- The Extended tour zone will reach Wonsan (Where the Japanese Chongryun ships come in)
- There are plans to finalize a “master plan” of development for the area (lakes, nursing homes, beaches).
- Since opening in 1998, 1.2 million south Koreans have visited
- Hyundai Asan hopes to channel 2.3 trillion won ($2.37 billion) into the project through domestic and foreign investors.
- Besides the tour-related issues, the two sides also agreed on a payment of $400,000 to the three victims of a traffic accident that happened late last year. It wish I could track that $400,000. It will end up in interesting places for sure. The accident happened on Dec. 27 in the tourist area, and North Korea called at first for at least $1 million in compensation. In an earlier traffic accident that killed a North Korean soldier in June 2001, $6,000 in compensation was paid.
Kumgang Expansion
February 15th, 2006China Trade Boosting DPRK GNP
February 14th, 20062/14/06
SEOUL – North Korea’s economy would have posted minus growth if it had not been for its rapidly growing trade with China, the South Korean central bank’s research unit said Monday.
North Korea-China trade has been rising by an average 30% every year since 2000, boosting the communist state’s economic growth by 3.5% every year, according to the Institute for Monetary and Economic Research.
As of 2004, the bilateral trade accounted for 39% of the North’s total trading volume, and also made up 77% of annual increase in the North’s trade volume, the institute said. North Korea’s economic growth could have dipped below zero if it were not for such a sharp increase in its trade with China, the institute said. Such a sharp increase in bilateral trade is the result of North Korea’s low production capacity and cheap prices of Chinese goods, it said.
Geographical proximity also boosted the trade. The fast growth of the Chinese economy will result in increased trade with North Korea and induce more market elements in the Stalinist state in the coming years, the institute predicted.
As a result, the inclusion of China in South Korea’s economic cooperation with the North will be one of the options that the government could consider in its policy, it added.
Sinuiju SAR back on?
February 13th, 2006According to the Daily NK (2006-2-13):
A high-level internal source in North Korea reported on the 12th that North Korea is in the process of restarting the development of Shinuiju Special Administrative Region.
According to the source, a mass number of residents were moved to rural areas, plans were set to move administrative offices and plans were carried out to build the road to Dandong, China is under expansion construction. They are also coming up with measures to better control the usage of cellular phones as well as other political measures.
Such recent development activities in Shinuiju mainly took place after Kim Jong Il’s visit to China, which seems to be part of North Korea’s reformation and liberalization plan.
Driving Out the Residents and Their Number
The source reported, “They are planning to move the Shinuiju residents of about 7,000 families (25,000 to 30,000 people) to close cities and rural areas. Their plan is to strictly sort out those from “bad families” and those who have committed political errors (wrongdoings) and move them to Chulsan-gun [Cholsan], Donglim-gun [Tongrim], Yomju-gun, and Taechun-gun[Thaechon] of North Pyongan province.”
In September of 2002, North Korea announced Shinuiju as the Special Administrative Region and nominated Yang Bin, president of Ouya Group at the time, who was the invited minister of the Shinuiju Special Administrative Region. He said, “We will move the current 200,000 Shinuiju residents to another place.”
At the time, the North Korean government started to build 3 m high fence around the designated region, which clearly showed its preparation to make Shinuiju an isolated Special Administrative Region.
Kim Eun Chul, president of Backdu-Halla Association, a young adults defectors organization and a former Shinuiju resident, said, “Chulsan-gun, Donglim-gun, Yomju-gun, and Taechun-gun are agricultural areas where there is no military or manufacturing production facilities, thus they are adequate places to move the residents.”
“There have been rumors about moving those people with unclear backgrounds out of the region every time they talked about making the Special Administrative Region.”
Provincial Administrative Offices to be Moved
The source reported, “The provincial offices located in Shinuiju city are rebuilt in South Shinuiju and roads to Dandong, China are under construction to be expanded.”
