South Korea to permit public access to North Korea's Rodong Sinmun

South Korea's unification ministry announced on December 26 that it will take administrative steps to allow public access to the Rodong Sinmun, the main newspaper of North Korea's ruling Workers' Party. The move aims to ease restrictions previously imposed due to concerns over North Korean propaganda. It seeks to uphold the public's right to know and promote inter-Korean exchanges.

On December 26, 2025, South Korea's unification ministry announced in Seoul that the government will implement administrative measures to permit public access to the Rodong Sinmun, the official newspaper of North Korea's ruling Workers' Party. The publication has long been classified as 'special materials' in South Korea, restricting access due to fears it promotes and praises the North Korean regime.

The ministry, along with the National Intelligence Service (NIS) and other agencies, held a consultative meeting that day to review reclassifying the Rodong Sinmun as 'general materials' under NIS guidelines. Participants reached a consensus on the reclassification, and the government plans to begin necessary steps next week, the ministry stated in a press notice.

The decision follows criticism from President Lee Jae Myung, who during last week's unification ministry policy briefing described the ban as treating the public 'as those who can fall for propaganda and agitation' from the North.

Currently, the Rodong Sinmun is available only at designated facilities, such as the ministry's North Korea information center, after verifying the applicant's identity and purpose. Once reclassified, South Koreans will gain easier access to its print version, though online access to the newspaper's website remains prohibited.

In a report to the National Assembly, the NIS indicated it will 'proactively' review lifting bans on online access to around 60 North Korean websites, restricted under the Information and Communications Network Act, which allows curbs on content linked to national security law violations.

This shift is expected to enhance the public's right to know and foster inter-Korean exchanges, while maintaining vigilance against propaganda.

関連記事

Illustration depicting banned anti-North Korea leaflets at the DMZ, stamped prohibited due to legal revisions, with a ministry official symbolizing hope for inter-Korean peace.
AIによって生成された画像

Legal revisions end era of anti-North Korea leaflet campaigns

AIによるレポート AIによって生成された画像

Recent legal revisions have made it difficult to scatter propaganda leaflets into North Korea, effectively ending the era of such campaigns, the unification ministry said. The spokesperson expressed hope that the measures could restore inter-Korean ties and build peace.

South Korea's unification ministry on Monday dismissed a report claiming it proposed a constitutional revision to President Lee Jae-myung to recognize North Korea as a separate nation. The claim emerged from a local newspaper alleging the suggestion was made during a closed-door policy briefing last Friday as part of efforts to resume engagement with Pyongyang. Ministry spokesperson Yoon Min-ho rejected the report as "groundless and false."

AIによるレポート

SEOUL, Dec. 19 (Yonhap) -- Unification Minister Chung Dong-young vowed Friday to strengthen the ministry's leading role in Korean Peninsula policies during a briefing to President Lee Jae Myung. He stated that international sanctions on North Korea have lost effectiveness and plans to seek relief to resume engagement. Chung highlighted the period before U.S. President Donald Trump's April China visit as decisive, citing potential Trump-Kim Jong-un summit talks.

北朝鮮の金正恩委員長は、近日中に開催される労働党大会で核戦力の強化に向けた次段階の計画を明らかにすると述べた。国営メディアが水曜日に報じたところによると、これは火曜日のミサイル発射試験に続くもので、金氏はこれを敵対勢力に「耐え難い精神的苦痛」をもたらすものだと表現した。

AIによるレポート

The U.S. State Department has voiced significant concerns over a recent revision to South Korea's Information and Communications Network Act, warning that it could negatively impact U.S. online platforms and undermine technology cooperation. The amendment, aimed at curbing false and fabricated online information like deepfakes, was passed by South Korea's National Assembly last week and approved by the cabinet on Tuesday. This has raised worries about potential diplomatic and trade tensions between the allies.

South Korea's trade ministry said on January 8 it will expand communications with the United States to avert potential conflicts over revisions to the country's network law. Last week, the U.S. State Department voiced "significant" concerns about a recently passed amendment to the Information and Communications Network Act, aimed at curbing false online information, warning it could spark trade tensions. To mitigate this, the ministry plans to intensify outreach on non-tariff trade barriers.

AIによるレポート

A Japan-based pro-Pyongyang newspaper highlighted the omission of North Korean issues from the Donald Trump administration's recent National Security Strategy as the 'most notable' aspect in a Thursday editorial. It interpreted this as an admission of complete failure in the US policy to denuclearize the Korean Peninsula, amid questions in Seoul about whether the issue might be sidelined under Trump.

 

 

 

このウェブサイトはCookieを使用します

サイトを改善するための分析にCookieを使用します。詳細については、プライバシーポリシーをお読みください。
拒否