Sunday, December 4, 2011

South Korea hands Yellow Sea islands over to North Korea

Or at least, that's what Google Maps would have you believe.

So I was looking for an aerial view of Paengnyŏng-do the other day. That's one of the Sŏhae-odo (서해5도), the so-called "Five Islands of the West Sea" which are technically a part of the City of Inch'ŏn (인천광역시) but hug the coast of North Korea.

The Northern Limit Line (or NLL, the blue line above), which has formed the de facto maritime border between the ROK and DPRK since the Korean War armistice in 1953, is drawn in such a way that these islands form what would be a "natural" maritime border, one that follows the universally accepted principle of equidistance from populated land on the North Korean and South Korean sides.

The North Koreans, however, insist on the red line in the graphic. It ignores South Korea's Five Islands of the West Sea and runs equidistant from the mainland, with corridors South Korea can use to access its islands (and fish, presumably). It has become a very contentious issue lately, and North Korea has used it as a pretext to attack Yŏnpyŏng-do, ostensibly to sink the Ch'ŏnan, and engage in other sea battles out there.

Note that these islands are not disputed territory (former US Ambassador to South Korea Donald Gregg's words notwithstanding), and they were ROK-held even before the Korean War (the islands and the Ongjin Peninsula just above them are south of the 38°N line (the Thirty-eighth Parallel) that was Korea's Mason-Dixon Line (the KNTO should put a sign up like that: "Welcome to 38-Line! It's Mason-dixon Line of Korea!" including those capitalization and article errors).

And so that makes it quite odd that Google Maps would list this key territory (one that makes Inchon a very long city, though not as long as Honolulu) as North Korean. You see, as I typed P-a-e-n-g-n-y-o-n-g, a list with various options for my search would pop up, each selection getting more precise and specific as I went along. Finally, Google Maps offered "Paengnyong Do North Korea." There was no biased input on my part.

Interestingly, though, if I use the Revised Romanization and type Baengnyeong (the Paengnyong spelling is based on McCune-Reischauer), a proper South Korean address appears. Hmm...

Google Maps doesn't list Yonpyong-do, but asks if you are looking for Yeonpyeong Do, which it lists as in South Korea. However, check out the list if you type in Y-e-o-n-p-y-e-o-n-g and see what pops up:

Yup. Check out number four. That "Yeonpyeong-ri" is the principal village on Yŏnpyŏng-do Island, and Google Maps has it listed as North Korean territory. Below is visual verification.

This is very sloppy work on the part of Google. What's next? Saying Calexico is part of Mexico just because they rhyme? (Though frankly, they can have it.)

Mapapropisms can happen to anyone, even some big names in media. The BBC apparently sent a drunken Mancunian out on a dinghy to redraw the NLL, and the Wall Street Journal ceded the US territory of Saipan to South Korea. Sloppy, sloppy, sloppy.

But don't worry. I'm not going to go all VANK on Google (although I wouldn't rule out VANK going all VANK, since that's what they do). But it does make me wonder: Can I now no longer trust the accuracy of what I find when I search on the Google?

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4 comments:

  1. Google's maps division quite clearly stopped caring about South Korea long ago. Heck, they don't even seem to give much of a toss about the neighbours either.

    What sets the South Korea aside from the rest of the world? Cost of keeping maps up to date due to rapid development, massive local competition in the form of Naver and Daum Maps (the latter being a tad better in my personal opinion) and a fair amount of public smearing for anything they do make available in Korea would be my guess. I'm surprised the dominance of Android phones hasn't given them a carrot to get this region up to date though.

    Remember Google Maps and Google Earth are to an extent just marketing tools for the Pro version of Google Earth. I truly wonder how many paying subscribers this humble peninsula yields. An indecipherable romanisation scheme probably doesn't make the proposition of getting things in shape very encouraging either.

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  2. You may be right about them not really caring all that much about this part of the world. The aerial shots of Seoul are sometimes terribly outdated, and then there's this whole sloppy geographic problem.

    oh, and which Romanization scheme are you saying is indecipherable? I'm not fan of the "Revised Romanization," and I think it does lead some people to mispronounce words with its one-size-fits-all lettering system.

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  3. I feel Revised Romanisation is a blunder for tourism, particularly when you consider the deadly knee-punch combo of "eo" for a short "o" and the insistence on using a leading "g" (We'll change the name of the country itself to avoid soft G problems, but then revert our city names decades down the line anyway!)

    It genuinely took me longer to train myself to fluently read Revised Romanisation than hangul.

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  4. Alternately, note that Google tries to steer clear of geopolitical disputes. Whilst the North's claim may be unrecognised by most of the world, it is still _a_ claim. Identifying ownership based on choice of romanised input could just be a convenient way to stay well out of politics.

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