Archive for the ‘Chongryun’ Category

Letter of Thanks to Kim Jong Il from Chongryon

Sunday, April 8th, 2007

KCNA
4/8/2007

General Secretary Kim Jong Il received a letter of thanks from the Central Standing Committee of the General Association of Korean Residents in Japan (Chongryon) on April 8 on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the remittance of educational aid fund and stipends to the children of Koreans in Japan by President Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il.

The education aid fund and stipends sent by the President 50 years ago served as life-giving water that brought the national education in an alien land into bloom and an engine that dynamically pushed forward Chongryon and the movement of Koreans in Japan, the letter said, and continued:

The Koreans in Japan could usher in a heyday of national education by displaying patriotic enthusiasm in all fields with the high honor and pride of being overseas citizens of the DPRK led by the immensely kind-hearted and wise President and conduct a more vigorous patriotic movement centered on the national education after building modern Korean schools in different parts of Japan.

Over the past five decades since then, the warm love and care shown by the President have shed more brilliant rays under your loving care and the educational aid fund and stipends sent by you keep the great flower garden of national education in fuller bloom.

Recalling that Kim Jong Il has wisely led the national education of Koreans in Japan, regarding it as a lifeline for the movement of Koreans in Japan, the letter noted that thanks to his guidance they have firmly preserved the soul of Koreans and led a worthwhile life as the overseas citizens of the DPRK generation after generation even in terror-ridden Japan where national persecution and phobia about Koreans prevail.

We Koreans in Japan will cherish the faith that we are sure to emerge victorious as long as we are led by you and wage a more vigorous patriotic movement, decisively frustrating the heinous moves of the Japanese right-wing reactionaries by the force of single-minded unity and thus greet with pride the 21st congress of Chongryon as one of victors, one of unity and put the movement of Koreans in Japan on a new higher level, the letter concluded.

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Pro-Pyongyang group file suit against Japanese government

Saturday, March 31st, 2007

Yonhap
3/31/2007

A pro-Pyongyang organization in Japan filed a lawsuit against the Japanese government and Tokyo provincial government seeking compensation for damages it claims were caused by a police raid on its office, the local media reported.

According to the reports, the General Association of Korean Residents in Japan (Chongryon) lodged a complaint Friday with Tokyo’s district court, saying the investigation by the Japanese police last November was illegal.

The investigation was a political act intended to oppress the organization and its affiliates, it said.

Japanese police raided a number of houses at the end of November in response to allegations that a 74-year-old woman affiliated with the group attempted to ship bags of an intravenous solution needed by doctors to the North.

The intravenous solution is used to supply patients with nutritionally rich amino acids both prior to and after surgery.

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Japan’s N Koreans oppose ‘bias’

Saturday, March 3rd, 2007

BBC
3/3/2007

Thousands of North Koreans living in Japan have demonstrated against what they say is discrimination following Pyongyang’s nuclear test last year.
The protesters rallied in a Tokyo park complaining that their community had been bullied by the police.

Hundreds of police kept them apart from a counter-protest by nationalists.

There are more than 500,000 ethnic Koreans in Japan and bilateral ties have soured since Pyongyang carried out its missile and nuclear tests.

Ban rejected

The Korean residents group, Chongryon, said about 7,000 people attended the protest in Hibiya Park, although local media put the figure at about 3,000.

Some demonstrators carried pro-Pyongyang placards or carried posters of the North’s leader Kim Jong-Il.

They demanded an end to bullying of Korean schoolchildren and the resumption of ferry services to the North that Tokyo shut after the nuclear test in October.

Chongryon official Nam Sung-U told the crowd: “We Koreans in Japan have gone through such suffering during colonial rule and even after liberation. We have united to survive.”

Many of the Koreans in Japan are descended from people brought in as forced labour during the Japanese colonial era early last century.

The governor of Tokyo, Shintaro Ishihara, tried to get the protest banned but the courts rejected his request.

Nationalist counter-demonstrators took up positions along the Koreans’ protest route to chant slogans.