Shinuiju’s administrative offices refer to provincial offices of North Pyongan Province, including Provincial Party (office), People’s Committee, and Administrative Committee. Plans to move these offices to South Shinuiju had been announced when the government announced the plan for the Shinuiju Special Administrative Region in September 2002. South Shinuiju is located about 3 km away from downtown Shinuiju and when Shinuiju becomes a Special Administrative Region, administrative work will be divided and South Shuinuiju will take charge of provincial administrative work.
Yet another source said, “Among the Shinuiju residents, rumors are spreading that Kim Jong Il’s visit to China was for iron and oil trade.” Shinuiju relied on Chinese aid or trade for most of the industrial facilities and as an example, currently, Baekmawon Oil Factory in Shinuiju is receiving oil aid of 1,500,000 tons per year from China.
Additional posts on the Sinuiju SAR can be found here.
Read the full story here:
Shinuiju Special Administrative Region Plan Propelled Once Again
Daily NK
Kwon Jeong Hyun
2006-2-13
Japan threatens to tighten the screws (again)
February 13th, 2006Highlights:
Kyodo) _ Japan plans to apply regulations tightly to issues related to North Korea to put pressure on Pyongyang after bilateral talks made little headway on the abduction and other bilateral issues — without imposing economic sanctions for the time being, government sources said Monday.
The government has urged municipalities which provide tax breaks for a pro-North Korean organization’s facilities to consider whether such preferential treatment is appropriate, according to Abe.
The government may also study tightening customs screening of travelers who take souvenirs back to North Korea under a system to allow simplified customs checks for souvenirs worth up to 300,000 yen, the sources said.
American Koreans reunited with family in the DPRK
February 9th, 2006According to the Seattle Times: (By Barbara Demick, Los Angeles Times)
An American Foundation is working to reunite Korean families in the US with their relatives in the DPRK. From the article:
One of the most active U.S. charities working in North Korea announced Wednesday it will try to fill [the communication] void with a program it hopes will eventually lead to family reunions. The Eugene Bell Foundation, which operates out of Washington and Seoul supporting tuberculosis clinics inside the North, said it will start by collecting family information from Korean-Americans who belong to separated families.
“These people are in their 70s and 80s, and there are fewer and fewer of them every year. Many of them don’t speak English well and don’t understand the system well. They need our help if they will ever see their relative again,” said Alice Jean Suh, Washington office director of the Eugene Bell Foundation and the head of the campaign.
Smoke signals from BAT’s North Korea venture
February 8th, 2006Asia Times
Lora Saalman
2/8/2006
On January 10, North Korean leader Kim Jong-il traveled in a luxury train to China’s Guangdong province to sample socialist-flavored capitalism. Just a few months earlier, the North Korean Workers Party introduced reform measures granting foreign investors tax cuts and allowing them to sell goods produced in North Korea without tariffs.
For an economy that ostensibly issued halting economic reforms in 1984, these new measures constitute a revolution, albeit one with Chinese characteristics. In accordance with its giant neighbor’s model, North Korean economic reform is predicated as an alternative to the instability of political liberalization. Unforeseen social and political shifts are to be cushioned by financial solvency to keep the regime intact. With China’s assistance and unofficial aid, sustainable growth may one day be achieved in North Korea. Yet a darker side to North Korea’s economic awakening remains.
Kim Jong-il’s visit comes on the heels of accounts of North Korean money-laundering in Macau and the US decision last June and again in October to freeze the assets of various North Korean companies and financial institutions. While many of these firms are beyond the reach of US sanctions, implied misconduct has already led to runs on the North Korean-affiliated financial institution Banco Delta Asia in Macau.
As allegations swirl of money-laundering through counterfeit cigarettes and currency, a less-known story has emerged on British American Tobacco’s previously undisclosed four-year-old joint venture in North Korea. It presents the dilemma of doing business in a country in desperate need of revenue but with a poor track record of allocating resources to its people. This cautionary tale begs the question as to where exactly Pyongyang’s joint-venture profits are going.
