This article is about the North Korean broadcasting service. For the South Korea's international radio service, see KBS World Radio. For the unrelated Montreal local radio program, see CKUT-FM § Voice of Korea. For the South Korean reality show, see The Voice of Korea.
The origins of Voice of Korea can be traced to 1936 and the radio station JBBK. Operated by the occupying Japanese forces, JBBK broadcast a first and second program as part of Japan's radio network that covered the Korean Peninsula from Seoul.[citation needed]
The station was founded in October 1945 as Radio Pyongyang,[2] and officially inaugurated programming on the 14th, with a live broadcast of the victory speech of Kim Il Sung when he returned to Pyongyang at the end of World War II.[citation needed]
The first foreign broadcast was in Chinese on 16 March 1947. Japanese-language broadcasts began in 1950, followed by English (1951), French and Russian (1963), Spanish (1965), Arabic (1970), and German (1983).[3]
By 1960, Radio Pyongyang broadcast 159 hours of programming every week. In 1970, weekly broadcasting hours totaled 330 hours and by 1980, 597 hours. In 1990 weekly broadcasting time fell to 534 hours per week,[4] 529 in 1994, and 364 in 1996.[3]
In 2002, the station was renamed Voice of Korea.[2]
Programming
Unlike most international broadcasters, Voice of Korea does not broadcast an interval signal in the minutes leading up to the start of the transmission. It instead starts broadcasting the interval signal (the first few notes of the "Song of General Kim Il Sung") on the hour.[citation needed]
A typical program line-up begins with the interval signal, followed by the station announcement "This is Voice of Korea". After the announcement, the national anthem, "Song of General Kim Il Sung" and "Song of General Kim Jong Il" are played. The songs are followed by a news broadcast consisting of Korean Central News Agency items with small adjustments for the radio.[5] If there are any items about Kim Il Sung, Kim Jong Il or Kim Jong-un, these are the top bulletins. On the station's website, Kim Jong Un's full name is used whenever he is mentioned in a story, and his name (as well as those of Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Un) appear in font larger than the rest of the story's text.
The news items are typically one day behind the news of the domestic service Korean Central Broadcasting Station. The news is followed by music and an excerpt from Kim Il Sung's memoirs With the Century. After the memoirs, there is more music and feature stories, sometimes followed by an editorial. The 57-minute broadcast concludes with frequency information and a sign-off message.[5]
In the past, the station broadcast coded messages to North Korean spies. This practice ended with the 2000 June 15th North–South Joint Declaration.[2] In 2006, Voice of Korea started broadcasting on 11545 kHz, the same frequency as the former Lincolnshire Poachernumbers station.[6][self-published source] While it is unknown whether this was an intentional effort to interfere with Poacher's propagation or an accident, it is not unknown for Voice of Korea to unintentionally jam its own signal by transmitting programmes in different languages simultaneously on the same frequency.
Broadcasting
Voice of Korea broadcasts on HF or shortwave radio frequencies,[2] as well as on medium wave for broadcasts aimed at neighboring countries. Some frequencies are well out of the ITU-allocated shortwave broadcast bands, making them less susceptible to interference and less likely to be listenable on older receivers.[citation needed] Recently, it has increased the share of satellite broadcasting.[2]
On occasion, Voice of Korea has missed its regular service. The interruptions have not been explained by Voice of Korea, but they are thought to be due to engineering works at the transmitter sites, faulty equipment or because of power outages. In 2012 they occurred when the country was facing one of its worst electricity shortages in years.[8] The off-air periods also affect North Korea's own jamming signals designed to prevent reception of South Korean stations such as Echo of Hope, Voice of the People, and KBS Hanminjok Radio.[9][10]
Currently (as of 11 March 2021) it seems, that several foreign language programmes are identical to each other, as exactly the same music is played at the same time, only the spoken and translated parts of the programme have been amended to match the respective program language. This could be monitored by switching from the German evening program on 6170 kHz from 19:00 UTC to the Spanish program on 7570 kHz at 19:00 UTC and back. It also seems, that the shortwave transmitter, which is used for the German language service, has a rather bad modulation. The transmitter for the Spanish programme however seems in better shape.[citation needed]
Schedules
This is a list of broadcasts of Voice of Korea by language as of July 2024. All times are in UTC.[11]
Arabic
All Arabic broadcasts are transmitted from Kujang.
