Art under control in North Korea

February 26th, 2006

This new book could be interesting: Art Under Control In North Korea

Jane Portal’s book is the first to be published in the West which explores the role of art in North Korea, a role that has been based on pronouncements made by the Great Leader, Kim Il-sung and his son the Dear Leader, Kim Jong-il, about what the State expected of its artists. Portal makes comparisons with those of other, similar, regimes in the past, and finds a clear connection between North Korean art and the socialist realism of the Soviet Union and China. She places North Korean art in its historical, political and social context, and discusses the system of producing, employing, promoting and honouring artists. Painting, calligraphy, poster art, monumental sculpture, architecture and applied arts are included, together with a review of the way in which archaeology has been used and even created for political ends, to justify the present regime and legitimize its lineage. Jane Portal thus reveals much about art made under totalitarian rule, as well as how the art subverts the regime.

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North Korean Propoganda

February 26th, 2006

Here are two sites that have good examples of the DPRKs socialist-realism paintings:

http://www.northkoreapropaganda.com/

http://northkorea-art.com/ (Pyongyang Art Studio run by out friends at Koryo Tours)

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North Korean Bath Houses

February 26th, 2006

According to Andrei Lankov in the Korea Times:

The North boasts a huge public bathing facility, one that probably exceeds in size any comparable enterprise in the South, and one that is not much inferior in service quality. This is Changgwangwon, a mammoth bathing complex that opened to the public in March 1980. In 2001 North Korean media reported that during the first two decades of its existence Changgwangwon was visited by some 37 million people.

Changgwangwon can be described as a ‘super-bathhouse’. This granite and marble structure is replete with swimming pool, an impressive array of spas and showers, saunas, and the like. It has its own bars and tearooms. And it is open to the general public.

However, not everybody can just walk in: one has to have a ticket, and the ticket is only valid for a limited time. Actually, the Changgwangwon complex serves some 5,000 patrons a day, but it is not enough to satiate the wishes of the capital residents: many more people would like to get in. Thus people wait in the early morning, from 4:00 AM, in a long queue. Foreigners are luckier: they have a designated day (Saturdays) when the entire complex is reserved for their exclusive use ㅡ much to the dismay of the common people. However, foreigners pay hard currency for the privilege

In the 1980s a handful of other top-class bathing houses were built in Pyongyang. These are moderate if compared to Changgwangon, but quite impressive by the standards of the ‘normal’ North Korean public bathhouses. However, a visit to Changgwangwon is a rare event, even for the inhabitants of privileged Pyongyang; it is the humble public bathhouse that is for daily use.

And what about private bathing facilities? These are nearly absent. Rare is the dwelling in the countryside that has any bathing facilities at all. This is often the case even with the multi-story buildings, especially outside Pyongyang: a tap in the kitchen is the best that one may hope for. Only a minority of North Koreans can wash themselves in their own apartment building, but even then it is seldom done in a private bathroom. The better apartment complexes have small bathhouses for the exclusive use of the residents. Sometimes there is a shower room on every floor, and sometimes a bathhouse is located on the ground floor of a building. Only in a handful of the best apartments in Pyongyang is every flat equipped with its own bathroom.

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DPRK agrees to Chinese aid based on market principles

February 25th, 2006

Kyodo News:

China has reached an agreement with North Korea to let the private sector, rather than the government, take the initiative in providing economic aid to Pyongyang and to respect market principles, sources familiar with China-North Korea relations said Saturday. According to the sources, the market-based approach is contained in a cooperation agreement in economy and technology signed by the two countries when Chinese President Hu Jintao visited North Korea in late October.

One of the objectives of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il’s visit to China in January was to confirm this approach, the sources said.

The sources also said a cooperation agreement in economy and technology signed by a Chinese delegation led by Vice Premier Wu Yi during their visit to North Korea in early October is separate from the agreement with the same name signed during Hu’s visit later that month.

The earlier agreement calls on China to continue providing materials and technological cooperation for the Da’an Friendship Glass Factory near Pyongyang. It also allows North Korea to export glass products made at the factory.

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Thomas J. Payne Market Development

February 19th, 2006

From their website: 

Tom J. Payne frequently travels to the north of China to Liaoning Province and the commercial region of the DPRK.  Specifically, we are active in the Dandong region which is the main city bordering on North Korea.   This allows us a close up view and quick jaunts into the Worker’s paradise.   Our friends at the Liaoning Import Export Corporation conduct around 90 percent of their business with the North, and trade food, for steel.  They operate duty free stores and restaurants in the capital city and even sell automobiles to VIP communist leaders.  Here are just a few images from the frontier.  Give Tom a call if you want to learn more about what is really going on in North Korea.  [email protected]   (Although we are not allowed to do anything, there, we certainly know people who are!) Until last week!  The doors are now open, and we will be presenting information on doing business with the Hermit Kingdom! 

He ansers the following quesitons:

What is the business climate like?
Do the North Koreans Pay their Bills?
Are there small business opportunities?
Are there private businesses operating in the DPRK?
What about all of the aid organizations etc…
What can a foreigner source in the DPRK?
What do the North Koreans Need? 
Will the political climate change?
How does a westerner survive there?
Can you access the internet from there?

