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The Nuclear Great GameJourneyman"When Pyongyang declared it had an advanced nuclear programme, the shock waves reverberated worldwide. But how was a state teetering on the verge of bankruptcy able to develop such a sophisticated programme?" -
Shadows And WhispersJourneyman"In the mountains of North East China a family is living in hiding under the earth." -
Shadows & Whispers: The Struggle of North Korea's RefugeesJourneyman"As many as 800,000 North Koreans have crossed illegally into China in search of food. This is their story, told from hideouts underground: under floorboards, behind closed doors." -
Globalization: The Haves and Have NotsJourneyman"As the IMF meets and activists threaten new trade protests, this provocative documentary asks just who’s winning and who." -
Global CarJourneyman"The automobile was once a shining example of American ingenuity and industrial might. It shaped the country’s cities, defined lifestyles and was tightly woven into the fabric of the American psyche. But with world dynamics shifting and an economy in cr"
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Iraq's Secret War FilesJourneyman"The only TV doc to have advance access to the biggest Wikileaks release ever. This is what really happened during the Iraq war, not what the US PR machine of the time wanted us to believe. The reality behind the civilian death count; al-Qaedas fictitious" -
BoardheadsJourneyman"Board sports define the tough, trendy, wild young kids who dice with death as they wow and surprise. But theres another side to the too cool for school boarding frenzy. Its about autistic children taking to surf boards, skateboards bringing sport and" -
Off the Grid: Life on the MesaJourneyman"Twenty-Five miles from town, a million miles from mainstream society, a loose-knit community of eco-pioneers, teenage runaways, war veterans and drop-outs, live on the fringe and off the grid."
Length: 41mins 36secs
Published: 27 Mar, 2001
Last Updated: 26 May, 2011
We return to the tragic story of the Kim family – forced to give their children up to orphanages to escape hunger and the deprivation of living beneath the ground. Seven months after we last met them, the Kims were arrested thanks to an informer and forcibly returned to North Korea. Now they hide in a shed after escaping prison and fleeing once again to the mountains of North East China. They tell of appalling beatings at the hands of the North Korean prison guards. Their escape has brought them one step closer to a reunion with their children, but they must leave the safety of their hideout and return to the city where they were captured. Min-Ho and Hyung-dong are children who sleep in an abandoned construction site. They risked life and limb to escape North Korea. When they were caught their punishment for abandoning the motherland was transfer to a North Korean labour camp. There they faced a hunger that made them faint. They know if they are caught smuggling money back to their families this time they will be sent to political prisons – from which they will not emerge alive. They wrap money in plastic to swallow it to smuggle it back home. We travel with them as they prepare to cross the border back into China. They risk their lives to go back – the embodiment of this harsh existence. Su-Hee and Han-jin make their living weaving baskets for an underground aid organisation, and send money back to their little girl in North Korea. “She’s probably forgotten what we look like”. Tired of crying, they now believe the best way to help their daughter is to make money for her. “The sun will shine for us some day”. They don’t answer knocks at the door.In a rare glimpse of life on the other side of the border – North Korean women wash seeds in the Tumen river. All who flee the famine must swim these waters. On the banks of this river human traffickers prey on young women, kidnapping them and selling them as sex slaves. Sun Ja is one of countless North Korean women bought by Chinese. “When you’re desperate you’re not easily scared” she says of her escape by jumping from the roof. The Kims are offered a filthy shed to live in, close to the orphanage. There’s a hole below ground in which to hide if necessary. Meanwhile their three children await their parents’ arrival. It’s nine months since they saw each other. The children are better nourished than ever before and are learning to read. But they are silent at first - barely recognising their parents. They tell their children of the beatings they got in jail. “We escaped just because of you!” they plead. In their final few hours together they find a peace they may never know again. A reunited North Korea may one day relieve them all of their anguish and fear – but it’s not happened yet. Our films ends as Min-Ho and Hyung-dong wait for darkness to fall to slip past the border guards. It’s an ending full of fear. For these boys, as for so many others, the nightmare goes on.
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