July 1,
2011
1. Wide interior shot of passengers at the
Pudong Airport waiting to check in for their flight to
Pyongyang
2.
Electronic board displaying departure information for the Air Koryo flight to Pyongyang
3. Pan from right to left of tourists checking in for the flight
4. Mid of tour guide holding papers with passenger's visas
5.
Close of tourist's visa to
North Korea
6. Close of Air Koryo boarding card to Pyongyang
7. SOUNDBITE (
Mandarin) Ms. Wu, passenger:
"I want to see what the past is like, how different it is from what we have now. North Korea is a mysterious country, and it has kept close ties with
China, including our involvement in the
Korean War. It will be an emotional trip for me."
8.
Cutaway of passengers waiting inside the airport for their flight
9. SOUNDBITE (Mandarin) Zhu Jianliang, Korean War veteran travelling to Pyongyang:
"
Yes of course, I want to go back to visit. It is just nostalgia. Those four years I spent there were not easy."
10. Mid of departures board, including flight bound for Pyongyang
11.
Passengers walking around the
Pudong International airport terminal hall
12. SOUNDBITE (Mandarin) Jin
Song,
Shanghai representative for Air Koryo
"If this (route) works well between Shanghai and Pyongyang and if the customers are satisfied, we will probably open more destinations in
Guangdong,
Nanjing,
Xi'an, and
Chengdu."
13.
Various of Pudong Airport runaway with planes (please not these shots do not show
the Air Koryo plane that is bound for Pyongyang)
June 30, 2011
14. Wide interior of Jinjiang
Tours travel agency in Shanghai
15.
Mid shot of travel agency staff showing brochure to a customer
16. Close of North Korea tourism brochure
17. SOUNDBITE (Mandarin) Xie Jianxiao, marketing manager of the
Korean Department at Shanghai Jin Jiang Tours:
"For
European tourists, they might feel it is hard to follow the rules. But for
Chinese tourists, we share a similar history, so they prefer to re-experience the past."
18. Wide person walking up the stair of the travel agency stairs with posters promoting
North Korean tours on the wall
19. Close of poster promoting North Korea tours
20. Set-up of
Professor Shi
Yuanhua, director of the
Centre for
Korean Studies at
Fudan University, walking towards library
21. SOUNDBITE (Mandarin) Shi Yuanhua, director of the Centre for Korean Studies at Fudan University:
"We (
Chinese government) used to regard the
Korean Peninsula as problem due to the nuclear tension. But we have now had the six-party talks on the Korean Peninsula nuclear issue and we are also trying to encourage communications on economic development in North Korea. This is a rapid development
."
22. Close of Shi reading a book
STORYLINE
The first regular direct flight linking the capital of North Korea with
China's economic powerhouse, Shanghai, departed on Friday evening with 138 Chinese tourists eager to experience the diversity of their next door neighbour.
Most of the passengers boarding the Air Koryo JS-552 flight at Shanghai's Pudong Airport expected a nostalgic trip to experience the kind of society that China and its reforms have already left behind.
"I want to see what the past is like, how different it is from what we have now. North Korea is a mysterious country, and it has kept close ties with China, including our involvement in the Korean War. It will be an emotional trip for me," said one of
the passengers.
Zhu Jianliang, a 78-year-old Korean War veteran, was also eager to revisit a country where he fought more than half-a-century ago when China came to the aid of the Korean communists during the 1950-1953 civil war against a
United States-led
United Nations coalition.
North Korea has denied any role in the sinking, one of
South Korea's worst naval disasters.
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- published: 30 Jul 2015
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