For North Korea, which lacks many of the basic laws for financial transparency and good governance, capital investments are more than economically precarious. Shared contact information and dubious management practices among North Korean companies are ubiquitous.
Daesong-BAT is one of a handful of Western joint ventures in North Korea. The far-reaching tentacles of its North Korean partner illustrate the complexity of verifying the background and connections of any North Korean entity. Like many of its compatriots, North Korea’s Sogyong General Trading Corp (Sogyong) boasts circuitous and often indirect ties to entities engaged in proliferation, international trade, shipping, and money-laundering. These indicators point to larger concerns as to whether joint ventures, particularly Western ones, can be manipulated by North Korea for illicit financing of the regime or even to sustain its alleged WMD (weapons of mass destruction) programs.
Joint ventures and front companies
In establishing Daesong-BAT, British American Tobacco teamed up with Sogyong General Trading Corp, a Pyongyang-based state trader best known for its carpet exports. Sogyong, however, also exports such products as handicrafts, furniture and agricultural produce, while importing machinery, electronics, fishing tackle, chemicals and fertilizer. It is not uncommon for North Korean state-run enterprises to deal in everything from machinery to fishing tackle. Yet eclectic product lists make trade in illicit drugs and weapons all the more difficult to track. Cigarettes are just one more product in the Sogyong export-import pantheon.
North Korean company product lists also rarely convey their full range of trade. Seemingly innocuous industries are often manipulated as front companies. Last year, for example, Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) listed what appeared to be an innocuous North Korean food manufacturer, Sosong Food Factory, for its participation in nuclear, missile, chemical and biological-weapons proliferation. Cigarettes, like food, have been used at times to mask the real objects being transferred. In one case, Japan in 2002 seized a Chinese vessel and found that the declared store of cigarettes on board actually contained drugs thought to have come from North Korea.
While not as licentious as drug or human trafficking, even the black-market trade of cigarettes could have a tangible impact on North Korea’s financing, as seen in Eastern European illegal cigarette rings. These factors highlight the danger of taking a North Korean food or even carpet manufacturer at face value.
North Korea’s network
Among the elements of obfuscation, the company name Daesong-BAT merits attention. Rather than combining or modifying the titles of the two partner companies to form Sogyong-BAT, Daesong-BAT combines British American Tobacco’s acronym with a name that could either point to North Korea’s Daesong district or Daesong General Trading Corp (Daesong). If it turns out to be the latter, Japan and other governments have prominently featured Daesong for its ties to missile and nuclear proliferation.
Incidentally, Daesong maintains one of the most extensive and convoluted North Korean networks, with more than 10 subsidiaries. It also is suspected of falling under Bureau 39, which earns foreign currency for North Korea. A direct connection between Daesong-BAT and the sinewy Daesong franchise has yet to be established but, as illustrated below, nothing is clear cut in North Korean business relations.
Because of the lack of transparency and convoluted nature of North Korean companies, contact information often serves as the first stencil for tracing overlap between industries. In the case of Daesong, the US Central Intelligence Agency’s Open Source Center follows the use of the same fax number to establish potential business and branch linkages. If the same logic is applied to Sogyong, another pattern emerges. Sogyong shares common fax numbers with at least two companies, Korea Foodstuffs Trading Corp (Foodstuffs) and Korea Kwail Trading Corp (Kwail). These companies in turn share fax numbers with nearly 100 companies in North Korea.
Among North Korean firms sharing contact information with Sogyong-linked entities, Japan’s METI and official European export monitors have listed at least six as end-users associated with North Korean WMD programs. In October, the US government targeted one in particular, Korea Ryonha Machinery Joint Venture Corp (Ryonha), freezing its assets under US jurisdiction and placing it on the US Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons list. Ryonha is a prime example of the complex web of North Korean subsidiaries. Last June, the US Treasury Department also targeted the assets of its parent company Korea Ryonbong General Corp, formerly known as Lyongaksan, which heads five other US-designated entities.