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The end of KEDO and “nuclear” energy

February 18th, 2006

From the Donga:

South Korea has agreed to pay the termination costs for a light-water reactor project in Sinpo, North Korea that was canceled earlier last month.

The total reactor termination costs are estimated to be roughly $200 to $300 million. Most of the cost is damages with penalties and money that needs to be given to construction companies and component suppliers. The costs could snowball even more if additional costs for moving equipment and construction vehicles out of the North are taken into account. The additional costs could amount to as much as $4.7 million

North Korea currently refuses to return the equipment, however. The North is also likely to demand compensation for ending the light-water reactor project. If that is the case, who else can North Korea turn to for compensation but South Korea?

Should the project be restarted, South Korea will end up covering most of the construction costs. In short, they will end up paying for the termination costs first, and then construction costs if the project is restarted.

Despite all this the South Koreans still have to provide two million kilowatts of power to the North. Providing power is now a separate issue from light-water construction due to the government’s hasty offer.

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Insurance and Compensation in the DPRK

February 17th, 2006

The Daily NK speculates about how much money the family of the victim of the accidental death in the Mt. Koumgang resort will receive.  What is interesting about this article is the exploration of dispute resolution without courts or insurance companies…something that most westerners could not imagine.

Here are some bullet points from the article:

  • Allegedly from a North Korean defector: “In North Korea there is no such national compensation for car accident causalities. So it is pitiful to think that the North Korean government did take away this compensation without giving it to the car accident-related families.”
  • “Because of the system of no car insurance in North Korea, offenders must compensate the injured parties for the car accident themselves. If the offenders do not have the ability for compensation, then they must go to prison. And if they have the ability, they pay money for it. The compensation is usually a TV or about one hundred thousand won ($35). “
  • If one dies in North Korea, the death is not dealt with seriously.
  • The aleged defector again describes an accident in which his friend was killed by a Mercedes: “[After the accident, I put my fired in the back seat of the car].  As soon as I informed those instructors of the hospital who were in charge of Jeong Hyeok’s car accident, they ran to the Red Cross Hospital. In the meantime, Jeong Hyeok had died, and was moved to the mortuary. The vice-president and the teacher in charge of the college construction required the driver to be responsible for drinking and driving and to compensate his parents for the car accident. The chief demanded to finish up this accident, saying that he will give a TV and a refrigerator to Jeong Hyeok’s parents. The teacher repelled the suggestion, ‘This is not enough. If you do it this way, then I will accuse you to the Central Committee.  The next day, a secretary of the Primary Party Committee called the college. He said, “Just follow the suggestion that the Security Safety Agency gives the funeral expenses and a color TV.” It was evident that the Security Safety Agency gave a certain kind of hint to the secretary of the Primary Party Committee. The situation was saying that the chief will evasively save the driver. However, who can refute the instruction of the Party? Despite the undeserved death, the North Korean government just issued one ‘patriot certificate’. Seeing the TV exchanged for her son, she continued sobbing.

I have some personal experience with this topic.  When I visited the DPRK in August 2005, I asked one of my guides how traffic disputes were resolved.  He said that those involved simply had to work out the details.  there were no insurance companies.  This would put the average citizen at a severe bargaining disadvantage in the event of an acident.

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Macau bank drops N Korean clients

February 16th, 2006

According to the BBC:

A Macau bank accused by the US of laundering money for North Korea has agreed to dissolve all links with the communist state.

The US Treasury said Banco Delta Asia had acted as a “willing pawn” for North Korea to channel money through Macau.

Macau’s authorities took control of the bank last year after the fraud claims led to a run on its deposits.  Customers withdrew 10% of total deposits after the allegations surfaced.

Officials said the bank would end ties with North Korean clients and tighten its anti-money laundering procedures.

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The Times, They Are ‘a Changin’

February 15th, 2006

A New  report, Hungry for Peace: International Security, Humanitarian Assistance, and Social Change in North Korea, compiled by Hazel Smith, a former adviser to U.N. humanitarian agencies who lived in North Korea for two years, claims that the right kinds of aid could have the effect of opening up the country…becuse the place has already opened up quite a bit.

This view contrases with this one, which says that outside efforts to leverage foreign aid to gain concessions will fail because China and South Korea provide all sorts of assistance that requires no quid pro quo.

From the Press Release:

“There are too many analyses of North Korea that assume that this is a society that never changes and that it’s monolithic.  The influx of hundreds of aid workers in the late 1990s, followed by South Korean businessmen, has made old images of the North outdated. Massive social change resulted from the famine that killed a million people made a bankrupt socialist government unable to stop the marketization of the economy.”

The bottom-up erosion of rigid social controls allowed junior officials and some of the population of 23 million people to become exposed to United Nations and other aid workers, diplomatic missions and South Koreans, Smith told Reuters.

While the hard-line communist government of leader Kim Jong-il has resisted any kind of political liberalization, she said, “party officials at the middle level no longer pay so much attention to what the state tells them.”

“There’s a big fragmentation in the country these days,” Smith said, describing a fight between officials who want to restore a command economy and those who think the North must follow China in adopting a market economy.

