Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

North Korean tour shows human face

- SUZANNE SIMONOT suzanne.simonot@news.com.au

A GOLD Coast company is giving intrepid travellers a chance to explore the most mysterious and controvers­ial place on earth: North Korea.

Known as the Hermit Kingdom, the secretive Communist dictatorsh­ip has a long history of shutting out the rest of the world and is as closed and tightly controlled as ever under the leadership of Kim Jong-un.

That hasn’t stopped independen­t Coast company Travel Masters from guiding small groups of curious locals on bespoke tours of North Korea every August for the past eight years.

Managing director Neil Kirby led the 2016 and 2017 tours and will return to North Korea again in August 2018.

He said the tours were a reminder of the common bond of humanity, whatever political views people hold.

“People’s biggest misconcept­ion is that it’s a Truman Show-style environmen­t where everything’s staged for you, that you do exactly what you’re told to do, that you will go where you are told to go and that couldn’t be any further from the truth,” he said.

“We have a lot of interactio­n with the Northern Koreans. Our itinerary has been designed in associatio­n with them and we can make spot changes depending on the environmen­t. They are very wary, very suspicious of westerners which does cause a few problems but a lot of them are very curious and they will approach us and they want to know more about our culture, they want to listen to our music, they want to hear about our families. It’s a very warm – as far as the general public – a very warm place.”

One of the world’s most inaccessib­le and least-visited countries, North Korea is surrounded by three of the world’s great powers – China, Russia and Japan.

Conditions for tourists are comfortabl­e but austere, with significan­t limits on what they can and can’t do.

Mr Kirby said the 13-day tours were subject to change but usually saw travellers fly from Brisbane to Guangzhou, in China, and on to Shanghai before crossing the border into North Korea by rail from Dandong. The travellers are met by two government tour guides who stay with them for the next five days until they fly out of Pyongyang Internatio­nal Airport to Beijing on Koryo Air – the world’s only one-star airline.

Mr Kirby said the tours appealed to experience­d, older travellers and retired couples.

“We get a lot of retired couples looking for interestin­g and memorable travel experience­s who want to see the country for themselves.”

The tours run in August to coincide with Liberation Day National Holiday, which commemorat­es the Korean defeat over the Japanese.

Mr Kirby said North Korea was home to beautiful mountain ranges, incredible monuments and artefacts.

“Most people are surprised to see that North Korea has a history that dates beyond the Korean War,” he said.

 ?? Picture: SUPPLIED ?? Local travel agent Neil Kirby in North Korea.
Picture: SUPPLIED Local travel agent Neil Kirby in North Korea.
 ?? Picture: SUPPLIED ?? Neil Kirby with North Korean tour guides.
Picture: SUPPLIED Neil Kirby with North Korean tour guides.

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