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  • North Korea is officially the most corrupt country in the World. The Corruption Perceptions

  • Index ranks every country in the world from 0 to 100, based on how corrupt it is, with

  • a score of 0 being very corrupt and 100 meaning very clean. Every year North Korea ties with

  • Somalia for last place. Let's uncover the most disturbing facts about the World's favourite hermit kingdom.

  • North Korea, or more officially known as the Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea, has

  • the fourth largest army in the world, with 1.2 million active members, not far behind

  • America with it's military of 1.4 million.

  • There are 28 state approved haircuts in North Korea. Women are allowed to choose from one

  • of 18 styles. Married women are instructed to choose shorter styles, whilst single ladies

  • are permitted to let loose with a longer style. Men on the other hand are allowed to choose

  • from 10 state approved hair cuts, all of which are short. All North Korean men are prohibited

  • from growing their hair longer than 5 centimetres.

  • North Korea has an impressive 100% literacy rate. Literacy is defined as individuals aged

  • 15 and over who can read and write.

  • There are 25,554 kilometres of roads in North Korea, but only 724 km are paved, that's a

  • measly 2.83%.

  • The Korean Demilitarised Zone, or DMZ. Is a strip of land 250 kilometres long that separates

  • South Korea from North Korea. It was setup as a neutral zone where the two countries

  • can safely discuss matters, at the end of Korean War in 1953. Despite its name, it is

  • the most heavily militarised border in the world. Soldiers guarding the DMZ are ordered

  • to shoot anyone trying to sneak in our out of the country. Making China the most popular

  • escape route for North Koreans. 80% of defectors are women.

  • But an unlikely good has come out of such a heavily militarised border, the Korean DMZ

  • strip is home to some of the most critically endangered species of animals and plants on

  • Earth. Whom have found an unlikely haven, protected from any human contact. Extremely

  • rare species such as the Korean Tiger, the elusive Amur leopard and Asiatic black bear

  • have all found a home here amongst the landmines and listening posts. Ecologists have identified

  • some 2,900 plant species, 70 types of mammals and 320 kinds of birds within this narrow

  • strip of land. The South Korea government has campaigned to UNESCO numerous times to

  • turn the DMZ into a nature reserve to protect the endangered animals, but every time North

  • Korea has declined to make such an agreement.

  • In the 50s, North Korea built Kijong-Dong on North Korea's side of the DMZ, so it was

  • easily visible from South Korea. Which North Korea claimed was the perfect city, the city

  • supposedly contained a childcare centre, kindergarten, primary and secondary schools, and a hospital.

  • The idea was to make the city appear so attractive that it enticed South Koreans to defect to

  • North Korea. However, after observation from the South Korean side of the DMZ, it became

  • obvious that the city is actually completely uninhabited, and has remained so ever since

  • it was built. It has since come to be known as 'Propaganda Village'. In the 1980s the

  • South Korean government built a 98 metre tall flagpole on the south side of the DMZ, close

  • to the border. The North Korean government responded by building an ever taller one in

  • Kijong-Dong, in what some have called the "flagpole war". At the time it was the second

  • tallest flagpole in the world.

  • In the last 60 years, over 23,000 North Koreans have defected to South Korea. Whereas only

  • two South Koreans have gone north of the border.

  • North Korea has its own operating system called Red Star OS, a fork of linux. Most of the

  • software on there, such as the web browser, text editor and firewall are custom programs

  • written by North Korea.

  • In 1974, Kim Il-Sung took 1,000 Volvo sedans from Sweden to North Korea and never paid

  • for them.

  • In 2013 current North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un executed his uncle along with five of his

  • aides by locking them in a cage and feeding them to a starving pack of 120 dogs. But what

  • had Kim's uncle done to deserve such a horrific demise? Kim accused his uncle of mismanaging

  • the economy, corruption, womanising and taking drugs.

  • Marijuana is completely legal in North Korea and is not even classified as a drug. It is

  • commonly used for medicinal purposes.

  • North Korea is the only nation on Earth to currently have a US Navy ship captured.

  • It isn't 2015 in North Korea, it is the year 104. Counted after the birth of Kim Jong Un's

  • grandfather, and founder of the DPRK, Kim Il-Sung.

  • North Korea is home to the world's largest stadium. The impressive May Day Stadium seats

  • 150,000 people. It is home to the annual Arirang games, which is one of the most spectacular

  • displays of coordination and choreography on Earth.

  • The Ryugyong Hotel in North Korea is a 105 story building that for 20 years held the

  • title of the world's tallest hotel. Construction began in 1987, but was halted before it was

  • finished in 1992, as North Korea entered a period of economic crisis following the fall

  • of the Soviet Union. The monstrosity now towers over Pyongyang and stands completely empty.

  • The only people allowed to own vehicles in North Korea are the military and government

  • officials. Transport in general is tightly controlled, North Korean citizens are generally

  • restricted from travelling anywhere at all, even inside their own country.

  • North Korea's space agency is called "NADA", which in Spanish means "nothing". It stands

  • for National Aerospace Development Administration. The program only has a 20% success rate.

  • Wearing jeans is illegal in North Korea because denim symbolises the DPRK's enemy, the United

  • States.

  • Every 5 years North Korea holds a general election, in which the ballots paper lists

  • only one candidate.

  • In 2012 North Korea officially announced that it had discovered a unicorn lair. The DPRK's

  • official news agency released a statement claiming they had found a cave 200 metres

  • from Pyongyang City, with a rectangular rock in front of it with the words "Unicorn Lair"

  • conveniently carved into it. They believe the unicorn was rode by an ancient Korean

  • king named King Tongmyong.

  • North Korea is dotted with prison labor camps. Where prisoners are reportedly subjected to

  • horrific inhumane treatment. Prisoners of these concentration camps suffer a level of

  • slavery, torture and experimentation comparable with the holocaust. Although North Korea denies

  • the existence of such camps, insider sources claim there are 16 such camps, home to 200,000

  • prisoners. North Korea also has a three generations of punishment law. This means that anyone

  • sent to a prison camp is sent along with their entire family, regardless if they were involved

  • in the crime or not. Also any family members born whilst in prison will live their entire

  • lives there, as well as any children they may have whilst in prison.

  • North Koreans are subject to a six day work week, as well as a seventh day of supposed

  • "volunteer" work, which is also strictly enforced. Meaning North Koreans have virtually no free

  • time.

  • Official records show that Kim Jong il learnt to walk at the age of three weeks, and was

  • talking at eight weeks. Whilst studying at Kim il Sung university, he reportedly wrote

  • 1,500 books over a period of three years, along with six full operas. According to his

  • official biography, all of his operas are "better than any in the history of music."

  • It is also written in Kim Jong il's biography that he was born under a double rainbow, and

  • to mark his birth there was a new star and a swallow in the sky. It is also written that

  • he could control the weather and make it rain on command, depending on his mood. In fact,

  • the list of questionable claims and feats of prowess surrounding the former North Korean

  • leader are endless. School children are required to learn everything about their current leader

  • as well as his two predecessors. Even if the so called facts may be a bit on the fabricated

  • side.

North Korea is officially the most corrupt country in the World. The Corruption Perceptions

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