North Korea tourism

The Pyongyang Illusion - Foreign Student Vlogs Only Tell Half the Story

In May 2025, 62 Chinese students arrived in Pyongyang to begin their studies at North Korean universities. Their arrival marked only the second intake of Chinese students since North Korea sealed its borders during the Covid-19 pandemic. 

Within this tightly managed reopening, a rare firsthand perspective emerged from a Chinese college student studying in Pyongyang, who documented her daily life on Douyin (China’s TikTok). Operating this account under the name “Keshi,” this self-funded student reportedly paid around $3,000 USD per year in tuition. Her channel offers one of the clearest glimpses into how foreign students live inside North Korea. Unlike western correspondents, barred from reporting freely inside the DPRK, her videos captured classrooms, dormitories and unsupervised outings rarely seen on camera.

LIFE INSIDE THE BUBBLE

What makes Keshi’s videos particularly striking is how ordinary daily life appears in North Korea. In a video posted in early December 2025, she documented the first snowfall in Pyongyang, showing young people shoving snow at one another and engaging in snowball fights – scenes nearly indistinguishable from first-snow rituals in Seoul. The soundtrack used is even more disarming. Playing in the background is “The First Snow” by South Korean boy band, EXO, a song now commonly used in Instagram Reels and TikTok videos to mark the season’s first snowfall, lending the scene a sense of viral familiarity that feels worlds away from expectations of cultural isolation.

Across more than 40 vlogs, Keshi filmed a steady rhythm of daily life that feels strikingly global. She hopped into taxis – one driver even casually streamed the 2015 Chinese historical drama “Nirvana in Fire” during the ride – and filmed herself heading to bowling centers, badminton courts and ice-skating rinks. Her footage showed local crowds lining up, chatting and playing, suggesting spaces that function beyond curated performances for outsiders. Foreigners, however, enjoy unmistakable privileges. She noted that she could skip queues and enter facilities immediately whenever her foreigner identity was made known.

Keshi’s camera wandered into cyber cafes equipped with kiosk systems to reserve seats and stocked with an unexpectedly extensive lineup of western video games, including Call of Duty, DOTA 2, FIFA 11 and Counter Strike 2, among others. Shopping malls, restaurants and cafes appeared no less familiar. She filmed outlets selling Häagen-Dazs ice-cream, Subway sandwiches, Prada products and even the globally popular plush toy, Labubu. In these moments, Pyongyang appeared uncannily like any other consumer city.

Meanwhile, street-level footage revealed steady traffic, including imported luxury vehicles. Clean streets, new residential towers and carefully planned infrastructure also gave parts of Pyongyang the feel of East Asian free economic zones, drawing comparisons to Songdo in Incheon more than to the crumbling cityscapes often imagined abroad. Further, unlike tightly controlled tourist itineraries, Keshi appeared able to vlog casually while walking through the city, echoing earlier accounts of Chinese businessmen moving freely in Rason. Although foreigners frequently pay in U.S. dollars., she showed trips to local markets and rides on public transportation using North Korean won, exchanging currency and navigating spaces usually hidden from visitors.

On campus, Keshi noted the presence of other international students, including Russians, and described classes taught in Korean, Chinese and English, covering subjects like Juche ideology, North Korean and world history, theater studies, economics and linguistics. Dormitories appeared modern, with shared but spacious rooms equipped with elevators and heating, costing about $11 USD per night. She also showed local North Korean classmates dropping by to play guitar and socialize. In addition, the timing of her uploads, closely aligned with seasonal events, suggests near real time posting and indicates that as a foreign student she has access to external networks beyond the domestic intranet within university grounds. She further documented how her university managed holidays, arranging flights and visas centrally, with students required only to pay the cost ($221 USD in January 2025 for airfare to China and visa processing).

MISINFORMATION BY OMISSION

On Chinese social media, videos displaying life in North Korea have been widely interpreted as evidence that life in North Korea is misunderstood, even unfairly maligned, by western media. In the comments beneath Keshi’s videos, viewers often described the channel as their only window into contemporary North Korea. Some Chinese vloggers even argued that North Koreans can travel freely and that poverty, rather than politics, is the main constraint. While factually true in exceptional cases, this framing is misleading, as travel abroad for North Koreans requires extensive political vetting and is restricted to diplomats, trusted traders and officials. Financial means alone are not sufficient. 

Foreign students certainly are not representative of ordinary citizens, not even the privileged group living in Pyongyang. Therefore, though foreigners’ cameras capture authenticity and their experiences are real, they are only revealing life in North Korea within permitted boundaries and are thus not generalizable.

While Keshi’s vlogs offer an enticing look at life in Pyongyang, it’s vital to remember that her "normal" is a carefully maintained exception. For a handful of foreign students, North Korea looks like a playground of lattes, luxury brands, and snowball fights. But for the 25 million people living outside that bubble, the reality is a landscape of total state surveillance and forced silence. While a camera can capture genuine smiles at a bowling alley, it remains blind to the prison camps and systemic hunger that exist just out of frame. While we can appreciate this rare glimpse into a hidden world, we shouldn't mistake a polished stage for the real lives of the people living behind the curtain.

Top Headlines From North Korea - December 2025

Russian TV Rebrands North Korea for Tourists

A fascinating new cultural shift is occurring in Russian media, where North Korea is being rebranded not as a hermit kingdom, but as a model of "sovereignty" and a desirable travel destination. This media campaign highlights the growing soft-power exchange between the two nations, impacting how ordinary citizens view each other.

  • The Narrative: New documentaries and weekly shows like Russian Lessons are portraying Pyongyang as a modern, decisive state to justify the deepening alliance to the Russian public.

