Google has mapped North Korea. The Washington Post has useful selection of before and after images. Compare the images for North Korea with a map of the county in which you live and you will get a sense of North Korea’s poverty. Britain is debating the merits of cutting the rail journey time between London and Brum by 10 minutes; North Korea has only the most basic road infrastructure. Small wonder, then, that the North Korean economy is so parlous that the Kims have accommodated a nascent form of capitalism in order to stave off mass starvation; an important point among many made by Victor Cha in The Impossible State, published last year.
Google’s sparse maps of North Korea may seem impersonal; but the absence of dense marks of civilization says something of the human suffering wrought by the Kim regime. There are more definite signs of terror, too. You can see, highlighted in brown, one of the vast concentration camps that provide the Kims a constant source of labour and a means of absolute control.
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