One major thorn in ties has been abductees – four years ago North Korea admitted its agents had kidnapped 13 Japanese citizens in the 1970s and 80s.

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North Korea’s golden path to security

Thursday, January 18th, 2007

Asia Times
Bertil Lintner
1/18/2007

While the West and Japan have targeted North Korea’s overseas bank accounts to curtail its weapons program, Pyongyang has recently turned to more ingenious ways of maintaining its international businesses through substantial exports of gold, silver and other valuable metals.

Pyongyang has apparently found a willing conduit to global buyers through its many business connections in Thailand, which has recently emerged as the isolated state’s third-largest trading partner after China and South Korea. According to official Thai Customs Department statistics, North Korea shipped 500 kilograms of gold worth 398 million baht (US$11 million) to Thailand last April.

The following month, another 800kg of gold worth 635 million baht landed in Thailand courtesy of North Korea. Also, in June, 10 tons of silver worth 148 million baht was sent from North Korea to Thailand, followed by 12 tons worth 166 million baht last October.

In sum, North Korea exported 1.35 billion baht – or nearly $40 million – worth of precious metals to Thailand last year.

That is a substantial figure for North Korea, a country with an estimated gross domestic product of about $22 billion and whose total exports amounted to just over $1 billion, according to official statistics. Thailand is bound by the international sanctions imposed last October against North Korea by the United Nations in response to Pyongyang’s exploding an atomic bomb.

According to official Thai statistics, the gold and first consignment of silver were shipped to Thailand before the UN sanctions were imposed. But there is nothing illegal in North Korea exporting precious metals, unless, of course, the income from the sale can be tied directly to the country’s controversial weapons programs, which anyway would be extremely hard to prove.

Untapped riches
North Korea’s gold and silver mines remain largely untapped. According to Tse Pui-kwan, a Chinese-American chemist who joined the US Bureau of Mines in 1990, North Korea has significant deposits of copper, gold, graphite, iron, lead, magnesite, tungsten and zinc. When the Cold War ended and North Korea lost large amounts of foreign aid from both the Soviet Union and China, its mining industry fell into disrepair and extraction activities sharply declined.

But with new foreign cooperation, production has resumed, which the recent exports to Thailand clearly demonstrate. North Korea’s main gold mine is in Unsan county in North Pyongan province, about 150 kilometers north of Pyongyang. It was originally opened by a US firm in 1896, when Korea was still an independent and unified kingdom, and was later taken over by a Japanese company when the peninsula became a colony ruled by Tokyo in 1910.

Nearly a century later, consultants from Clough Engineering of Australia in 2001 inspected the same mine under the sponsorship of the United Nations Office for Project Services. They estimated that Unsan held 1,000 tons of gold reserves, which if true would make it one of the world’s major gold mines. Silver is also mined in the same area, while iron ore and magnesite are found in North and South Hamgyong provinces in the northeast.

North Korea’s extraction techniques are sometimes controversial. According to witnesses interviewed by the US Committee for Human Rights in North Korea for its 2003 report “The Hidden Gulag: Exposing North Korea’s Prison Camps”, there is a gold-mining labor camp near Danchun in South Hamgyong province, where thousands of prisoners are being held and forced to work under abysmal conditions.

In that same report, several witnesses claimed that “some of the mine shafts dated back to the early days of the Japanese occupation of Korea in the early 1900s. Accessing the veins of minable gold required descending and, later, ascending a wooden staircase 500 meters in length, using gas lanterns for light. Deaths from mining accidents were a daily occurrence, including multiple deaths from the partial collapse of mine shafts.”

The first attempt to modernize North Korea’s gold-mining industry was made by an Italian financier and former Foreign Ministry official, Carlo Baeli, who traveled to the country in the early 1990s and claims to be the first Westerner to do business with Pyongyang since the Korean War. He later wrote a book called Kim Jong-il and the People’s Democratic Republic of Korea, which was published in Pyongyang in 1990, obviously with official permission as it was printed by the state-owned Foreign Languages Publishing House.

