The Star Malaysia - Star2

A spy gone north

Making waves at the United Nations is a new documentar­y about a retired Danish cook who managed to infiltrate North Korea.

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ULRICH Larsen can’t even explain to himself what made him take up a double life as a North Korean spy.

“I don’t really know myself. I’ve actually always been a pretty ordinary guy,” says the retired cook who lives in a suburb of Copenhagen, Denmark with his family. Then along came North Korea.

Larsen is the subject of a new documentar­y whose revelation­s have reached all the way to the leaders of the United Nations.

The documentar­y, Muldvarpen: Undercover i Nordkorea ( The Mole: Undercover in North Korea), made by Mads Brugger, tells of how North Korea’s leaders sought to circumvent UN sanctions by offering weapons and drugs in exchange for oil and cash.

Larsen’s interest in the country started after he watched a documentar­y film called Det Rode Kapel ( The Red Chapel) – which was widely criticised in North Korea. Afterwards, he decided to join the Danish-korean Friendship Associatio­n, although he felt that its members were boring and a bit odd.

Nonetheles­s, though Larsen is pretty quiet, he is soon promoted within the organisati­on.

He winds up meeting the chairman of the Korean Friendship Associatio­n (KFA), a Spaniard with aristocrat­ic roots who is particular­ly committed to North Korea’s cause. Larsen becomes the man’s friend and confidante, and eventually they travel to North Korea together, with the help of Brugger.

Despite the considerab­le risks involved, the meetings are recorded with hidden microphone­s and cameras.

Over the course of a decade, Larsen comes to live a double life that is a secret to everyone, even his wife: He infiltrate­s the KFA, meets a contact person in North Korea’s Ministry of Culture and gradually becomes closer and closer to the North Korean leadership, according to the film.

Ultimately, he and an alleged Scandinavi­an businessma­n – a former member of the Foreign Legion and a cocaine dealer who calls himself “Mr James” – wind up haggling with senior North Koreans over the sale of complex weapon systems and the manufactur­e of drugs, the documentar­y claims. Their plan is to build a

secret factory in Uganda to make weapons and drugs.

Meanwhile, they also hatch a plan to make a million-dollar deal between North Korea, Mr James and a Jordanian oil trader.

All this presumably violates UN sanctions imposed over North Korea’s nuclear and missile programme that expressly ban the trade in weapons and oil with Pyongyang, which has repeatedly

been accused of circumvent­ing the sanctions in recent years.

Brugger’s documentar­y was made in co-production with Norwegian radio NRK, Swedish station SVT and Britain’s BBC. The work recalls The Interview, a Hollywood satire with James Franco and Seth Rogen that tells of a journalist recruited by the CIA to assassinat­e North Korean ruler Kim Jong Un during an interview. The movie led to considerab­le discord with Pyongyang in 2014, and there were threats that cinemas might be attacked.

What’s different in this case is that the documentar­y is not fictional, but shows real meetings and agreements.

Larsen is well aware that he was exposing himself to considerab­le danger. “People are angry, there’s no doubt about that,” he told broadcaste­r DR, conceding that he had definitely annoyed people “and lied an unbelievab­le amount”.

The three-part series has triggered an internatio­nal response.

Denmark and Sweden instructed their UN agencies to inform the United Nations Sanctions Committee about the documentar­y, while both countries’ foreign ministers also said that they were highly concerned about the content of the documentar­y and the activities shown in connection with North Korea.

The broadcaste­r DR reports that Larsen has already received an invitation to meet a UN committee of experts.

Ultimately, it is the Danes who draw the line, according to the documentar­y. “Mr James” goes undergroun­d – otherwise, he would have had to come up with the millions of dollars he promised.

And Larsen, the mole of the documentar­y’s title, comes clean, telling his wife who he kept in the dark for all those years.

He also comes clean to his Spanish mentor at KFA, who ends their contact. Larsen is seen drawing a deep breath in the documentar­y. “Would you like to be a mole again?” Brugger asks.

Not in that exact same way, answers Larsen. But he adds: “You should never say never.” –

 ?? Photos: dpa ?? A new documentar­y by Brugger, in co-production with Norwegian radio NRK, Swedish station SVT and Britain’s BBC, features Larsen, who is said to have infiltrate­d North Korea. —
Photos: dpa A new documentar­y by Brugger, in co-production with Norwegian radio NRK, Swedish station SVT and Britain’s BBC, features Larsen, who is said to have infiltrate­d North Korea. —
 ??  ?? In this undated handout image from Danish broadcaste­r DR from the documentar­y Muldvarpen, the protagonis­t Larsen is trained in how to use a weapon.
In this undated handout image from Danish broadcaste­r DR from the documentar­y Muldvarpen, the protagonis­t Larsen is trained in how to use a weapon.
 ??  ?? Journalist and documentar­y producer Brugger’s recent film has made waves at the United Nations.
Journalist and documentar­y producer Brugger’s recent film has made waves at the United Nations.

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