Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

An ancient land of startling m

South Korea is a riddle to many, but an example of what can be achieved in spite of incredible adversity travel2014

- KEVIN RITCHIE

THEY call it the most dangerous place on earth – and yet it’s a tourist attraction. Welcome to Panmunjom, home of the Joint Security Area (JSA) in the Demilitari­sed Zone that cuts the Korean peninsula in two and has done so since 1953. The DMZ is 250km long and 4km wide, but here in Panmunjom there is no boundary, only a concrete slab buried in the ground about halfway down the length of each of the bright blue prefab buildings.

On either side are imposing multiple storey buildings. On the North Korean (or Democratic People’s Republic of Korea) side, it’s called Panmungak and looks squarely onto the Freedom House Pagoda in the Republic of Korea (or South Korean) side.

Standing vigil are five Republic of Korea Army (Roka) soldiers, clad in old style US army helmets, pilot sunglasses and serious attitudes. They stand in a tae-kwon do pose, pistols holstered at their sides, glaring at the sole Korea People’s Army (KPA) soldier, looking like a Soviet era cast- off, standing forlornly next to the pillars above the steps of Panmungak.

It’s frightenin­g – and hysterical – all at once. The air of surreality is compounded by the presence of souvenir shop at the JSA visitors’ centre a couple of hundred metres back to the south. The JSA used to be exactly that, a joint area where soldiers of the last remnants of the Cold War could interact under the watchful gaze of internatio­nal monitors, but a series of brutal beatings, defections and even the slaying of two US army officers in the 1970s put paid to all that.

Our guide, a young Roka conscript sergeant, warns us to take our name tags off, take our lenses out of our camera bags and leave the bags in the bus. The KPA troops will be watching our ever move, he tells us, we dare not provoke them.

It’s melodramat­ic, slightly toned down from the old days when tourists would be asked to sign a waiver acknowledg­ing they were entering a deadly dangerous area and could die, but still very real as we head off in an army bus to Checkpoint 3, which overlooks the “Bridge of No Return” and the stump of the tree whose felling led to two dead US officers and sparked one of the most intense Cold War spikes as the US went to Defcon 3 across the whole world while their soldiers mounted a full-on military operation to cut it down.

The theatre continues at the Dora Observator­y. Here you’ll find more luxury tour buses than outside Istanbul’s Blue Mosque. You can stand on the viewing deck and look out at North Korea as Roka troops, this time in full combat gear, body armour and assault rifles, stand within convenient range for the obligatory selfies. Chuck in the cartoon dictator, who looks like he’s just walked off the set of an Austin Powers’ spoof, and it is truly, deeply surreal.

But it isn’t. The tension is very real. Away from the tourists, the Roka soldiers conduct manoeuvres alongside the DMZ, as across the border the North Koreans threaten to conduct more nuclear tests.

The DMZ itself is rumoured to be the most heavily mined area in the world. Well within artillery range to the south, lies South Korea’s capital, Seoul – a city that is at once custodian of a three-and-a-half millennia old culture cradled within a city that is brand new, skyscraper office blocks giving way to equally tall apartment buildings on either side of the Han River, stretching away as far as the eye can see.

In the CBD, you’ll come across the Korea you already know, the corporate head offices of manufactur­ing giants LG, Hyundai and Samsung, with its D’Light store showcasing the latest advances and selling some of them too (although the same items are cheaper in Joburg).

The Gangnam district, home of the K-Pop phenomenon and that chubby little lad that the world started mocking before dancing to him and his eponymous Gangnam Style.

There are pubs aplenty, for the Koreans are incredibly sociable; craft beer houses interspers­ed with genuine Korean restaurant­s with ubiquitous soju or Korean rice spirit that is often drunk, not as a chaser but as a beer mix and the usual fast food joints hawking everything from pizzas to burgers and fried chicken.

Seoul is a city that never seems to sleep. There are 10 million people living there and another 12.5 million in Incheon, the satellite city to the west that now hosts Incheon Internatio­nal Airport the main gateway to the country, but the overwhelmi­ng feeling is of calm.

Traffic often gridlocks, horrifical­ly by Joburg standards, but no one is getting out of their cars with baseball bats or sitting on their hooters. There are bus routes on the highways that only buses use (another bizarre phenomenon for Joburgers), but the real alternativ­e is the seamless integrated public transport system that incorporat­es the undergroun­d railway, the buses and the orange Hyundai Sonata taxis, all of which take one precharged card.

Seoul is impressive for many reasons; for one, its phoenix-like emergence from the ravages of the Korean War. After the armistice was signed in 1953, the whole of South Korea was in ruins, the children were starving, there were no natural resources to speak of, only its people. Today it’s the eighth biggest economy in the world – and it’s still in the grip of a very real civil war.

In downtown Seoul there’s a piece of the old Berlin Wall that once separated West from East Germany, a silent reminder that Korea remains the last bastion of the Cold War.

In Incheon, the talk is of boosting tourism through a world first, a medical theme park, letting the entire family enjoy themselves while you have your tumours dealt with.

For the older Americans there’s even battlefiel­d tourism thrown in, reliving old triumphs while having the associated aches and pains of old age attended to. If you don’t have the time, just having a couple of hours layover at Incheon Internatio­nal is enough, the medics will come to you and whisk you off to some of the most advanced medical institutes in the world and have you back in time for your connecting flight.

It’s another example of a country and a culture that’s a riddle to many, but an example to everyone all of what just can be achieved in spite of the most incredible adversity.

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? CARTOON FIGURE: A magazine with a cartoon of US president Barack Obama and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un at a bookstore in Seoul, South Korea. The red letters on the magazine read ‘Hacker War’.
PICTURE: AP CARTOON FIGURE: A magazine with a cartoon of US president Barack Obama and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un at a bookstore in Seoul, South Korea. The red letters on the magazine read ‘Hacker War’.
 ?? PICTURE: EPA ?? PREPARED: South Korean marines take part in the annual amphibious operations during the ‘Hoguk’ exercise against a possible attack from North Korea, in Pohang, 360km south-east of Seoul, South Korea.
PICTURE: EPA PREPARED: South Korean marines take part in the annual amphibious operations during the ‘Hoguk’ exercise against a possible attack from North Korea, in Pohang, 360km south-east of Seoul, South Korea.

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