Apart from painting a flattering portrait of the North Korean leader, the book describes Baeli’s first trip to Pyongyang in 1990, of which he wrote, “We were interested in investing in the mining industry, mainly in the extraction of gold and granite.” Baeli later signed a contract for a loan of $118 million to purchase mining equipment, and the goal was to resurrect no fewer than six gold mines across North Korea. The money was to be provided by international banks such as Midland Bank and the Naples International Bank. He also arranged for the mining equipment to be shipped from Italy.

But heavy flooding in the mid-1990s damaged both the equipment and the mines and, according to a 2006 report in Forbes magazine, Baeli today works as an adviser to the Pyongyang government at a tire-recycling plant. The car and truck tires are imported from Japan, get ground into granulate in North Korea, and are sold to China for road resurfacing, car mats and shoe soles. A lucrative business, perhaps, but not quite the golden dream Baeli had when he first arrived in Pyongyang nearly 17 years ago.

Another unusual partner in North Korea’s gold trade may have been the late Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos. In August 2001, the right-wing South Korean newspaper Munhwa Ilbo published a story claiming that Marcos in September 1970 had deposited 940 tons of gold bars at a Swiss bank in the name of the late North Korean dictator, Kim Il-sung. The report came from a former Marcos aide, and Munhwa Ilbo carried a copy of the bank-account certificate on its front page. The alleged gold bars were part of what a Japanese army general had looted from Asia during World War II, Munhwa Ilbo claimed.

That report was never independently confirmed, but it nevertheless reflects the mystique and speculation that still surround North Korea’s gold industry – and how little the outside world actually knows about it.

Financial pressures
When the US took action against Banco Delta Asia in Macau in September 2005, labeling it a “primary money-laundering concern” for North Korean funds, very little evidence to substantiate the charges was ever produced. North Korea lost $24 million when the accounts it held with the bank in the name of a front company, Zokwang Trading, were frozen. Zokwang, which had been operating in Macau for decades, also closed its office and relocated to Zhuhai province across the border in China proper.

The action against Banco Delta Asia, a privately owned bank that the Macau government later had to prop up to prevent it from collapsing, was the second move against North Korea’s assets abroad. In a much less publicized action, North Korea’s only bank located in a foreign country – the Golden Star Bank in Vienna – was forced to suspend its operations in June 2004. The Golden Star was 100% owned by the Korea Daesong Bank, a state enterprise headquartered in Pyongyang, and was allowed to set up a branch in the Austrian capital in 1982.

For more than two decades, Austrian police kept a close eye on the bank, but there was no law that forbade the North Koreans from operating a bank in the country. Nevertheless, Austria’s police intelligence department stated in a 1997 report: “This bank [Golden Star] has been mentioned repeatedly in connection with everything from money-laundering and distribution of fake currency notes to involvement in the illegal trade in radioactive material.”

Eventually the international pressure to close the bank became too strong. Sources in Vienna believe the US played an important behind-the-scenes role in finally shuttering Golden Star’s modest office on 12 Kaiserstrasse in the Austrian capital. Until then, Vienna had been North Korea’s center for financial transactions in Europe and the Middle East. Visitors to North Korea have noted that euro coins in circulation in the country – the US dollar is not welcome in Pyongyang – invariably came from Austria. (Euro notes are the same in all European Union countries, but coins designate individual member countries.)

Last October, in response to Pyongyang’s nuclear tests, Japan froze a dollar-denominated account that North Korea’s Tanchon Commercial Bank held with an unnamed Japanese bank. The account had a balance of $1,000 and had not been active for nearly a decade, so the move was mainly symbolic: to demonstrate to North Korea that it cannot use banks in Japan for any deposits, big or small.

So it is hardly surprising that North Korea is looking for new ways to manage and maintain its international business interests and for new partners when it is increasingly locked out of most foreign countries. That is where Thailand apparently comes into the picture.

In 2004, trade between Thailand and North Korea for the first time overtook trade between Japan and North Korea. Previously, a string of North Korean-controlled front companies, managed by the Chosen Soren, or the Pyongyang General Association of Korean Residents in Japan, had supplied North Korea with computers, electronic goods and other vital items.