  • Tourism Push: The coverage specifically promotes the Wonsan-Kalma beach resort, attempting to normalize North Korea as a vacation spot for Russians cut off from Western travel.

  • Cultural Impact: This rebranding aims to erase the "backward" stereotype of North Korea in the Russian mindset, replacing it with images of clean monuments and "ideal" social order.

Source: 38 North

The home of a North Korean refugee in China

Scammers Exploit North Korean Families Searching for Repatriated Relatives

Families in the northern city of Hyesan are falling victim to cruel scams while trying to locate loved ones who were recently repatriated from China. Driven by the terrifying fear that their relatives have been sent to political prison camps, families are selling their homes and paying thousands of dollars to brokers who promise information but deliver nothing.

  • The Scam: Fraudsters are charging between $6,900 and $13,800 USD (up to 100,000 yuan) to "confirm" if a relative is alive or to "secure their release," but often disappear with the money.

  • The Human Cost: One family reportedly sold their home to raise funds for information about a repatriated relative, ending up homeless and still without answers.

  • The Context: The scams exploit the total information blackout the state maintains regarding the fate of repatriated defectors, weaponizing families' love and fear against them.

Source: DailyNK


Source: UN Human Rights Office of the High Commissioner

UN Official 'Shocked' by Persistence of Prison Camps"

In a statement released this week, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk expressed shock that political prison camps (kwanliso) still operate at such a scale in 2025. The update focuses on the human stories inside these "town-sized" detention centers, where entire families remain imprisoned.

  • Guilt by Association: The report notes that while the "three-generation punishment" rule (imprisoning a defector's parents and children) may be weakening in practice, it is still a terrifying tool of control.

  • Life Inside: Satellite imagery and defector testimony describe camps that resemble towns of up to 40,000 people, complete with schools and factories, but from which "you can never leave."

  • International Plea: The Commissioner emphasized the aging population of victims, including Japanese abductees and South Korean POWs, urging immediate action before the last witnesses pass away.

Source: Japan Forward 



North Korean refugee women in a Bible study with a group in China

Defector Women in China Losing Life Savings to 'Trusted' Locals"

A growing number of North Korean women hiding in China are losing their hard-earned savings to local acquaintances. Because they lack legal status and cannot open bank accounts, they are forced to entrust their cash to Chinese partners or friends, leaving them with no legal recourse when that money is stolen or withheld.

  • The Trap: Women often save money for years to send back to their parents in North Korea or to fund an escape to South Korea, only to have "trusted" guardians deny holding the funds.

  • Specific Incidents: Reports from Jilin and Liaoning provinces detail women losing sums ranging from 10,000 to 25,000 yuan ($1,380–$3,450 USD) with no way to report the theft to the police without risking deportation.

  • Legal Limbo: The stories highlight the extreme fragility of life for undocumented North Koreans, whose "illegal" status makes them perfect targets for financial exploitation.

Source: DailyNK

Top Headlines From North Korea - July 2025

Six North Koreans with 'strong desire' to go back repatriated by South Korea

Source: South Korean Ministry of Unification, 2025

  • South Korea repatriated six North Koreans who drifted into South Korean waters; all consistently wished to return home.

  • Failed efforts to coordinate repatriation persisted for months between South and North Korea. This return is the first under South Korean President Lee Jae-myung, who campaigned on improving inter-Korean ties.

  • Upon their return to North Korea, the six individuals will face extensive interrogation, according to Nam Sung-wook, the former head of the Korea National Strategy Institute think tank.

    Sources: BBC, AP

North Korea bars foreigners from newly opened 'world class' beach resort days after opening

Aerial view of Wonsan-Kalma Coastal Tourist Area

  • Just days after opening with significant fanfare and hosting its "first foreign guest," the Russian Foreign Minister, North Korea's official tourism site announced the massive resort for 20,000 people was "temporarily not receiving foreign tourists."

  • The move dims economic prospects for the resort and Wonsan Kalma Coastal Tourist Zone, which was a major national construction project intended to attract much-needed foreign currency.

  • Analysts cited in the article speculate the ban could be due to a Russian media report that suggested the "local tourists" seen during the official visit were staged, causing embarrassment for the regime.

  • The story provides a glimpse into the unpredictability of state policy and its direct impact on both the country's economic ambitions and the image it projects to the world.

    Sources: BBC, Independent.co.uk

Six American arrested in South Korea for trying to float rice and bibles to North Korea

Heavily guarded Gwanghwa area of South Korea that borders North Korea

  • South Korean police detained six U.S. citizens attempting to float 1,300 plastic bottles filled with rice, $1 bills, USB drives, and Bibles up the coast to North Korea.

  • Since taking office earlier in June, South Korean President Lee suspended anti-North Korea loudspeaker broadcasts on the border and asked activists in the South to stop launching helium balloons with leaflets.

  • North Korea drove South Korean border residents to tears and pleading with their local government officials over a mixture of ghastly and “evil” sounds pointed towards the south over the past several months.

    Sources: NBC News, Reuters, NPR

Justice Department charges North Koreans posing as IT contractors using stolen credentials

  • The Justice Department charged four North Koreans who posed as IT workers using stolen credentials, scamming U.S. companies out of hundreds of thousands of dollars.

  • The reports show a U.S. company unknowingly hired North Korean operative Jong Pong Ju, believing him to be Malaysian IT worker "Bryan Cho."

  • Authorities said that it is not only for financial gain for the North Koreans, but access is used to attempt to steal U.S. secrets as well.

Source: ABC News