
North Korea has tightened ideological controls since the Ninth Workers’ Party of Korea Congress. Now, first-quarter Q&A-style ideological review sessions have swept across nearly all institutions and organizations, Daily NK has learned.
From late March through early April, officials conducted sessions centered on rote learning and recall of key party documents. These included Kim Jong Un’s work report to the Ninth Party Congress, his policy speech at the first session of the 15th Supreme People’s Assembly, and materials tied to the Three Revolutions Red Flag Movement — a nationwide ideological and productivity campaign promoted by the WPK.
A Daily NK source in Ryanggang province reported on Friday that the evaluations covered “government agencies, enterprises, farms, and schools — almost every type of organization.” Enterprises competed by workplace, farms by work team, and schools by department.
Rote learning over comprehension
Each session designates a single respondent to answer questions on behalf of their entire group. One person’s performance reflects on the whole organization. Officials reportedly pressured members hard, demanding they “memorize answers verbatim.”
“On the afternoon of April 4, a Q&A competition was held at the Hyesan People’s Committee,” the source said. “Officials barely got any work done that day. They spent the whole time staring at answer sheets. If you’re called on and can’t answer properly, that stigma follows you for the rest of the year.”
Failing to respond correctly in front of a full assembly brings personal embarrassment. It also reflects poorly on the entire unit. The source described the atmosphere as near-maximum tension. Evaluators focus on verbatim recall rather than genuine policy comprehension, which only compounds the pressure.
“The questions and answers are distributed in advance, but the volume is so large that very few people actually memorize everything,” the source said. “Some try to arrange work trips or submit medical certificates around that time just to avoid participating.”
Ordinary workers below instructor level have fewer ways to opt out. “If you’re unlucky enough to get called on and can’t answer, you face public humiliation,” the source said. “The fact that it’s essentially a public evaluation makes it all the more stressful.”
Expanding beyond the workplace
The rote learning sessions have recently spread beyond the administrative unit level. In addition to workplace Q&A sessions, political mass organizations — including the General Federation of Trade Unions and the Socialist Patriotic Youth League — now conduct separate sessions of their own.
“The mine shaft-level Q&A competition at Hyesan Youth Coal Mine just ended, but now word is going around that the Youth League is going to hold another one,” the source said. Workers say they “can barely breathe” with one round finishing before another begins.
North Korea has promoted “putting ideology first” as a guiding principle since the Ninth Party Congress. The push has intensified efforts to monitor and enforce ideological conformity. But critics say the emphasis on performative rote learning — with little regard for genuine understanding — fuels mental exhaustion and quiet resentment among the North Korean people rather than real ideological commitment.
Reporting from inside North Korea
Daily NK operates networks of sources inside North Korea who document events in real-time and transmit information through secure channels. Unlike reporting based on state media, satellite imagery, or defector accounts from years past, our journalism comes directly from people currently living under the regime. We verify reports through multiple independent sources and cross-reference details before publication.
Our sources remain anonymous because contact with foreign media is treated as a capital offense in North Korea — discovery means imprisonment or execution. This network-based approach allows Daily NK to report on developments other outlets cannot access: market trends, policy implementation, public sentiment, and daily realities that never appear in official narratives.
Maintaining these secure communication channels and protecting source identities requires specialized protocols and constant vigilance. Daily NK serves as a bridge between North Koreans and the outside world, documenting what’s happening inside one of the world’s most closed societies.
Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: dailynk.com





