Story highlights
CNN attends pro-wrestling festival in North Korea in tightly-controlled trip
Behind public spectacle, is an attempt at sports diplomacy
Trip showcases country club, theme park, military might
Minders watch reporters' every move
The crowd cheers as the stars make their way to the ring for first pro-wrestling bout North Korea has seen in almost 20 years.
Back then, we’re told the spectators thought the action was real.
Now, they’re more savvy, and appreciative, clapping loudly as the former American stars execute their maneuvers during the two-day contest in Pyongyang.
“We’re here to do something bigger and better,” pro-wrestler Jon “Strongman” Anderson roars backstage.
He could also be alluding to the purpose of the trip, an attempt at “sports diplomacy” by Antonio Inoki, a Japanese former pro-wrestler turned politician.
He’s organized the trip at a time of thawing relations between Japan and North Korea over the issue of abductions of Japanese citizens in the 1970s and ’80s. Recent talks opened the door for further investigations by North Korea and a report is expected in the next few weeks.
The behind-the-scenes diplomacy is a long way from the public spectacles staged during this mixed martial arts festival.
The stars of the show – including former NFL star Bob “The Beast” Sapp – join arm-wrestling and tug-of-war competitions with the Pyongyang locals, some who seem more than a little bemused.
Tightlycontrolled
International media has joined the tightly-controlled tour, which took us from the birthplace of the nation’s founder, Kim Il Sung, to the pet projects of its current leader, Kim Jong Un.
A bus ride seemed to take us back in time as we passed fields where locals where working, tending the soil with their hands.
Our destination was a country club where, for the equivalent of $10 an hour, locals can ride horses in an indoor arena. It’s a past time only for Pyongyang’s elite. The country’s per capita income is estimated to be around $1,000 to $2,000 a year, putting such pursuits out of reach of most people.
However, outside Pyongyang there’s a place where anyone can see the country’s most impressive monuments, without having to visit each one.
It’s a theme park that displays North Korea’s landmarks in miniature. Many of them could be found in Pyongyang. Indeed, visitors could even see the real-life Tower of Juche from the park.
The original, built on the shore of the River Taedong, is named after the political ideology formed by the country’s Eternal President Kim Il Sung, that “man is the master of everything and decides everything.”
Then there’s the Victorious Fatherland Liberation War Museum and more lessons in North Korean history.
We were shown a video that shared the country’s perspective on the Korean War (1950-53). It was started by an attack from United States, the video declared. When I questioned this, the guide replied, “That’s what you’re taught. This is the truth.”
North Korea’s military might and successes were paraded in other displays. We were shown a U.S. Navy research ship – the USS Pueblo – that was seized in 1968 for allegedly spying on the DPRK.
Washington claims it never entered North Korean waters.
Photos showing planes and helicopters that had crashed in North Korean territory were also displayed, including a graphic image of a dead U.S. soldier.
Asked why it was necessary to display the photo, the guide replied: “Dead pilot? Because it shows that anybody who violates our sovereignty and intrudes on us to commit espionage must be killed like this.”
Pet projects
Since taking power after his father’s death in 2011, Kim Jong Un has sought to make his mark on the country and its population of some 25 million people.
He’s launched a number of pet projects, spending millions on a new Children’s Hospital and a slide-filled water park in Pyongyang, which we’ve seen firsthand during our trip.
However, outside Pyongyang it’s unclear how far the spending has spread.
North Korea remains a secretive state, accused by a United Nations panel of widespread human rights abuses, charges that the country denies.
Minders have watched our every move, from the moment we landed in Pyongyang to the bus ride to our hotel, which sits on its own island. The tour has followed pre-approved routes; we’re shown what they want us to see.
So far, that has been impressive infrastructure for a country that’s struggling to feed its own people, and that has erected an almost unassailable boundary between it and the outside world.
Hilary Whiteman in Hong Kong contributed to this report.