From his office in Seoul, former North Korean soldier Lim Young-sun runs a website offering a rare glimpse of state television in the North to show what the country he fled two decades ago is really like.
Lim’s Unification Broadcasting (SPTV) streams Korean Central Television, a risky business in Seoul where disseminating North Korean propaganda could see him fall foul of South Korea’s tough National Security Law.
While the site (sptv.co.kr), the only one of its kind in the South, so far has an audience just in the thousands, Lim has a dream of attracting millions of viewers curious about life on the other side of the last Cold War frontier.
“I started live streaming three years ago mainly to let people here witness what North Korea is really like,” Lim, 47, told AFP.
North Korean television is relayed by satellite to most of Asia, the Middle East and Africa. But its terrestrial signal south of the tense border is jammed by Seoul.
While some South Koreans have been arrested for posting North Korean news, SPTV appears to be tolerated, though under close surveillance by the security authorities.
“It’s not like we’ve been approved by the government, but they simply turn a blind eye to us in order to create a favorable atmosphere for unification,” he said.
South Korean government officials admit the authorities appear to be tolerating Lim’s business.
“It’s matter of judgement by security authorities, but SPTV is alive so far,” said a spokesman at the unification ministry which handles cross-border affairs.
Lim, a former North Korean army first lieutenant, said he fled to China after being involved in anti-government activities in the North and arrived in South Korea in 1993.
“When the two Koreas are unified, the South will have to embrace the North and to do that, people here must be familiar with the culture and lifestyle of North Koreans,” he said.
SPTV streams North Korean television for seven hours a day from 0800 GMT and edited footage is also posted online the next day.
The content is largely propaganda eulogizing North Korean leader Kim Jong-il or extolling his leadership and reports of military affairs in the secretive communist state.
News and other programs are heavy with detailed accounts of Kim’s field trips to various factories, farms and military units, stinging commentary attacking Seoul and Washington, or praising the virtue of hard work and blind allegiance and patriotism.
Though little publicized, daily viewership of SPTV’s live streaming service and other content on its website can reach up to 15,000, sometimes jamming its relatively small-capacity server, Lim said.
The audience for SPTV seems to be mainly defectors and researchers on North Korean studies, and sometimes South Korean college students.
“At first, the government was worried that some South Korean supporters of the Kim Jong-il regime would abuse my service, but ironically, many of them become anti-Kim after watching,” Lim said.
“They said the scenes of North Korean residents so frantically worshipping Kim seemed ridiculous, to the point it became impossible to agree with the ideology.”
Lim relies on small monthly donations of between 1,000 and 10,000 won (90 cents to $9) from a few hundred supporters to help fund his shoestring operation. (AFP)