity before winter hits. I took this photo in the rarely visited city of Haeju. Very few foreigners have been here.
18-wonsan-harbour-locals
Locals chatting on the docks in the port city (and naval base) of Wonsan. Directly behind me sits the out of service ship, Mangyongbong-92. This vessel once provided ferry transport to Japan until North Korea admitted to abducting Japanese citizens. The ferry route was then permanent discontinued after North Korea fired missiles into Japanese waters.
19-kimilsung-square-view
Kim Il-Sung Square. If you’ve ever seen goose-stepping North Korean soldiers on television, then you’ve seen this location. Kim Il-Sung Square is where most military parades, mass dances and rallies take place. In the distance is the Tower of the Juche Idea (Juche Tower).
20-pyongyang-military-bicycle
Private (pseudo-private) ownership of cars has exponentially increased in Pyongyang over recent years due to an emerging wealthy middle-class. Still, to own a car in North Korea’s capital remains exceptional and expensive. Even Korean People’s Army officers can’t go past the convenience and cost efficiency of a bicycle.
21-haeju-countryside-propaganda
Farmers receiving ‘on-the-spot guidance’ from President Kim Il-Sung. This photo was taken en route to the rarely visited south-west city of Haeju. The photo wasn’t very well received.
22-museum-of-united-states-war-atrocities
This is the ‘Sinchon Museum of American War Atrocities’. It’s located in Sinchon where an alleged mass murder of North Korean civilians occurred in 1950 at the hands of the United States during the Korean War. For American visitors to North Korea, this may be the one place to make you feel uncomfortable. The murals here are graphic, brutal and depict Americans enjoying the torture of men, women and children using primitive methods. Photographs are uncensored and show mass graves, mutilated corpses and burnt women and children. The final room depicts the surrender of the Americans. The visuals are aggressive and intense, and copies of these murals are used in educational facilities to push the anti-American narrative.
23-wonsan-harbour-statues
Statues of President Kim Il-Sung and General Kim Jong-Il watch over Wonsan harbour as locals spend their morning fishing. Seafood is plentiful in this city.
24-kumusan-palace-of-the-sun-mausoleum
This is the Kumsusan Palace of the Sun, otherwise known as the Mausoleum. Inside this building, President Kim Il-Sung and General Kim Jong-Il lie in state, embalmed inside clear glass sarcophagi for public viewing. You’re required to bow with sincerity at the feet and at both sides of each Great Leader, but not at the head. Visitations are only possible on certain days, formal dress is required and you’ll go through metal detectors, shoe cleaners and industrial-grade dust blowers. Access is via underground on long travelators. Here is a detailed write-up of my visit to the Kumsusan Palace of the Sun.




25-dprk-national-day-locals
Locals excited to begin a mass dance in Pyongyang for National Day, the celebration of the founding of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (North Korea) in 1948.
26-pyongyang-kaesong-motorway
Photo taken outside Kaesong, adjacent to the ‘Reunification Highway’ leading to Pyongyang. There were four military checkpoints between Pyongyang and Kaesong.
27-pyongyang-circus-theatre-locals
Locals receiving instruction outside the Pyongyang Military Circus.
28-dog-meat-soup-kaesong
Dog meat soup. I passed. There were many speciality dog meat soup restaurants in Pyongyang, it’s so prevalent that the North Korean government regulates the price. We found a dog tooth inside one of these soups.
29-korean-peoples-army-escort-dmz
Soldiers from the Korean People’s Army accompanied us on the brisk drive into the DMZ between tank traps and an active minefield. This was to reach the Joint Security Area (JSA) and the Demarcation Line (political border) itself. I wrote a virtual-tour of my visit to the DMZ here.
30-three-revolutions-exhibition-pyongyang
Just me embarrassing one of my guides during a visit to the Three Revolutions Exhibition in Pyongyang. This exhibition showcases the ideological, technical and cultural power of Kim Il-Sung’s leadership, including space and nuclear advancement. Note the photo directly behind us depicting one of Kim Jong-Il’s visits to this location.
31-north-korean-workplace-safety
Construction apparatus of this kind are commonplace throughout the entire country. The number of workforce deaths must be absolutely astounding.
32-workers-party-of-korea-monument
“Long live the Workers’ Party of Korea, the leader and the organiser of all victories of the Korean People!” Aesthetically, this is my favourite monument in North Korea. It’s officially known as the Monument to the Korean Workers Party.