Ryonha is not an aberration among companies converging with Sogyong. Among other Foodstuffs and Kwail-connected entities, Korean company databases list Korea Pyongyang Trading Corp as a distributor of methane gas derived from animal excrement. Apparently, effluent is not its only fetid source of income. The Japanese government has listed the very same company, along with subsidiaries of two other firms tracing back to Sogyong, namely Korea Ryonhap Trading Corp and Korea Jangsu Trading Corp, for nuclear, missile, chemical and biological weapons proliferation.
Proliferation networks may not be the only mechanisms at Sogyong’s fingertips. Contact information also links the two Sogyong-connected associates with at least four North Korean financial institutions. Among these, Koryo Bank and Korea Joint Bank have alleged ties to the now-infamous Banco Delta Asia in Macau. Banco Delta Asia’s own purported involvement in counterfeit-currency distribution and counterfeit-cigarette smuggling does not bode well for Daesong-BAT, no matter how convoluted their connections. Banco Delta Asia may have three degrees of separation between it and Sogyong, but in North Korea’s fishbowl of finance this does not preclude cooperation.
Banco Delta Asia is also reported to maintain a close business relationship with Macau-based Zokwang Trading, which its own vice general managing director claims is a part of North Korea’s Daesong General Trading Corp. Daesong, as mentioned earlier, has a pervasive proliferation record. It also has reported links to Changgwang Sinyong Corp (Changgwang), which has been repeatedly sanctioned by the United States for its missile-proliferation activities and sales to Iran and Pakistan. Zokwang in turn deals in missiles and nuclear-power-plant components, all the while maintaining a partnership with the notorious Changgwang. Combined with Sogyong’s branch in the joint \-venture hub Shenyang, China, even indirect ties to Macau suggest that Sogyong has the ability to tap into proliferation, industrial and financial networks in China and beyond.
Proliferation, industry and finance mean little without the means to transport goods and technology. Sogyong-associated entities Foodstuffs and Kwail share fax numbers with North Korea’s national airline Air Koryo, which has also been cited by official European monitors for proliferation. A 2003 Far Eastern Economic Review article even named Air Koryo as the transportation mechanism for Daesong’s suspected military assistance to Myanmar. Sogyong’s own shipping vessels Sogyong 1 and 2, which were detained in Japan on safety violations in December 2004 and January 2005, complete the final leg of the contact-linked proliferation, financing and shipment triangle. This network belies a much more intricate set of alliances than the domestic-consumption-based joint venture touted by British American Tobacco and Sogyong General Trading Corp.
Standards of business conduct
British American Tobacco’s website advocates transparency in international business and laudably eschews bribery, corruption, illicit trade, and money-laundering. In October, BAT executives further contended in The Guardian that the company’s North Korean cigarette joint venture fuels only domestic consumption, not exports to China or elsewhere. In spite of these reassurances, BAT is no stranger to the dangers of black-market cigarette production and transshipment. A February 2000 article in The Guardian even accuses BAT of complicity, by knowingly allowing illicit smuggling of its cigarettes to occur.
In the case of Daesong-BAT, British American Tobacco officials have admitted to knowing little of the company’s North Korean joint-venture operations. Ominously, BAT has stated that an unnamed Singapore division controls its North Korean joint venture. Lack of oversight combined with a dubious North Korean offshore mechanism for managing an ostensibly domestic industry raises significant warning signs. The incestuous relationship between state-run North Korean entities that share fax numbers of companies and banks listed for WMD procurement and money-laundering through counterfeit tobacco should also elicit concern. These are not simply dilemmas for British American Tobacco, but pose challenges to any companies forming joint ventures in North Korea.
Economic integration, as in China’s case, may bring North Korea more into step with international norms and standards. Ironically, engagement that is likely to lead to greater future transparency may also be manipulated for North Korea’s short-term illicit gains.
