Toronto Star

REVOLUTION IN THE SKY

Meet one of the ‘balloon warriors’ bombarding North Korea,

- CHOE SANG-HUN THE NEW YORK TIMES

POCHEON, SOUTH KOREA— Lee Min-bok’s house, fashioned out of two shipping containers, is monitored by 12 police surveillan­ce cameras. Dogs bark at any stranger walking up the dirt path. Plaincloth­es detectives check his mailbox and tag along wherever he goes to protect him from possible assassins sent by North Korea, which openly threatens to kill him. But that has not stopped him. On days when the wind blows to the north, Lee, 59, ventures out with his second-hand truck, hauling a large hydrogen tank to the border with North Korea, an hour’s drive away. There, he fills dozens of sevenmetre and 12-metre barrel-shaped balloons with the gas and lets them drift away.

The balloons carry special payloads: radio sets, onedollar bills, computer memory sticks and, above all, tens of thousands of leaflets bearing messages that Lee says will debunk the personalit­y cult surroundin­g Kim Jong-un, the youthful leader of North Korea.

“My leaflets are a poison for Kim Jong-un’s regime, because they help North Koreans wake up to his lies,” Lee said.

Sailing up to 5,000 metres above sea level, Lee’s balloons waft across the world’s most heavily guarded border, high enough that North Korean soldiers have little chance of shooting them down. Then his patented “timer” devices click, unfastenin­g vinyl bundles. Leaflets fall out like snowflakes over the North, where Kim struggles to keep his people under a total informatio­n blackout, blocking the Internet and prefixing all radio and TV sets to receive only his government’s propaganda-filled broadcasts.

In South Korea, there are 50 “balloon warriors,” many of them defectors from the North like Lee, who seek to breach the wall with leaflets.

Lee is their godfather. When he started floating large balloons in 2005, with others following suit, he received credit — and blame — for reigniting the leaflet battle the two Korean armies had waged until it

“My leaflets are a poison for Kim Jong-un’s regime, because they help North Koreans wake up to his lies.” LEE MIN-BOK BALLOON ACTIVIST

petered out with the end of the Cold War. He now launches 700 to 1,500 balloons a year, each carrying 30,000 to 60,000 leaflets.

To anyone who will listen, Lee preaches that the best way to reform North Korea and end its nuclear weapons program is to subvert Kim’s government from inside the country. And the surest way to do that, he says, is to infiltrate it with outside informatio­n through leaflets, radio broadcasts and DVDs filled with South Korean TV dramas and smuggled through the North’s border with China.

“Leaflets are the cheapest and safest,” Lee said. “No border guards, no radar, no radio jamming signals can stop them.”

While some defectors claim to have fled after reading leaflets or listening to outside radio, critics say leaflets do little more than provoke Pyongyang. It calls them an act of war and threatens to direct an artillery attack at their launching sites near the border. Balloonist­s have clashed with South Korean villagers worried about becoming targets of Northern retaliatio­n. In 2011, a man was arrested on a charge of plotting to assassinat­e a balloon activist at the behest of North Korea. Three years later, the North directed anti-aircraft fire into the South Korean sky, trying to down one of Lee’s balloons. This year, it began retaliatin­g in kind, floating leaflets to the south that called President Park Geun-hye a snake and a prostitute.

Andrei Lankov, a professor at Kookmin University in Seoul who grew up in the former Soviet Union and studied at a North Korean university, was skeptical about the impact of leaflets on the North.

“One leaflet is not going to change views of a person who is exposed to daily official propaganda,” he said. “However, it would be a mistake to stop the campaign now. That is what the North Korean authoritie­s demand, and it is not a good time to show weakness.”

Lee said his own story is proof that a leaflet can change a North Korean’s life. He was a biologist at a state-run agricultur­al research institute in 1990 when he picked up a leaflet from the South while on a trip near the border. It made, what was to him, the shocking claim that the Korean War started in 1950 with a North Korean invasion. In the North, he said, the government had taught people to hate the Americans by endlessly reiteratin­g that the U.S. and its South Korean puppets started the war. Lee did his own research, asking old veterans and people who had lived near the border when the war started, and became convinced the leaflet was right.

Lee fled the North in 1991 and, after travelling through China and Russia, arrived in the South in 1995. Today, sending balloons is Lee’s full-time job. He finances his operation with cash he earns from lectures he gives at churches and elsewhere.

Lee said his obsession with leaflets made him neglect his family. The South Korean wife he married in 1996 divorced him. He is now married to a Chinese woman who is far more supportive.

“You need a partner in this work,” Lee said. “You don’t know when the right wind will blow and your wife is the only helping hand you can get when you have to rush out with balloons.”

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 ?? JEAN CHUNG PHOTOS/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Lee Min-bok, a North Korean defector, prepares to release balloons with bags of leaflets to North Korea near the Demilitari­zed Zone in Pocheon, South Korea.
JEAN CHUNG PHOTOS/THE NEW YORK TIMES Lee Min-bok, a North Korean defector, prepares to release balloons with bags of leaflets to North Korea near the Demilitari­zed Zone in Pocheon, South Korea.
 ??  ?? Lee Min-bok sends radios and leaflets across the border using balloons and a “timer” device that unfastens the bundles.
Lee Min-bok sends radios and leaflets across the border using balloons and a “timer” device that unfastens the bundles.

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