In 2003, North Korea’s total trade volume to Japan was just over $265 million and fell even lower in 2004. At the same time, trade between Thailand and North Korea rose to more than $331 million in 2004. Two-way trade between Thailand and North Korea totaled $328 million in 2005, with Thai exports to North Korea amounting to $207 million and North Korean imports to Thailand totaling $121 million.

During January-November 2006 – the latest statistics available from the Thai Customs Department – trade totaled about $345 million, with Thai exports accounting for $200 million and North Korean imports $145 million. Thai imports of gold and silver have pushed those trade figures higher.

North Korea’s trade with Thailand grew mainly under the previous government of Thaksin Shinawatra, who at one point proposed signing a free-trade agreement between the two countries. In August 2005, Thaksin was formally invited by Kim Jong-il to visit Pyongyang. The visit never materialized, and since Thaksin was ousted last year in a military coup, the future of Thai-North Korean relations is very much in doubt.

But gold and silver are highly fungible and North Korea apparently has lots of the commodities. It appears Kim Jong-il has for now found at least one golden path around the international sanctions imposed against his regime’s nuclear tests.

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N. Korea demands Japan lift ban on ferry link

Saturday, January 13th, 2007

Kyodo
1/14/2007

Song Il Ho, the North Korean envoy in charge of normalizing relations with Japan, demanded in a recent meeting with a senior Japanese lawmaker that Japan lift a ban on a North Korean ferry service to a Japanese port on humanitarian grounds, informed sources said Sunday.

In a meeting with Taku Yamasaki of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party who visited Pyongyang last week, Song said, “There are people who can no longer travel to and from Japan even if they want to,” according to the sources.

“Humanitarian problems must be removed immediately,” Song was quoted as saying. Japan has banned entry by the North Korean passenger-cargo ferry Mangyongbong-92 as part of its sanctions against the North following its missile launches into the Sea of Japan in July.

Song also said Japan’s trade sanctions against the North after its first nuclear test in October is hurting sales of clams and matsutake mushrooms, according to the sources.

“We are faced with difficulty selling clams and mushrooms,” Song was quoted as saying. He also said Japan’s economic sanctions “have not been effective.”

The sources said Yamasaki was served cuisine featuring matsutake and Song told him, “I feel pity for the Japanese who can no longer eat delicious clams and matsutake” and implicitly requested that Japan lift the trade embargo against North Korea.

Returning to Japan from a five-day visit to Pyongyang until Saturday, senior LDP lawmaker Yamasaki also said on a TV Asahi program Sunday that North Korea denied it abducted Kyoko Matsumoto, a woman the Japanese government added last year to a list of Japanese nationals abducted by the North.

Yamasaki quoted Song as saying, “Several years ago, the Japanese government made an inquiry. After investigations, we found that no such person existed.”

Matsumoto, who disappeared from Tottori Prefecture in 1977 at age 29, was added to the list of abductees as the 17th victim in November. The abduction of Japanese nationals has been one of the major sticking points in the normalization of ties between Japan and North Korea.

Yamasaki visited Pyongyang despite the Japanese government’s urging not to do so when it is imposing economic sanctions against North Korea. The visit was also seen by some as paving the way for former Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi to make his third trip to the country.

On that point, Yamasaki said, “I personally think it would be nice if the trip is realized but nothing definite was made this time.”

Yamasaki said China is raising hopes that the United States and North Korea will meet later this month to discuss U.S. financial sanctions against the North.

Yamasaki said he met with Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Wu Dawei on Tuesday and Wu made a remark to that effect.

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Update: Pyongyang ‘Rock for Peace’ Cancelled

Thursday, January 4th, 2007

According to DPRK Studies, Jean Baptiste Kim, Administrator for Voice of Korea and organizer for “rock for peace” has resigned his DPRK related activities and written a resignation letter that pulls no punches.  He denounces the regime, but also endorses opening up trade as a means of bringing the most social change:

[L]arge scale of regular free trade at national level will make ordinary people awaken from internal darkness because they will taste the differences from outside world. The regime will be unable to control people when people are massively moving forward to make money for themselves. Do not threat them. It only makes them be cautious and this kind of tension only drive ordinary people fall into the famine and death. Let them trade freely and legally. I dare to say that they will never go back to the past when start to make money. The solution is not GUN but MONEY but do not give them money but allow them make money by themselves.

