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China-Japan-Koreas
N. Korea's nominal state head meets visiting AP president
2011-03-12
SEOUL, March 11 -- North Korea's nominal head of state met Friday with the visiting president of The Associated Press (AP), according to the communist state's official media.
Yup, the news agency that dare not be named...
Thomas Curley, CEO of the U.S. newswire, has been in North Korea since Tuesday, and Russia's Itar-Tass news agency said this week that he asked the country to allow the opening of an AP bureau in the capital, Pyongyang.
Why not just pull the news from the KCNA wire?
North Korea's official media have yet to report on why Curley was visiting the country but said the AP delegation has left the country.

A source in Seoul had told Yonhap News Agency that Curley was expected to stay in Pyongyang until Friday. While Kim Yong-nam represents the North in official events, Kim Jong-il, 69, essentially rules the country with an iron fist.

Among foreign news agencies, only Itar-Tass and China's Xinhua have bureaus in Pyongyang, while a journalist from the People's Daily newspaper of China is also based there.

Itar-Tass on Thursday said officials from Reuters, the London-based news agency, also visited Pyongyang earlier with a similar request.
Couldn't Reuters make up news from a more comfortable city? One with flesh-pots and full-service bars?
AP Television News, the international video division of AP, opened a full-time office in Pyongyang in 2006, making it the first Western news organization to establish a permanent presence in North Korea. The Pyongyang office of APTN currently provides only video images.
I'm surprised CNN didn't beat them there.
Posted by:Steve White

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