North Korea has cancelled its mass games spectacle, where it celebrates
its military might and communist ideology, because of flooding that hit
the impoverished country this month, a South Korean official said on
Monday.
The 80-minute performances that are part rhythmic gymnastics floor show,
part military parade and part circus act were scheduled to start on Aug.
15 and run through mid-October.
"The Arirang mass games have been cancelled," a Unification Ministry
official said by telephone.
Leonid Petrov, who specialises in arranging tours to North Korea, said:
"The official reasons named by the North Korean tourism authorities are
the recent torrential rains and the planned joint military drill Ulchi
Focus Lens, which will be performed by the US and South Korean military
forces".
Petrov said the mass games festival will be moved to April.
North Korea typically objects to the annual joint drills, but it has not
previously cancelled the mass games because of them.
About 100,000 people take part in the mass games -- called Arirang after
a historic love story -- with some in the floor show and about 20,000
who make up a wall of flip-cards that forms the changing backdrop.
The games have increasingly become a source of foreign currency for the
North.
Although the crowds are typically made up of North Koreans, the
communist state sells thousands of tickets to foreigners, with prices
ranging from 240 euros (US$306.30) for a box seat to 40 euros for a
third-class seat.
In addition, visitors must buy a package tour where they spend several
hundred euros a day for hotels, meals and guides.
Last year 7,000 tourists from South Korea attended. This year, the North
was planning to open its doors to American tourists, with packages
costing about US$5,000 to $6,000.
Three major storms hit North Korea in July, raising the possibility of
famine in a country that already battles chronic food shortages, experts
said.
North Korea said flooding has killed hundreds. International agencies
said the death toll exceeds at least 120 people. (US$1=.7836 Euro)
(Reporting by )
(Por Jon Herskovitz e Jang Sera,
Planet Ark, 01/08/2006)