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10 April 2013 Last updated at 18:12
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North Korean tourism: Holidays in a secretive republic By Alex Campbell
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More than 3,500 Westerners visit North Korea every year
The British Foreign Office has said it is considering changing its advice for tourists travelling to North Korea as international tension grows. But what exactly is it like to go on holiday to North Korea - and do people really do it? With constant surveillance from trained minders, suspicions of bugged hotel rooms and a repeatedly failing power supply, North Korea is unlikely to feature prominently on most tourist wish lists. But more than 3,500 Westerners visit the enigmatic state every year and the numbers are said to be increasing.
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At more than £1,000 for a typical fivenight visit it is not a cheap option. So what exactly is the attraction?
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Specialist tour guide Carl Meadows has visited North Korea 15 times in the past eight years.
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"The groups are usually well-travelled, open-minded people who have heard a lot about it and just want to see it for themselves," he said.
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"Pyongyang is a showcase city. Most people find it fascinating to spend their time in what is one of the most bizarre capitals in the world." What most foreign visitors encounter is a carefully-arranged snapshot of a secretive republic. There is little or no hint of the poverty, food shortages and human rights abuses which blight its people.
They took away our phones and computers at the border but they didn't understand what an iPad was so I was allowed to keep it” Andrew Drury
In fact, tourists in Pyongyang can expect to be well-fed and treated as "guests of the state" - housed in their own hotels and, if needed, treated in their own foreigners' hospitals.
'Like Marbella' Visits to museums, monuments and beyond are planned with military precision.
Adventure tourist
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Guides and a driver accompany foreigners whenever they leave designated hotels.
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