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Kijong-dong

Kijŏng-dong, Kijŏngdong, Kijŏng tong or Kaepoong is a Potemkin village in P'yŏnghwa-ri, Panmun-guyok, Kaesong Special City, North Korea. It is situated in the North's half of the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ). Also known in North Korea as Peace Village, it has been widely referred to as 'Propaganda Village' by those outside North Korea, especially in South Korean and Western media.

History
, the world's seventh-tallest, in height, flying a flag of North Korea over Kijŏng-dong, near Panmunjom. The North Korean government says the village contains a 200-family collective farm, serviced by a child care center, kindergarten, primary and secondary schools, and a hospital. However, it is widely considered an uninhabited settlement built in the 1950s as part of a propaganda campaign to encourage South Korean defection. Some parts are used to garrison Korean People's Army soldiers manning a network of artillery positions, fortifications and underground marshalling bunkers along this part of the DMZ. The village features a number of brightly painted, poured-concrete multi-story buildings. Its layout is oriented so that the buildings' bright blue roofs and multi-colored walls beneath Kijong-dong's massive DPRK flag and flagpole, can be clearly seen from the South Korean border. From the border, the main way of observing the village and surrounding ares is from the Dora Observatory, which provides binoculars to visitors to the DMZ. A mural dedicated to Kim Jong Un can be spotted as well, reading "Long live General Kim Jong Un, the sun of Korean Songun". The village has been widely described as a potemkin village. According to observers, windows appear to be either left unglazed or just painted onto exterior walls, and electrical lights on timers periodically turn on and off in some buildings. The buildings are said to be concrete shells that are maintained by caretakers in an effort to preserve the illusion of activity. Nonetheless, some limited civilian activity has been reported in the area by foreign journalists. A 2016 farming season report from the South Korean channel MBC, made with footage from the Aegibong Observatory near the border, was able to attest further activity in the village, such as children attending school. Laundry was also spotted hanging from the windows. However, the reporters noted the "very shabby and old" appearance of the buildings, and an "eerie and bleak" atmosphere. It is now the ninth-tallest flagpole in the world, and the tallest supported one. Propaganda loudspeakers Massive loudspeakers mounted on several of the buildings deliver DPRK propaganda broadcasts directed towards the South. As its value in inducing defections diminished over time, particularly as South Korea caught up with the North economically in the 1960s and 1970s, the content was switched to condemnatory anti-Western speeches, agitprop operas, and patriotic marching music for up to 20 hours a day. The broadcasts resumed after escalating tensions as a result of the January 2016 nuclear test. On 23 April 2018, both North and South Korea officially cancelled their border propaganda broadcasts. == Notes ==
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