North Korea’s government has ordered students to collect scrap paper for use in printing new textbooks for a new curriculum that will soon be adopted by high schools, Daily NK has learned.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, a source in Yanggang Province told Daily NK on Apr. 26 that the North Korean government issued instructions in mid-April about revising the curriculum to allow high school students to choose which courses they want to take in the areas of social studies and science.

While the new curriculum is currently being implemented on a trial basis at a limited number of schools in each region, the authorities have said they plan to roll it out around the country and are stressing the need to publish new textbooks.

As a result, people’s committees at provinces, cities, and counties around the country have been given submission quotas for high-quality and low-quality scrap paper.

High-quality scrap paper refers to white printer paper and intact newspapers and books, while low-quality scrap paper refers to tissue paper and other flimsy kinds of paper. The authorities want both kinds of paper submitted so they can accelerate printing of textbooks for the new curriculum.

In Pungso County, Yanggang Province, urgent assignments to submit scrap paper have been given not only to schools but also to neighborhood watch units.

Not an easy task to accomplish

But people are outraged about the sudden order to hand over scrap paper. The main reason is that high-quality scrap paper is difficult to find.

Currently, each student in Pungso County is supposed to submit five kilograms of high-quality scrap paper, which many people complain is an unreasonable amount.

Thanks to the sudden demand for scrap paper, vendors who sell scrap in the markets or on the streets are doing brisk business. The new textbook project is causing various kinds of trouble for the North Korean public.

Translated by David Carruth. Edited by Robert Lauler.

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