AntiUS posters and souvenirs vanish from view
IN the wake of Kim Jong Un’s summit with US President Donald Trump, antiAmerican souvenirs once sold on the North Korean side of the Demilitarised Zone have disappeared from gift shop shelves, Western tour operators say.
Among more generic gifts like ginseng, a North Korean shop on the tourist route to the fortified border between the two Koreas usually sold stamps, postcards and other souvenirs attacking the United States.
‘‘They’re always very popular, not very subtle, and, as of now, have all been removed,’’ Koryo Tours general manager Simon Cockerell said.
Staff were unlikely to remove the items unless instructed, he said, and the removal follows Kim’s declaration of an end to testing of nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles while focusing on developing North Korea’s economy.
It is the latest sign of a change in tone by Pyongyang, where tour operators said in May antiAmerican posters had mostly given way to less political messages.
Kim met Trump in Singapore on June 12, amid a flurry of diplomatic activity by the reclusive North Korean leader.
They signed a statement that was light on details, but agreed to work to establish ‘‘new’’ ties with each other. The two nations’ enmity dates from the 19501953 Korean War that killed hundreds of thousands and devastated the Korean peninsula.
As one of the most visible legacies of the war, the DMZ has become a tourist attraction in both North and South Korea.
‘‘We had a group go down to the DMZ from Pyongyang three days after the summit held in Singapore where we noticed the change in what was being sold to tourists at the gift shop,’’ a tour manager at Young Pioneer Tours, Rowan Beard, said.
‘‘They’ve shifted the focus from antiAmericanism to improving agriculture, sports and boosting the local economy.’’
North Korean propaganda posters are perhaps best known for their antiAmerican messages, but they have also featured themes such as agriculture and science.
‘‘It’s not just at the DMZ, all the antiAmerican posters I usually see around Kim Il Sung Square and at shops [in Pyongyang], they’ve all just gone,’’ Beard said.
‘‘I’ve never seen them completely disappear before.’’