Starts
Ends
Frequencies (kHz)
Target area
15:00
15:57
9890, 11645
Middle East and North Africa
17:00
17:57
9890, 11645
Middle East and North Africa
Chinese
All Chinese broadcasts are transmitted from Kujang.
Starts
Ends
Frequencies (kHz)
Target area
21:00
21:57
9875, 11635
China
22:00
23:57
9875, 11635
China
05:00
05:57
7220, 9445, 9730
Northeast Asia
08:00
08:57
7220, 9445
Northeast Asia
11:00
11:57
7220, 9445
Northeast Asia
21:00
21:57
7235, 9445
Northeast Asia
22:00
22:57
7235, 9445
Northeast Asia
13:00
13:57
11735, 13650
Southeast Asia
03:30
04:27
13650, 15105
Southeast Asia
06:30
07:27
13650, 15105
Southeast Asia
English
All English broadcasts are transmitted from Kujang.
Starts
Ends
Frequencies (kHz)
Target area
04:00
04:57
11735, 13760, 15180
Central and South America
10:00
10:57
11710, 15180
Central and South America
13:00
13:57
13760, 15245
Europe
15:00
15:57
13760, 15245
Europe
18:00
18:57
13760, 15245
Europe
21:00
21:57
13760, 15245
Europe
16:00
16:57
9890, 11645
Middle East and Northern Africa
19:00
19:57
9875, 11635
Middle East and Northern Africa
13:00
13:57
9435, 11710
North America
15:00
15:57
9435, 11710
North America
04:00
04:57
7220, 9445, 9730
Northeast Asia
06:00
06:57
7220, 9445, 9730
Northeast Asia
19:00
19:57
7210, 11910
Southern Africa
05:00
05:57
13650, 15105
Southeast Asia
10:00
10:57
11735, 13650
Southeast Asia
French
All French broadcasts are transmitted from Kujang.
Starts
Ends
Frequencies (kHz)
Target area
06:00
06:57
11735, 13760, 15180
Central and South America
11:00
11:57
11710, 15180
Central and South America
14:00
14:57
13760, 15245
Europe
16:00
16:57
13760, 15245
Europe
20:00
20:57
13760, 15245
Europe
14:00
14:57
9435, 11710
North America
16:00
16:57
9435, 11710
North America
04:00
04:57
13650, 15105
Southeast Asia
11:00
11:57
11735, 13650
Southeast Asia
18:00
18:57
7210, 11910
Southern Africa
18:00
18:57
9875, 11635
West and Central Africa
German
All German broadcasts are transmitted from Kujang (frequency update: 03/2021, as announced on air, see also ADDX)
Starts
Ends
Frequencies (kHz)
Target area
16:00
16:57
6170, 9425
Europe
18:00
18:57
6170, 9425
Europe
19:00
19:57
6170, 9425
Europe
Japanese
All Japanese broadcasts are transmitted from Kujang, except 621 kHz and 6070 kHz broadcasts, which are transmitted from Chongjin-Ranam and Kanggye respectively.[12]
Starts
Ends
Frequencies (kHz)
Target area
07:00
07:57
621, 9650, 11865
Japan
08:00
08:50
621, 9650, 11865
Japan
09:00
09:57
621, 6070, 9650, 11865
Japan
10:00
10:50
621, 6070, 9650, 11865
Japan
11:00
11:57
621, 6070, 9650, 11865
Japan
12:00
12:50
621, 6070, 9650, 11865
Japan
21:00
21:50
621, 9650, 11865
Japan
22:00
22:57
621, 9650, 11865
Japan
23:00
23:50
621, 9650, 11865
Japan
Russian
All Russian broadcasts are transmitted from Kujang.
Starts
Ends
Frequencies (kHz)
Target area
07:00
07:57
13760, 15245
European Russia
08:00
08:57
13760, 15245
European Russia
14:00
14:57
9425, 12015
European Russia
15:00
15:57
9425, 12015
European Russia
17:00
17:57
9425, 12015
European Russia
07:00
07:57
9875, 11735
Far Eastern Russia
08:00
08:57
9875, 11735
Far Eastern Russia
Spanish
All Spanish broadcasts are transmitted from Kujang (frequency update: 03/2021, as announced on air, see also ADDX)
^ abcdeHoare, James E. (2012). "Voice of Korea". Historical Dictionary of Democratic People's Republic of Korea. London: Scarecrow Press. p. 395. ISBN978-0-8108-7987-4. Archived from the original on 2017-11-27.