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Most N Koreans unaware of NY Phil
concert: report
Showbiz
Desk
SEOUL—Most North Koreans were unaware of or uninterested in the New York
Philharmonic’s historic concert in Pyongyang last week despite the huge
media attention outside the closed communist nation, a report said
Monday. Under a deal with the organisers, North Korea agreed to
broadcast the performance — an extremely rare cultural exchange between
the two hostile nations — live on domestic television.
The Daily NK, a Seoul-based website reporting on North Korea, quoted
residents living outside the capital as saying they had not known about
the event even after the orchestra’s February 26 performance. The
website is run partly by defectors and often quotes sources inside the
North. One source said: “A majority of the citizens were not even aware
that such a performance was held. It was introduced in a very brief
article in the Rodong Shinmun (party newspaper) so the civilians did not
show any interest.”
Another resident said the North’s energy crisis might have made it hard
to watch the performance on TV, even if people had known about it. The
resident said: “The supply of (mains) electricity is insecure at 6 in
the evening... even if they had known about the performance, who tries
to watch TV at that time of night by using a battery?” The orchestra
performed works by Dvorak and Gershwin and also the North Korean and US
anthems, in the heart of a nation which US President George W. Bush once
labelled part of an “axis of evil.”
Officials at Seoul’s unification ministry, which handles relations with
the North, could not estimate how many North Koreans watched the event.
“On top of 1,500 selected Pyongyang citizens (at the venue), some of the
citizens who own television sets could have watched the New York
Philharmonic’s performance,” a ministry official told AFP on condition
of anonymity. |