The more senior leaders believe they can use South Korean and Chinese aid, and maintain North Korea’s political system in a federation with the South. Smith says this is impossible.

But below them are younger, pragmatic technocrats who are “very aware that the regime as it stands is not sustainable and admire what South Korea has done,” she said.

The competition between economic modernizers and old guard security officials gives potential leverage for the United States and other countries at the six-party talks aimed at convincing North Korea to abandon its nuclear weapons.

“There are avenues for negotiation because there are economic outcomes which the North Koreans want,” said Smith.

Dangling economic incentives would help modernizers win, Smith said. South Korea’s modest investments to support nascent civil society and bring North Korea into the outside world was “the best of all the feasible options”.

South Koreans who deal with North Korea “know this is not a very militarily strong country — it’s a weak country, it’s very vulnerable and its people are fed up with the past decade and a half of poverty,” said Smith.

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Price and wage data:

February 15th, 2006

Daily DK did a survey of prices in the DPRK this January, 2006.

Official Wages for a North Korean workers labor are 2,000 won to 3,000 won per month (about $1).

 

Exchange rate

Yuan 350:1 / Dollar 2,715:1 / 100Dollars: 85Euro

Groceries

Rice

750won

Millet

500won

Glutinous

850won

Barley

450won

Annam rice

700won

Pork

3,000won

Chicken

3,000~4,000won(it depends on size)

Egg

150won per one

Edible oil

Yellow-1,930won per kg

Seasoning

1,500won per 500g

White – 1,660won

Corn

380won

 

Clothes and Shoes

Underwear

panties

500~1,000won

Sneakers

Home handcraft

6,000won

Brassiere

4,000~5,000won

Private products

3,000won

Socks

500~1,000won

Made in China

12,000~17,000won

Shoes

15,000~20,000won

Handy shoes(for women)

2,000won

 

Housing Prices

Rental

60won per menth / Paying quarterly

Luxurious apatment

4,000~5,000dollars(99m²)

Quality apartment

3,000dollars(82.5m²)

General apartment

1,500~2,000dollars(66m²)

Small apartment

1,000~1,500dollars(49.5m²)

General single story house

800dollars

Inferior single story house

450~500dollars

 

Medicines

Cold remedy

20won(1pill)

Vitamin B1 injection

20won(once)

Aspirin

20won(1pill)

Amoxicillin (Antibiotics)

28won(250mm)

Anthelmintics

60won(1pill)

Santonin

120won (1pack)

Obstruent

15won(1pill)

Painkillers

15won(1pill)

– When examined, bribery is not necessary
– When getting a medical certificate or medicines, bribery is necessary
– Bribery: one box of tobacco/ as for medicines for 1,000 won, 7000 won

Stationery

Pencil

General lead pencil

25won

Notebook

Big one

25won

Mechanical pencil

200won

Small one

15won

Ball pen

50~100won

School Uniform

Elementary school

1,500won

School Bag

10,000won

Mid and High schools

2,500won

– Every month, the following costs should be paid to schools: kindergartens – 1,000 won/ elementary schools- 2,5000 won/ middle and high schools- 4,000 won
– Every month, the following stuffs should be provided to schools: scrap irons, glass 15kg and 40 bundles of timbers
– In an irregular basis, the following stuffs should be provided to school: vinyl, wastepaper, paints and gasoline

Railroad Fares

Shinuiju – Pyongyang

High class – 650won

Shinuiju – Chongjin

1,000won

Low class – 450won

Shinuiju – Gaesung

1,000won

Shinuiju – Nampo

600won

Shinuiju – Ryongcheon

200won

Sariwon – Pyongyang

200won (low class)

Pyongyang – Dandong(Pyongyang-Beijing international train)

About 10yuan(3,300won)

Dandong – Pyongyang

400yuan

 

Fares of Cars and Buses

Shinuiju – Pyongsung

8,000won

Shinuiju – Jeongju

5,000won

Shinuiju – Yeomju

3,000won

Shinuiju – Wonsan

10,000won

Sariwon – Wonsan

8,000~10,000won

Sariwon – Pyongyang

1,000won

Sariwon – Pyongsung

8,000~10,000won

Sariwon – Haeju

6,000won

 

Accommodation Fee

Hotels

Usually 100 dollars, at minimum 60 dollars

Inns

50~100won

Private-owned inns

Less than 100~200 won / The most decent room is 500won

 

Fees for Travel Documents

Safeguard certificate

in a province

3,000won

Crossing-river certificate

100dollars

Outside of a province

4,000~5,000won

Passport and visa

40,000won

 

Selling Stand in a Market

Depending on size, place and kinds of business

15,000~50,000won

 

 

Appliances

White-black TV

50,000~60,000won

Computer

Pentium 3

170~190dollars

Color TV

200,000won(new one)

Pentium 4

300~400dollars

Radio

Made in China – 20,000~30,000won(about 100yuan)

 

Prices and Phone Bills of Telephone and Mobile Phone

Telephone

Installation fee(per one)

40,000won(about $200)

Using in a postal office

Local

2won

Rental per month

1,500won

distance

40~50won

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