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LifestyleTravel & Leisure

State of play

A dearth of nightlife options and a series of power outages leave Kate Whitehead and her tour group wandering round Pyongyang looking for some fun

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The 150,000-seat Rungnado May Day Stadium in Pyongyang is filled with hundreds of thousands of performers and spectators for the Arirang Festival mass games (left). The Taedong Diplomatic nightclub (above) and its casino (far right). A customer sings in the Egypt Palace Karaoke in the Yanggakdo hotel's basement (above right) while members of the tour group pose in uniforms made by the hotel's tailor (below right). The Taedonggang Craft Brewery Bar (right). The bowling alley bar in the Yanggakdo (below). A flyer promoting a gig by Brian Offenther, aka DJ BO, the first western DJ to play in Pyongyang.Photos: AFP, Joseph Ferris, SMP Pictures
Kate Whitehead

Pyongyang, as the capital of a desperately poor nation ruled by a military dictatorship, isn't exactly famous for its nightlife.

But while in the Hermit Kingdom on a weeklong tour recently, we reason there has to be some kind of entertainment available after dark. And when we hear rumours of a nightclub called the Taedong Diplomatic, we simply have to go.

"The Diplo?" says Simon Cockerell of Koryo Tours, which specialises in trips to North Korea. "It's not what you're expecting. You won't get swanky diplomats hanging out at the bar. It's nothing glam."

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Still, we aren't put off, even when we hear the nightclub apparently possesses only one CD. We know the Diplo will be bad, the question is how bad.

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Tour group travel is the only real way to see North Korea and it's not the place for individual requests. The itinerary is carefully choreographed: wander too far from the group, step over that invisible line, and a North Korean guide will be there to guide you back.

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