Want this question answered?
Yes because north Korea is not Communist, but south Korea is. in south Korea they have absolutely zero freedom of speech.Answer:The previous answer is completely wrong. North Korea is communist and South Korea is a democracy. Most accounts assume that North Korea has almost no freedom of speach, however, much of what we know about North Korea is speculation, since it is the most isolated country in the entire world.
I would guess that most non-North Koreans familiar with the situation would answer "no", mainly because the press is controlled either by the state or the Workers' Party of Korea, and also because of reports that dissenters are sent to political hard labor camps and/or executed.
North Korea Freedom Coalition was created in 2003.
religion sex food freedom of speech no transportaion technology t.v music
No people are not allowed to leave North Korea, they can escape to South Korea, but risk being shot, or if caught trying to escape North Korea they can get heavy punishment, so the only way to get out of North Korea if your North Korean is to escape out of North Korea secretly, and go to South Korea, via another country that can give you asylum.
That would be the samuri.
noo at all .... there is nothing called rights there . all of the people there act like slaves for the impirror and they do whatever he wants like people have no choices in their haircut they do it all of them have the same haircut which the impirror choose ..... cameras are not allowed there
One BIG thing is that North Korea has a dictator, someone wwho forces things, and South Korea has more freedoms and has a President. Mainly, South Korea has more freedom than North Korea.
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The North Korean people are not allowed to leave the country because North Korea is a dictatorship. The government exercises total rule over it's people. There are harsh punishments for anyone who tries to leave the country.
North Korea is a regime which tramples over every fundamental human right that there is, opposing people's rights to free speech, freedom of religion, freedom of association, freedom for petition, freedom from searches and seizures, freedom of movement, freedom from torture, and many others. It is estimated that between 200,000-500,000 North Koreans (1-2% of the overall population) are currently in concentration camps, being brutally tortured.
It represents freedom because if you watch it, that means that you don't care about the threats made in the past and you aren't afraid of them. It also means that you don't care about The Interview being controversial and you can watch it if you want to because it is a free country and that is the very definition of freedom.