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Associated Press Opening North Korea Bureau

North Korea

First Posted: 06/29/11 05:37 PM ET Updated: 08/29/11 06:12 AM ET

NEW YORK -- North Korea, a totalitarian country ranked near the bottom in the world on the press freedom index, presents one of the toughest challenges for journalists.

But the Associated Press made significant progress Wednesday in increasing its access within the secretive country by signing agreements with North Korea’s state news agency, KCNA, to open a bureau in the capital Pyongyang. The AP has operated a television office in North Korea for five years, but the new operation will be the “first permanent text and photo bureau operated by a Western news organization in the North Korean capital," according to a release.

The AP and KCNA have been working on the agreement for several months. In March, AP chief executive Tom Curley, executive editor Kathleen Carroll and senior managing editor for international news John Daniszewski traveled to Pyongyang. More recently, KCNA president Kim Pyong Ho led a delegation to New York.

"This agreement between AP and KCNA is historic and significant,” Curley said in a statement. “AP is once again being trusted to open a door to better understanding between a nation and the world. We are grateful for this opportunity and look forward to providing coverage for AP’s global audience in our usually reliable and insightful way."

While the partnership sounds promising, does the AP really have the freedom to file dispatches with a Pyongyang dateline and not face government interference?

Carroll, the AP’s top editor, says the news organization will be able to act independently.

“The AP operates independently, regardless of location. Period,” Carroll said in a statement to The Huffington Post. “We have been able to work from Pyongyang as we do elsewhere, by asking questions and seeking to learn more about a country and its people and then doing stories. Our coverage of North Korea from inside and outside the country has been straightforward, insightful and fair. None of it has ever been censored.”

Indeed, one reason to be hopeful about the arrangement is that the AP has already made significant inroads into North Korea over the past year. AP Seoul bureau chief Jean Lee and chief Asia photograph David Guttenfelder have made several reporting trips into North Korea and even attended a staged government news conference in April -- a significant moment in terms of western press access, according to the Wall Street Journal:

The AP story generated much more attention, in part because American journalists are rarely granted access to North Korea. The AP has operated a TV news bureau there, staffed by North Koreans and managed from Hong Kong, that chiefly delivers video feeds of North Korea events to other news organizations. Recently, the AP’s president, Tom Curley, visited North Korea as part of an Asia tour.

The largest group of American journalists to enter North Korea was in 2008, when 80 were granted access to cover a visit to Pyongyang by the New York Philharmonic. In 2009, North Korea detained two American journalists it captured on its border with China for six months.

Given the amount of suspicion leveled at American journalists by the Pyongyang regime, reporting and writing from North Korea has got to be difficult. It’s unclear from the AP’s story whether Ms. Lee was allowed to ask a question at the news conference.

In addition to the news conference, Lee has covered several events from Pyongyang over the past year, including a huge magic show and a parade where Kim Jong Un -- son of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il -- was introduced to public as heir apparent. She spoke about covering the latter event in a narrated slideshow featuring photographs from the AP's Vincent Yu.

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NEW YORK -- North Korea, a totalitarian country ranked near the bottom in the world on the press freedom index, presents one of the toughest challenges for journalists. But the Associated Press mad...
NEW YORK -- North Korea, a totalitarian country ranked near the bottom in the world on the press freedom index, presents one of the toughest challenges for journalists. But the Associated Press mad...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DigiReader
08:11 PM on 07/06/2011
I don't get it. Shouldn't the Associates Press realizes that they're sleeping with North Korean Communist Party dictatorship?
09:13 PM on 07/04/2011
Associated Press? An MSM entity??? still no credibility!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NoboyukiMasaki
happy-happy, joy-joy
06:01 PM on 07/04/2011
If I were offered $1 million per year to work on North Korea, I wouldn't do it.

Even from space, North Korea looks like the most boring place on Earth.

See for yourself:

http://www.fas.org/nuke/guide/dprk/facility/dprk-dmsp-dark.jpg
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kyeshinka
01:50 AM on 07/04/2011
Internet access is still heavily regulated and only North Korean-based sites are available. Still, this is progress.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Steelsil
Alan Grayson for President!
07:23 PM on 07/03/2011
And they will then have to chose between actually reporting news, or staying out of N. Korean concentration camps.
05:43 AM on 07/03/2011
Someone's going to be arrested for spying if North Korea does something stupid and needs a tradeoff. I wouldn't want the job. But I hope it opens a window into the plight of that idiotically led nation. North Korea has become the Arsenal of terrorism.
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joeisright
Semper Fi
01:08 PM on 07/01/2011
The Associated Press has found it's home.
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steve11407
pending approval and won't be displayed until ...
01:47 PM on 06/30/2011
"None of it has ever been censored.”

while taking special care not to report anything that attracks censors.
12:37 PM on 06/30/2011
Most foreign bureaus operate under significant restrictions from the host governments. CNN's Dubai bureau couldn't break the Shahar Pe'er story when she was denied entry into the women's tourney. But you need a day to day presence in a country, if for no other reason than to provide some level of guidance for anyone you have to "parachute" in for a hard story. Problem is that might be considered "spying" there :(

We shall see...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tmboy
Reading comments messes with my ZEN, but I'm addic
03:10 PM on 06/30/2011
I would be very disappointed if at least 30% of the people station there are not spies.
jestermarcus
Enough about me.....
03:21 PM on 06/30/2011
Don't you think the North Korean Government hasn't thought of that already? It would be way too obvious.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wwoody
Retired fishing for the truth.
09:15 AM on 06/30/2011
Who ever thought of it ...really came up with a brain storm ....learn how to repeat and copy what they tell you to say.
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MajorKong
If the pilot's good, see, I mean if he's reeeally
08:19 AM on 06/30/2011
Might as well just set up a direct feed from the Korean Central News Agency (DPRK) because that's all they're going to get.
08:16 AM on 06/30/2011
of course the zionist controlled AP have a secret agenda with N Korea and knowing the North Koreans, so do they.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cranmer1549
Fear is your only god on the radio.
09:16 AM on 06/30/2011
Did you take your medication this morning?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TFlint
12:07 PM on 06/30/2011
What about your secret anti-semiric agenda?
08:28 PM on 06/30/2011
I'm pro-palestinian so no, i am not anti-semetic. israel and their control over the usa is another story.
08:01 AM on 06/30/2011
I am pretty sure the North Korean government is getting paid quite well-- I can see that as their only motivation of having the AP within their country. The elites need money for their rich life styles as most of their nation lives under a $1 a day. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/06/29/ap-associated-press-north-korea-bureau_n_887147.html#
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fineartgalaxy
Speaking from the heart, always.
07:55 AM on 06/30/2011
Do they think they can really be a free press bureau, in North Korea? Why bother with a bureau in North Korea? Let's see how long they last before the NK government boots them out.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
repugnicansfearme
Here endeth the lesson.
07:38 AM on 06/30/2011
Wow! This seesm like a really good investment! Let's open a news bureau in the most closed and oppressive society in the world. Yeah man! The reporters can all write books in a couple of years about how they were all suspected of being CIA agents, followed, beaten, surveilled, etc. Brilliant! And the stories they will cover! Meeting sources and others in coffee shops to break the news to the world. Here's some news for you-- you won't be able to cover sh** in this sh**hole, so why waste the rent?