October 24,
2006
1. Wide of bus entering Onjeong-ri village (filmed from another bus)
2.
View from moving vehicle of houses on one side of the road
3. View from moving vehicle of
North Korean soldiers and military truck on one side of the road
October 25, 2006
4.
Zoom out from river and cascade at Biro-bong valley in
Diamond mountain
5. Wide of the snow-capped mountain
6.
Various of
South Korean students
7. Zoom out from the top of mountain
8. Various shots of propaganda slogan engraved on a rock reading: "
Greatest leader
Kim Jong-il"
9.
Medium shot of media
10. SOUNDBITE: (
Korean) Thae Chun Sung, North Korean guide:
"
Whether North Korea conducts another test as feared all depends on what position the US takes."
11. South Korean tourists
12. SOUNDBITE: (Korean) Thae Chun Sung, North Korean guide:
"It is our national pride. It is our dignity and how important it is that we have enough power like that."
13.
Memorial stone in honour of North Korea's former leader
Kim Il-sung
13.
Cutaway of North Korea guide
14. Close-up of a pin with Kim Il-sung's face
15. SOUNDBITE: (Korean) Kim Nam Sook, North Korean guide:
"Any economic sanctions by US imperialists will only help us endure more difficulties in the future. We should even thank them for that."
16. Various of North Korean workers at a farm
17. SOUNDBITE: (Korean) Pak
Nyong Nam, official:
"It is regrettable. It all depends on how South Korean authorities react to such pressure. I think they (
South Korea) should think about whether it's a national project or a project that can be pressured by outside forces."
18. Pan of farm
19. North Korean soldiers walking next to fence
20. Small shop at Diamond mountain area
21.
Top shot zoom in of North Korean soldiers marching
22.
Slogan reading: "Greatest leader Kim Il-sung will stay with us forever"
23. Various top shots of North Korean workers cleaning the street
24. Panel with Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-il's picture
25.
Tilt down from Diamond mountain to North Korean office building
STORYLINE:
Despite threats of international sanctions,
North Koreans hailed their country's first nuclear test as a proud event and scoffed at moves to punish the communist nation.
Several North Korean guides gave their views on the nuclear test as South Korean tourists made the first visit to the
Diamond Mountain resort, which is located in the communist
North, since the test was carried out.
"
We are not scared of any sanctions," said Kim Nam Sook, a guide at Diamond Mountain, a
South Korean-run tourist enclave inside the reclusive state.
"Any economic sanctions by US imperialists will only help us endure more difficulties in the future," Kim said in an interview earlier this week.
The UN Security Council swiftly adopted sanctions against
Pyongyang for its October 9 nuclear test, calling for a ban on the sale of major arms to the North and inspection of cargo to and from the country.
The US initiated measure also calls for the freezing of assets of businesses supplying the North's nuclear and ballistic weapons programs.
South Korea, which has been reluctant to take a hardline stance against its northern neighbour, took its first steps toward implementing sanctions with its announcement on Thursday that it will ban the entry of North Korean officials who fall under a UN travel restriction.
Seoul also promised it will review its involvement in the Diamond Mountain project along with an industrial complex in the North Korean border city of
Kaesong, two inter-Korean initiatives that have been criticised for providing hard currency to the cash-strapped North.
The South Korean government hails the two projects as key symbols of reconciliation, and has been reluctant to scrap them.
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- published: 23 Jul 2015
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