North Korea is, in many ways, living in the Dark Ages. Things that westerners take for granted, such as on-demand electricity, are notably lacking. Private car ownership is almost entirely unheard of — as of 1990 (per Wikipedia) there were only about a quarter of a million cars in the country as a whole, and most of them, by a large margin, were owned by the military. There are only about 1,000 miles of paved roads, and the purchase of fuel is extremely restricted. So there are not a lot of cars on the roads (as seen, for example, here) — and even in places of relatively heavy traffic, the lack of infrastructure means no traffic lights. But no traffic lights would mean more traffic accidents, and that would be a very bad thing. The solution? Young women, trained to direct traffic, and stationed atop an umbrella-adorned platform in the middle of an intersection, as seen above. Meet a Pyongyang traffic controller. As seen in the video below (via Laughing Squid), the traffic controllers — all female – are trained to be robotic and purposeful with their movements. Each action is crisp and exact, and the traffic controller only rotates counter-clockwise, directing traffic with nothing more than a baton and a whistle. |
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