33-kaesong-policemen
Police officers having a discussion on the streets of Kaesong.
34-yanggakdo-hotel-pyongyang
The Yanggakdo International Hotel in Pyongyang. This is where most foreigners stay upon a visit to North Korea. It’s conveniently isolated on an island so you cannot leave and freeroam the city. Tourists are placed in rooms facing the best parts of Pyongyang existing to the right of this frame. It has been speculated for years the rooms are bugged.
35-traditional-bowls-meal-kaesong
Our lunch today was a Korean banquet presented in small metal bowls traditionally served to royalty in Kaesong’s history.
36-mansudae-hill-locals
Young Korean People’s Army recruits just after bowing to the Great Leaders at the Mansudae Grand Monument on Mansu Hill. In the distance, you can see one of Pyongyang’s most recognisable icons, the Monument to the Korean Workers Party.
37-north-korean-female-guides
On a private tour to North Korea, you’ll be assigned two tour guides and a driver. You’ll be greeted by another local guide at most major attractions who will be a walking encyclopedia on the site. Here is my female guide (left) translating for the local guide (right) at the Monument to the Korean Workers Party. Seemingly all female guides are incredibly beautiful. I don’t believe this to be a coincidence.
38-reunification-building-mtkumgang
This building is within the proximity of the specialised Mount Kumgang Tourism region on the south-east border. To the left, a restricted road leading to South Korea, to the right, Mount Kumgang. We were told swiftly (as we passed) that the building is used as a meeting point for family reunification between North and South Korea. In reality, this road hasn’t been used since 2008 when a South Korean tourist was shot dead on a tour here.
39-wonsan-hill-buildings
Tall white buildings scatter the hillside like mushrooms, intimidating the port city of Wonsan.
40-pyongyang-metro-conductor
A conductor in the Pyongyang Metro. Contradictory to what rumours have long suggested, the people in the metro system are not actors. North Korea opened up both lines and all stops to tourists in 2014. I was part of the first group of foreigners to visit every station. It’s a hive of activity and a crucial service to Pyongyang. The Pyongyang Metro is essentially a North Korean ideological museum, here is an in-depth photo essay I did to give you a look.




41-mansudae-art-studio-statues
Flowers lay at the foot of an exemplary monument of the Great Leaders at the Mansudae Art Studio, Pyongyang. Mansudae Art Studio is the only studio permitted to depict the likeness of the hereditary Kim family.
42-kimjongil-thegreatman-book
Here’s a snippet from a book I purchased from the Foreign Languages Bookshop, translated from Korean to English. The book was named “Kim Jong-Il – The Great Man”.
43-pujon-county-guide-slogan-trees
Our local guide at Pujon County in the remote north-east. We hiked the woodlands here and visited the Okryonsan Revolutionary Site, once an Anti-Japanese guerilla camp. With pride, we were shown the ‘slogan trees’, trees adorned with loving phrases to President Kim Il-Sung. They are preserved eternally in reinforced glass and people will protect these trees with their lives.
44-national-day-mass-dance
Public holidays in North Korea usually include a colourful and choreographed mass dance celebration. This one was for National Day, the day of the founding of North Korea. As a tourist you’re permitted to join and dance with the locals which I did with my guide. The statement under the portraits translates to “Comrade Kim Il-Sung and Comrade Kim Jong-Il will be with us eternally”.
45-international-friendship-exhibition-gardens
These are the gardens preceding the International Friendship Exhibition at Mt. Myohyang (Myohyangsan), a 2.5-hour drive from Pyongyang. A visit is a formal occasion and locals will arrive by the bus load to catch a glimpse of the Great Leader’s well-earned treasures, proof of international endearment.
46-chongchon-hotel-lobby-mural
You’re hit in the face by this expansive mural upon entering Chongchon Hotel at Mt Myohyang. Come in, sit down and have a hot cuppa and a cigarette with Dear Leader. Make yourself at home!
47-pyongyang-circus-military-intermission
This skit during an interlude of the Pyongyang Military Circus left little to the imagination. Militaristic in its entirety, the locals loved it. The last performance depicted a drunk American soldier dressed as a clown and treated as a laughing stock.
48-local-produce-sariwon
Free-trade is illegal in North Korea. Sort-of. A black-market emerged after the ‘Arduous March’ (North Korean famine) in the 90’s, which has slowly become a tolerated grey-market with designated, regulated areas for market activity. These areas are named the ‘jangmadang’ and there are over 500 of them in North Korea. As a tourist, you won’t see a jangmadang. Traders unable to afford stall space at their local jangmadang endeavour to sell their produce on the street. This is actually illegal, and groups of women like this have been nicknamed ‘grasshopper merchants’ inside North Korea as they must hop around to avoid authorities. Photo taken in the middle of a dirt road, somewhere between Haeju and Sariwon.