Full text of the resignation letter is posted on DPRK studies.

Additionally, the Voice of Korea web site is down.

Part 1 from the First Post:
11/14/2006
Joe Mackertich

Billed as “Rock for Peace”, the event is an attempt to promote the values and stability of North Korea. “We are not a mad, isolated country. We are part of an ordinary world, just like yourselves,” organisers told The First Post.

The decision to invite bands to play “western, capitalist” music was designed to change people’s perception of the Hermit Kingdom.

What it will resemble musically is anyone’s guess as no bands have yet been confirmed and anyone who accepts the invitation will have to refrain from mentioning war, sex, violence, drugs, imperialism or “anti-socialism”. Despite these strictures, the organisers hope to attract rock musicians such as Eric Clapton, U2 and – most surprising, given their redneck credentials – Lynyrd Skynyrd.

If the Rock for Peace festival is a success, there is talk of making it a regular occurrence and even staging the next one in the DMZ (demilitarised zone) between North and South Korea, the most heavily guarded border on earth.

Part 2: Voice of Korea
Here is a blurb from their website (bold added by NKEW):

There are few restrictions and conditions on participation but any band will be considered even though you are from USA. The lyrics should not contain admirations on war, sex, violence, murder, drug, rape, non-governmental society, imperialism, colonialism, racism, anti-DPRK, and anti-socialism. The concert will be held from May 01 to May 04, 2007 under the management of Voice of Korea. We currently received requests of 54 bands from 20 countries and participations are increasing every week. ‘ROCK FOR PEACE’ will be the 2007 version of Woodstock rock festival in 1969 but in a different location and with a different goal, We welcome every musician as long as they are purely music based without political intentions. Every band is financially responsible for their own trips to/from and staying in DPRK but we will offer sightseeing in many different places including DMZ, mountains, rivers, monuments, etc,,. Your musical instruments and related equipments, except passengers, will be transported at free of charge. If any band need confirmation letter from us in order to get sponsors, please do not hesitate to ask.

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DPRK charters flights for pro-Pyongyang Koreans in Japan

Tuesday, December 26th, 2006

N. Korea uses chartered flight to transport pro-Pyongyang Koreans in Japan
Yonhap
12/26/2006

North Korea has sent chartered flights to Dalian, China, to ferry pro-Pyongyang Korean residents living in Japan, local civil aviation authorities said Tuesday.

Chinese authorities said North Korea’s Air Koryo flew into the port city on Nov. 22 and twice more on Dec. 1 and Dec. 10.

Air Koryo does not maintain regular flights to the city on the Liaodong Peninsula.

Airline officials said the flights were arranged to transport students from a school run by the General Association of Korean Residents (Chongryon), who wanted to visit the communist country.

It said there are no plans to continue the chartered flights.

The use of chartered flights comes after Tokyo banned the Mangyongbong-92 ferry from docking in Japanese ports in July. The ship had been the only regular passenger link between the two countries. The Japanese government initiated the ban after Pyongyang launched ballistic missiles into the East Sea.

Air Koryo operates regular weekly flights to Beijing on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, and flights to Shenyang in Liaoning Province on Wednesday and Saturday.

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Golf in the DPRK

Friday, December 8th, 2006

Daily NK
12/8/2006
Yang Jung A

While golf equipment was amongst the list of banned luxury goods the U.S. government announced recently, Radio Free Asia (RFA) reported on the 6th that golf is a symbol of luxurious pleasure that only the elite in North Korea can experience.

Citing from a Pyongyang report by an Agence France-Presse correspondent, RFA revealed “The main golf course in North Korea is “Pyongyang Golf Course” with about 100 members, which in reality are all officials of Chosun Workers’ Party” and “Annual membership paid by the member amounts to $10,000.”

