storm corps
The Rodong Sinmun newspaper reported on Sept. 13, 2024, that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un had supervised drills by combat personnel during a tour of operational and training sites of special forces in the Korean People’s Army on Sept. 11. The unit in question is presumed to belong to the XI Corps, known as the “Storm Corps.” (Rodong Sinmun, News 1)

North Korean authorities are conducting household inspections of wired broadcast equipment across multiple provinces following the conclusion of the ninth Workers’ Party of Korea (WPK) congress, in what analysts see as a coordinated push to reinforce ideological control, a Daily NK source said Monday.

A source in South Hamgyong province told Daily NK that neighborhood watch unit leaders in Hamhung received instructions in late February to alert households without functioning broadcast equipment to take corrective action before inspections began. Neighborhood watch unit leaders, neighborhood office workers and people’s committee officials have since been conducting door-to-door checks to verify that each household has a wired speaker installed and that it is receiving transmissions without interference.

Wired broadcast systems serve as a primary propaganda tool in North Korea, transmitting information about the supreme leader’s activities and state policies directly into private homes. All households are required by law to have a speaker installed. Broadcasts typically run from 5 a.m. to 10 p.m., ensuring that North Korean people receive state messaging from the moment they wake until they go to sleep.

The source said the timing is directly linked to the recently concluded Ninth Party Congress. “The purpose is to instill the party’s policies and lines decided at the congress into the people,” the source said. The Rodong Sinmun newspaper published an editorial on March 2 underscoring the need to study congress documents deeply, describing ideological preparation as the essential first step toward achieving the goals of the new five-year plan.

Resentment grows as households bear the cost

Despite the mandatory nature of the system, actual listenership is low. The source noted that in practice, fewer than one or two out of every five households actively tune in. Many people had not even realized their equipment was broken until inspections were announced, prompting a last-minute scramble to repair or replace units.

The financial burden has fueled resentment. Replacement speakers cost between 15,000 and 23,000 North Korean won (approximately $0.70 to $1.10) per unit — enough to purchase more than 2 kilograms of corn. For economically struggling households, the expense is significant. “We have to spend money on equipment for a broadcast nobody listens to anyway,” one person was quoted as saying. Others called for the state to provide replacement units free of charge, arguing that if the authorities want people to listen, they should bear the cost.

Households that fail inspections face public shaming, and the entire neighborhood watch unit risks collective punishment, which is the primary reason people comply despite their frustrations.

The inspections have also been confirmed in North Hamgyong province. A source there said checks are underway in Chongjin and in rural neighborhood watch units as well. “People are already being put through study sessions at the organizational level right after the congress ended,” the source said. “Now they’re being told to hear the same content at home through the broadcast. Nobody welcomes this.”

North Korean authorities are expected to continue using broadcasts, document study sessions and lectures to repeatedly reinforce ninth party congress decisions in the weeks ahead, maintaining tight ideological control over the population.

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