Thursday 25 January 2018

An Intimate Look At North Korean Life (27 Pics)

Eric Lafforgue is the photographer behind these revealing photos of life in North Korea and it is amazing to see.

Without electricity, daily life would look bad. So they wanted it deleted

Bathing in the river is common and portrays poverty.
Subways double as a bomb shelter.
Children working and collecting materials outside, an image North Korea forbids as it depicts poverty.
They even work outside in the fields during hard, economic times.
Cars are new to the region and pretty rare, which is why children still play in the streets.
Depictions of wealth are forbidden.
A street vendor outside. The government requested Lafforgue not to use flash, saying it would scare the people.
The government forbids pictures of soldiers relaxing.
Worker safety, what's that?
The government allows photos of the animals performing, but not the crowd watching. Maybe because soldiers make up the whole audience.
Shopping at supermarkets is reserved for the elite. Even then, the selection is barren, although the stores still stock Evian.
Depictions of homelessness is forbidden.
Pictures of statues from behind are forbidden.
The government does not allow pictures of its army.
North Korea presents a strong image of the army to its citizens. Having its soldiers do menial labor goes against this image.
A grey market exists in the carts that sell candy or cigarettes.
Officials attempt to maintain building exteriors, but even then, life looks bleak.
People pick grass from the park for food and North Korea hates that image.
Photos of anything that doesn't work are forbidden. Here, riders push a broken bus.
North Korea didn’t like the image that a soldier sleeping in public presented to the world.

A rural bathroom’s cistern shows austere life in the country.
Public transportation is rare and underdeveloped, so you’ll even see soldiers hitchhiking.
Pictures of malnutrition are banned.
North Koreans required to attend various monuments during the Kimjongilia festival, a festival for flowers named after former dictator Kim Jong-il.
Brooms are never to be placed at the base of official statues.
Power outages are common. When they happen, such as in this art gallery, officials blame the American embargo.

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