The correspondent said “This is a figure the average North Korean citizen could not even dream as an expense” and “The golf course in North Korea is a symbol of luxurious pleasure only experienced by authority officials or the elite.”

In the vicinity of Lake Taesung in Yongkang-gun, Nampo 38km from Pyongyang is “Pyongyang Golf Course,” equipped with a complete 18 hole course and ample enough to host an international golf tournament. The course was established in ’87 in celebration of Kim Il Song’s 75th birthday, sponsored by the Jochongnyeon, the pro-North Korean residents’ league in Japan.

Although it is said that a golf course exists within the grounds of Kim Il Sung’s Mountain Myohang villa and Ryongsung resort, the only golf course open to the public is ‘Pyongyang Golf Course.’ Mountain Myohang golf course is located in a valley 1.5km from Hyangsan Hotel, whereas Ryongsung golf course is situated 20 min by car from Pyongyang.

There are also mini courses, such as Yangkakdo golf course and Pyongyang golf practice range, Nampo Wawoodo golf course (9 holes). With investments by South Korean business, more golf courses are being constructed in areas such as Mt. Geumgang.

However, these golf courses are mainly accommodated to foreigners and excluding the elitist class, common people in possession of foreign currency such as Korean born Japanese or foreigners with blood-relatives are also using the courses.

Golf is one of Kim Jong Il’s favorite pastimes. In a book written by Fujimoto Kenji, once Kim Jong Il’s personal cook, Fujimoto wrote of his times at a golf course with Kim Jong Il at his villa.

At the golf course Fujimoto visited with Kim Jong Il, Kim asked Fujimoto ‘Compared to all the other places in the world, what do you think about the golf courses in North Korea?’ That day, when Kim Jong Il visited the golf course was October 6th and categorized a public holiday as a ‘The day Kim Jong Il visited.’

One time, North Korean mass media announced that at Kim Jong Il’s first time round of golf in `94, he scored an “eagle” followed by five “hold in ones,” recording a total score of 34. This only incited laughter from the international community.

If he had made 34 hit shots in a round of 18 holes, based on a game of par 72, this would mean he is 38 under. Even if a golf angel happened to come from the heavens, this would be impossible. While deifying Kim Jong Il and having no knowledge of golfing rules, media officials only made the situation into a laughing comedy.

In response, the New York Times sarcastically commented, that if the reports by North Korean media was true, Kim Jong Il should be selected as the “World’s number one golfer” as even professional golf competitors find it difficult to claim a hole a one in a lifetime.

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Pyongyang not feeling pinch of UN sanctions

Friday, December 8th, 2006

Kyodo News is claiming that recently enacted UN restrictions on trade in luxury goods to the DPRK are having little effect on shops in Pyongyang (with the exception of Japanese cigarettes).  I suspect there are several reasons for this:

1.  Sanctions never completely cut off the supply of goods.  Where there is a willing buyer, there will almost always be a willing seller (particularly if the buyers is a well-connected party finctionary).  Quantity falls a little, price rises a lot.  A few more people get into the smuggling business.

2.  Most goods are imported from China.  China is not as tough on its “little brother” as the Japanese and US. 

3.  This will raise the value of North Koreans that have legitimate foreign connections (I dont want to name names but you know who you are! 🙂

4.  There are several places in Pyongyang worth checking out to learn more aobut the impact of sanctions in Pyongyang.  The DHL office in the Foreign ministry building, the shops on changwang street, and the Ragwan department store near the ice skating rink.  Ragwan was set up to sell to Koreans who returned from Japan and have yen to spare.

Story below:

Kyodo News (Hat tip DPRK Studies)
12/8/2006

Impact of sanctions not yet felt in Pyongyang stores

While countries have begun drawing up lists of luxury items they will deny North Korea as part of sanctions in response to the country’s nuclear test, the impact of the measure has yet to be felt in the handful of stores that sell imported goods in Pyongyang.
During a recent visit, shelves at a store inside the Koryo Hotel in central Pyongyang were stocked with French perfume, Russian vodka and Japanese “sake” rice wine, and restaurants in the North Korean capital still offered foreign beer.

