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North Korean Government
Joins Twitter, YouTube
August 20, 2010
North
Korea has joined two popular social networking websites, using them to
expand its propaganda against the South.
Using one of its government websites, Pyongyang announced that it now
has accounts on Twitter and YouTube.
The Twitter account has acquired thousands of followers since it was
established Thursday. It is not clear who they are, however, since most
North Koreans are barred from using the site and the South has also
blocked access.
South Korean officials have also reminded Internet users that it is
illegal to communicate with the North.
South Korean newspapers reported Wednesday that the North's initial
postings praised North Korean leader Kim Jong Il and slammed South Korea
and the United States.
Nevertheless,
the United States has welcomed North Korea to the global networks and
urged Pyongyang to allow all its citizens use them.
State Department spokesman Philip Crowley used his own Twitter account
to announce the U.S. position. He wrote, "We use Twitter to connect to
inform and to debate. We welcome North Korea to the networked world, but
is it prepared to allow its citizens to be connected as well?"
The YouTube and Twitter campaigns are seen as North Korean retaliation
against South Korean radio broadcasts criticizing the Pyongyang regime.
Seoul began the broadcasts after an international probe concluded that
North Korea torpedoed a South Korean warship, the Cheonan, on March 26.
The North has dismissed the investigation's findings as a fabrication by
South Korea and the United States. |