49-north-korean-structural-integrity
Structural integrity is an undefined term in North Korea.
50-north-korean-guide-lonely-planet
One of our guides reading an (allowed, cleared by customs) guidebook on North Korea that one of us brought across the border. He was fascinated to read an outside perspective on his beloved country. Photo taken in the Pyongyang Metro.
51-kaesong-propaganda
“Let’s thoroughly penetrate the militant tasks set out in this year’s New Year message!”, “The great Comrade Kim Jong-Il, we will be faithful till the end!”, “According to the leadership of the great comrade Kim Jong-Un, let’s complete the achievements of Juche revolution until the end!”
52-north-korea-haircut-options
Fancy a haircut? There’s a wide variety, choose wisely! In all seriousness, the rumour that North Koreans can choose only from state-approved haircuts is false, but it is illegal to dye your hair anything but black.
53-north-korean-countryside-housing
About as good as it gets outside Pyongyang and other major municipalities.
54-pyongyang-restaurant
This is the typical restaurant setting inside Pyongyang. As a general rule, the restaurants you dine at as a tourist will be empty with no other expected guests. Karaoke will always be available and murals of holy places such as Mt. Paektu (Paektusan) decorate the interiors.
55-hamhung-beach-military-helicopters
During our visit to Hamhung, military helicopters could be spotted flying above us as we walked the beach. That night after a beach clambake and far too much soju, a group of us were intercepted on the beach by a Korean People’s Army officer with an AK47 who in kind terms, motioned that it may be past our bedtime.
56-north-korea-dmz-kpa-soldiers
The DMZ is the only place in North Korea it’s legal for tourists to photograph soldiers. The soldiers are more than happy to take photos and crack a smile here, they’re even up for selfies. The atmosphere at the DMZ from the North is relaxed and not tense as you imagine. It’s an ironic far cry from the scare tactics and intimidation used by South Korean tour guides and American servicemen on that side of the border.




57-pyongyang-metro-leaders
The portraits of President Kim Il-Sung and General Kim Jong-Il are even inside each train carriage. The Pyongyang Metro is flooded with propaganda; downtime spent transiting is an excellent opportunity for ideological impression.
58-north-korean-schoolbus
The local school bus. Children stack on top of one another for transit.
59-pyongyang-foreign-books
Just a small selection of the foreign texts available to purchase in North Korea. The presentation for many is heavily borrowed from international religious texts. Some resembled more of a funeral handout than a published work.
60-haeju-military-propaganda-child
A young boy sits innocently within a giant militaristic propaganda mural in the city of Haeju. It says “Long live the great victory of Songun (military-first) politics!”
61-kimilsung-square-students
Students in Pyongyang curious about what we’re up to in Kim Il-Sung Square.
62-north-korean-snake-soju
Snake soju (rice wine), ginseng jelly and other North Korean delicacies are for sale at many tourist locations. The snake soju is bottled with a live snake, the more venomous, the more expensive and the greater the ‘medicinal’ payoff. It’s the peak of luxury in North Korea.
63-war-museum-america-propaganda
A captured US Army helicopter showcased at the Victorious Fatherland Liberation War Museum in Pyongyang. Note the photos above, one of the American ‘imperialists’ surrendering and the other a gruesome uncensored photo of an American pilot shot in the head. Schoolchildren visit here in groups to learn about the Korean War.
64-pyongyang-policemen
A local in Pyongyang chatting to a police officer after being pulled over.
65-north-korea-coal-truck
Taking a nap on the back of a moving coal powered truck.
66-pyongyang-times-america-propaganda
The Pyongyang Times translated into English. This image speaks for itself, enjoy the read.
67-pyongyang-arch-of-triumph
“Long live the great revolutionary traditions of our party, hooray!”, “National Reunification, frequent self-defence.” To the right sits the ‘Arch of Triumph’, which was built with exactly 25,500 blocks, one for each day of President Kim Il-Sung’s life for his 70th birthday.




 

Half way! Click below to head over to part two.

Want to visit North Korea for yourself? I can help. I’m the tour director at Uri Tours, a North Korea tour operator. For inquiries you can contact me directly at [email protected].

Interested in North Korea? More coming soon! Follow me on Facebook!

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About Author

Elliott

Elliott believes each country on earth offers a uniquely interesting travel experience worth having. Inspired by contemporary history, news media and international politics, he likes to visit and see for himself. He's a poor golfer, tour manager, part-time software developer and has grown alongside one of Australia's oldest wombats. Read more here!

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68 Comments

« Previous 1 … 4 5 6
  1. Chaya G. Reply
    January 2, 2018 at 7:17 am

    thanks. wanted to see what North Korea was like. Very helpful.

  2. Kim Reply
    November 24, 2017 at 2:23 am

    great photos, sure taking some of them must have been dificult…thanks for sharing

  3. Brian Reply
    November 22, 2017 at 5:12 am

    good insight, not what we normally see

  4. Piotr Reply
    October 31, 2017 at 11:43 pm

    Great collection. thanks for sharing

  5. Fyl Reply
    October 26, 2017 at 5:37 pm

    Looks like the Soviet Union in the 80s.

    Fewer misconceptions than other such collections online.

  6. kim Reply
    August 30, 2017 at 11:31 pm

    amazing pics does not depict what we see on the news

« Previous 1 … 4 5 6

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