Personal life
Collings was from Auckland, New Zealand.[1][2] He graduated from the University of Auckland business school.[1]Career
Collings became interested in North Korea after watching the 2004 documentary A State of Mind about North Korean gymnasts training for the 2004 Summer Olympics.[1][3] He later went on a research tour to the country.[2]Collings and Gareth Johnson founded Young Pioneer Tours in 2008.[1][3] One of their aims was to make travelling to North Korea affordable; their tours cost around half the price of existing tours to the country.[3][4] At the time, a trip to North Korea cost about 2000€, but Collings offered trips from 795€.[5]
The company is registered in China,[6] and Collings worked as a managing director.[7] As well as tours to North Korea, the company includes tours of Chernobyl, Ukraine, East Timor and Nauru in Micronesia.[1][3] The organisation also offers short term study trips to Pyongyang University of Foreign Studies, a Chinese-funded language centre.[7]
Collings was an advocate for North Korean tourism.[3] He helped open the Tumen-Namyang border between China and North Korea to foreign tourists.[2] He was the first westerner to travel across the Tumen-Namyang border,[2] when he led a tour group across the border in 2013.[5] In 2012, he launched the Pyongyang Deaf and Blind Center charity.[5]
In 2017, Young Pioneer Tours were criticised after the death of Otto Warmbier, who was on a tour with the company. Warmbier was imprisoned for 15 years on a charge of subversion and died in 2017.[1] After Warmbier's death, Collings maintained that North Korea was a "safe place to visit", as Warmbier was the first person on a Young Pioneer Tour to be arrested.[8]
Death
Collings died in March 2020 of a heart attack.[1][3][2]
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1 件のコメント:
北朝鮮旅行を専門とする中国の代理店「ヤング・パイオニア・ツアーズ」
トロイ・コリングス氏はツアーガイド
オットー・ワームビア(米国大学生)
北朝鮮のエコノミーツアー参加
組織的に拷問されて、昏睡状態のまま帰国後、死亡していた。
いやー、因果応報の情報ありがとう。
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