Monday 7 September 2015

FIONA BRUCE WELCOMES BBC ANNOUNCEMENT TO BROADCAST INTO NORTH KOREA

FIONA BRUCE WELCOMES BBC ANNOUNCEMENT TO BROADCAST INTO NORTH KOREA

Fiona Bruce MP, Co-Chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on North Korea, has today welcomed the announcement by the BBC to set up a daily broadcasting programme into North Korea.

Fiona Bruce MP saidThis is a hugely positive development, and follows lengthy campaigning by Members of Parliament and others, and it is heartening that the BBC has listened to calls over the past few years to engage with the oppressed people of North Korea in this way. North Korea is the most persecuted country on earth; its human rights violations are without parallel in the 21st century – as documented in the recent UN Commission of Inquiry chaired by Mr Justice Kirby – with hundreds of thousands of its own people incarcerated in concentration camps, many for speaking even briefly in opposition to their government.

‘The example of unfettered free speech, and the picture of an outside world, which the BBC has offered to oppressed societies across decades is unparalleled, and has had real impact in how helping to change them. As we have heard from testimonies of those who lived in the Soviet Union, East Germany, Romania and Burma – broadcasting into those countries from the BBC encouraged and inspired millions during their darkest days to understand what a free society looks like, and educated many for future leadership.

‘Over recent years advancements in new technologies mean that increasingly the information blockade in North Korea which has enabled the Government there to keep a stranglehold on their people’s understanding and thought-processes is cracking – and broadcasting by the BBC has the potential to make this crack a huge fissure – let us hope it is the beginning of the end of over sixty years of suffering for the North Korean people.’



 Fiona Bruce MP, House of Commons Speeches, North Korea:

2.    21st October 2013, included: ‘I think that we would all accept the importance of the BBC’s role as a key instrument of soft power in promoting universal values—human rights, the rule of law and democracy—and would accept that, at its best, the BBC World Service is a beacon of hope and a voice of freedom for the oppressed throughout the world. Broadcasting into North Korea would enable the people there who are victims of the most egregious and repressive regime in the world to know that they are not forgotten.
‘I hope that Members will forgive me if I remind them for a moment of the atrocities that occur in North Korea, and of why it is so important for us to shatter the wall of communication isolation that has afflicted the North Korean people for well over three generations. There are beginning to be cracks in that wall, largely owing to the advancement of technology. I think it important for the BBC to be at the forefront of that, rather than lagging behind.

Only last week our media reported that humans were being used as guinea pigs in North Korea, and that whole families were being placed in what were effectively glass boxes so that chemical weapons could be tested. That is cruelty beyond imagination, but it is just one example of what is happening in that country. People are being steamrollered to death, children are being starved to death, and thousands more are wandering the streets without parents. The children of prisoners are being treated as prisoners from birth. Hundreds of thousands are being held in gulags, many simply because of their beliefs or for making a cursory statement against the regime. Many are literally worked to death in prison factories, sleeping at their machines. A vast number of people are starving. Aid is being misappropriated at borders, never reaching those for whom it is intended. Those who succeed in escaping—which is rare—may lose their lives in the process, and three generations of their families may be threatened with imprisonment, perhaps for life. In short, they are the most persecuted people on earth.

Surely we should use our soft power through the BBC World Service to uphold human rights, democracy and the rule of law, and to develop this nation into one that we would see as habitable for human beings, not the nation we know of today. The cost of that would be a fraction of the £100 million lost from the BBC through the digital media initiative, not to mention the high celebrity salaries and executive pay-offs.
The all-party group held a meeting some months ago with Peter Horrocks, director of global news, including the World Service, and he kindly agreed to look into this suggestion. I contacted the Foreign and Commonwealth Office some time later and received a letter in response in March 2013 from the Minister of State, my right hon. Friend the Member for East Devon (Mr Swire). He confirmed that Mr Horrocks had

“agreed to look into the suggestions that the group made in more detail. I understand that this work is ongoing. The BBC has committed to updating the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and the APPG once this work has been completed. I do not want to prejudice that update and look forward to hearing more from Mr Horrocks on this in due course.”’

3.    16th December 2013, included: ‘Given that a major weapon in ending Stalin’s reign of terror was the role that this country played by broadcasting the BBC World Service and breaking the Soviet information blockade—the same has been done more recently with the Burmese information blockade—and given the Foreign Secretary’s role in setting the World Service’s strategic objectives, will the Minister consider extending the BBC World Service to the Korean peninsula?’ 


4.    14th December 2014, included: ‘in the UK Parliament, MPs we continue to press for the BBC World Service to broadcast to you in both Korean and English languages’ http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201415/cmhansrd/cm141218/debtext/141218-0003.htm#14121849000514