Nor were changes visible in exchange rates for Japanese yen, the euro and Chinese yuan, which remained at around the level of previous months in several hotels that cater to non-Korean visitors and tourists.

“I would have thought that there would be a run on foreign goods by expatriates here, but so far there has been no major change,” a diplomat living in Pyongyang said. “The stores visited by the foreign community here still have, for example, chocolate and wine.”

After North Korea carried out its first nuclear test in October, the U.N. Security Council passed Resolution 1718, which condemns the nuclear experiment and denies the nation military hardware, nuclear technology and luxury items.

The idea behind the ban on luxury goods is to pressure North Korea’s elite, not the ordinary public, in a country that faces chronic food shortage.

While the U.N. Security Council resolution detailed the military and nuclear items the U.N. member countries will deny North Korea, it left the decision on luxury goods up to each country.

Japan’s list of 24 items, for example, includes high-quality beef, fatty tuna, caviar, fur products and jewelry. Many other countries have yet to complete their lists.

Another Pyongyang resident, meanwhile, said he has noticed one change — a dramatic rise in the price of Japanese cigarettes.

There has been a three-fold increase in the price over the past few months, said the international aid worker.

While cigarettes are among the luxury items Japan denies North Korea under the U.N. resolution, there could be another reason for the price hike — a Japanese ban on port calls by the ferry Mangyongbong-92 which has been in place since North Korea test-fired missiles in July.

The ferry, the only passenger link between the two countries, has also been used to ship Japanese goods into North Korea.

“The impact of the denial of luxury goods would not be very visible” in the streets of Pyongyang as they target the country’s elite, said Noriyuki Suzuki, a senior analyst at Radiopress, which monitors North Korean media in Tokyo.

But the impact of Japanese sanctions that include a halt in all imports from North Korea “would probably result in a gradual decrease in not just luxury items but all Japanese goods in the country,” he said.

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Japanese crack down on pro-DPRK Chongryun

Tuesday, December 5th, 2006

Herald Tribune
12/5/2006

Japanese police raid pro-North Korea group over alleged accounting violation

Japanese police raided offices of a pro-North Korean association and later arrested an executive over suspected accounting violations on Tuesday, the latest crackdown as Tokyo intensifies pressure on the reclusive communist regime.

Investigators searched the offices of the Hyogo chamber of commerce affiliated with the General Association of Korean Residents in Japan, which acts as Pyongyang’s de facto embassy, prefectural (state) police spokesman Naoki Awazu said.

Awazu said no other details were immediately available.

Police suspect a 36-year-old former senior official at the group’s local business office helped North Korea-affiliated companies and offices evade taxes and provided accounting services without a license, Kyodo News agency reported.

Eitetsu Kawa, a North Korean living in Japan, was later arrested on suspicion of accounting law violations.

Japan has been cracking down on the residents’ association amid concerns about North Korea’s nuclear and chemical weapons programs, but it was not immediately known if Tuesday’s raid was linked.

The reclusive regime angered Japan and other nations when it tested ballistic missiles in July and conducted a nuclear test in October.

Pro-Pyongyang Japanese residents have come under increasing scrutiny by authorities as tensions have escalated with North Korea.

Tokyo was also planning to urge local governments to review preferential property taxes for facilities owned by North Korean organizations to check on how the pro-North association uses its buildings and facilities.

On Tuesday, the North’s state-run Korean Central News Agency protested the recent raids, calling them “an infringement upon the dignity of (North Korea) and a vicious political provocation.”

Last week, police raided the association’s Tokyo headquarters and its offices in the northern Japanese city of Niigata on suspicion that a relative of a group official illegally obtained a small amount medical supplies for shipment to the impoverished country.

In August, Japanese police arrested a pro-North resident in Japan for allegedly exporting to the North machinery that can be used to make biological weapons.

In March, Japanese police raided another pro-North Korea local chamber of commerce in connection with Pyongyang’s abduction of Japanese citizens in the 1970s and 1980s.

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