The unification ministry said Friday the government will take administrative steps to allow the public's easy access to the Rodong Sinmun, the main newspaper of North Korea's ruling Worker's Party.
In South Korea, public access to North Korean media and publications, including the Rodong Sinmun, is denied as they are classified as "special materials" due to concerns that they include content praising and promoting North Korea.
The unification ministry, the National Intelligence Service (NIS) and other related government agencies held a consultative meeting earlier in the day to review ways to reclassify the Rodong Sinmun as "general materials," not as special ones under the spy agency's guidelines.
The participants at the meeting shared a consensus on the reclassification of the North's daily and the government will take necessary administrative steps from next week for the access, the unification ministry said in a notice to the press.
President Lee Jae Myung took issue with a ban on public access to the North's materials during last week's policy briefing by the unification ministry. Lee said the current ban amounts to "treating the public as those who can fall for propaganda and agitation" by the North.
The NIS earlier said it is "positively" reviewing steps to permit people to access North Korean materials to ensure the public's right to know and facilitate inter-Korean exchanges.
Currently, the Rodong Sinmun can be read at designated facilities, such as the ministry's information center on North Korea, only after an applicant's identity and purpose for accessing the content are verified.
But if the North's daily is reclassified as general information, South Koreans will be able to easily access its paper version. Still, online access to the newspaper's website will continue to be banned.
In a report to the National Assembly, the NIS said it will also "proactively" review whether to lift a ban on online access to North Korea-related websites.
The government has restricted online access to around 60 North Korean websites in accordance with the Information and Communications Network Act.
The act stipulates the government can restrict the public's online access to information related to activities banned under the national security law.
Spcynugg45 on December 28th, 2025 at 17:13 UTC »
The only benefit I can think of is that now North Korea will have to consider that people in South Korea will also be reading the publication when they write their propaganda. It will be interesting to see how or if they choose to change the content based on that.
ArugulaElectronic478 on December 28th, 2025 at 15:45 UTC »
Even Kim Jong-Un is prob confused by this.
You’re basically mainlining propaganda from an enemy to your people.
It’s like letting ISIS have a channel on tv
Lone-T on December 28th, 2025 at 14:05 UTC »
SS: South Korea's government announced on Dec 26, 2025, it will reclassify North Korea's Rodong Sinmun—the ruling Workers' Party mouthpiece—from "special materials" to "general," enabling easy public access to print editions next week, though online access remains blocked under national security laws. Backed by dovish President Lee Jae-myung—who decries the ban as infantilizing citizens—and inter-agency consensus, this partial liberalization aims to uphold the "right to know" and foster inter-Korean exchanges amid frozen ties. As Pyongyang's provocations persist, does this gesture signal Seoul's unilateral confidence-building to thaw relations and counter information asymmetry, or risk domestic exposure to regime propaganda in a divided peninsula where psychological warfare remains a core deterrent?