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The main reason behind the increase in propaganda investments appears to be the need to counter the creeping influence of the modern world. "It isn't quite realized in the West how much of a threat the penetration of ideas is. The regime of Kim Jong-il sees it as a social problem that could bring down the state," says Brian Myers, a North Korean expert at Dongseo University in South Korea. Since the late 1990s, a subtle influx of entirely new products and ideas - hence destabilizing for the regime - has been entering from the borders with China and South Korea. Some analysts have described this as "soft globalization". Pocket radios, CDs, videos, cellphone signals from China and practically any other product of the western cultural industry are feeding a rich form of underground trade. Smuggling appears to be on the increase in defiance of tough penalties imposed by the regime: for example, those caught listening to broadcasts from abroad risk being sentenced to forced labour. http://www.asianews.it/index.php?l=en&art=8192&size=A |