Summary
16 June 2010
It's almost impossible for most North Koreans to follow
their team's progress in the World Cup because the media is very tightly controlled there. Live match
coverage1 is unlikely during the tournament.
Reporter:
John Sudworth
ReportNorth Korea, of course, hasn't sent any fans to South Africa. Such are
the restrictions2 it places on freedom of movement that
there is no such thing as a North Korean tourist. And the single, government-run, TV channel rarely broadcasts live international games, perhaps because it risks allowing pictures of people protesting against the country's human rights record
onto the airwaves. But citizens who do have access to a TV set -
ownership is patchy outside the capital Pyongyang - probably will get to see the games,
albeit3 in recorded form.
The North Korean leader is also, it seems, taking an interest in the progress of the team. According to officials from the North Korean Football Association, Kim Jong-il has given them
in-depth guidance and proposed "
tactics most relevant for the characteristics of Korean players."
If they do receive
a humiliating drubbing it might just mean that the TV schedulers suddenly
can't find room for the games after all.