In 2003, the British government pressured BAT to close down its cigarette factory operations in the military dictatorship of Myanmar because of concerns over that country’s lack of human rights. Given the legion of obstacles impeding transparency in North Korea, BAT and other Western firms could be contributing to the worsening of more than human rights. They could be aiding and abetting illicit North Korean financing that is alleged to fuel Kim Jong-il’s slush fund and WMD programs.
Kaesong Industrial Park Update and Expansion
February 7th, 2006Tuesday, February 7, 2006
By Hwang Si-young
KT Corp., the country’s No. 1 fixed-line telecom and broadband operator, will build a gigantic communications center at the Gaeseong Industrial Complex in North Korea by 2007, the company said yesterday.
“Many local companies are expected to set up plants in Gaeseong in a few years. To meet a growing demand for fixed-line telephone and internet services, we decided to build a large communications center, approximately 9,900 square meters in size,” said KT’s Gaeseong District Office director Joung Youn-kwang.
There are currently 11 companies based in Gaeseong Complex. They are permitted and approved by the Ministry of Unification and Korea Land Corporation to do their businesses in Gaeseong.
The size of the industrial complex currently stands at 92,400 square meters, but according to KT, it will be expanded more to around 3,300,000 square meters by 2007, housing 300 or more companies.
As of now, KT operates a small communications center using a two-story temporary building in Gaeseong.
The company is likely to build a center after the overall industrial complex expansion is completed, Joung said.
KT will soon begin negotiating with its North Korean counterpart to secure land and bring additional telecommunications equipment, the company said.
DPRK conterfitting cigarettes?
February 6th, 2006A confidential report compiled by investigators working for a coalition of major U.S., European and Japanese tobacco companies indicates that North Korea has developed a highly lucrative source of hard currency: counterfeit cigarettes. The report dated June 29, 2005, offers a unique glimpse of the scale and sophistication of North Korea’s illicit-cigarette industry, which has allegedly counterfeited a vast array of brands—from Marlboro to Davidoff. The report estimates that production from 10 to 12 North Korean factories in the counterfeiting business may total 41 billion cigarettes a year, generating annual revenues of $520 million to $720 million. It’s not clear how much of this money flows to the regime of dictator Kim Jong Il, whether in duties or payments “for protection,” but the report speculates that its share of the profits may amount to $80 million to $160 million a year. That would be quite a windfall at a time when the North’s economy is reeling and the U.S. is trying to pressure Kim to abandon his nuclear-weapons program by cracking down on his regime’s income from business exploits as diverse as trafficking drugs and counterfeiting $100 bills.
Pyongyang has consistently dismissed U.S. allegations that it’s engaged in such illegal activities. But according to the report, some of these cigarette factories are directly owned by North Korea’s military and the internal-security service, giving the state “total control” over these operations. In other cases, says the report, the North’s contribution is primarily to provide a “safe haven” to factories run by overseas counterfeiting syndicates. Three of the factories that are said to be located in the Rajin area on the northeast coast of North Korea are allegedly run or financed by crime syndicates from Taiwan. One of these factories, equipped with second-hand equipment from China, has allegedly counterfeited such brands as Mild Seven, Dunhill and Benson & Hedges. According to the report, another factory in Rajin employed 120 people and was run by Chinese supervisors and technicians; North Korean officials were allegedly paid a “tax” on the factory’s cigarettes, which were then exported in fishing vessels owned by a Taiwan crime syndicate. Indeed, the report claims that a chief attraction of running such a business in North Korea is that the “regime’s willingness to allow dedicated, deep-sea smuggling vessels to use its ports provides the gangs with a secure delivery channel.”
Foreign Radio Broadcasts in DPRK
February 5th, 2006Here is a list of organizations that are broadcasting into the DPRK:
1. Open Radio for North Korea
2. Radio Free Asia
3. Voice of America
4. Social Education Broadcasting of KBS (schedule)
5. Radio Free North Korea (offical web site)
From Daily NK
Official statistics on the size of the DPRK audience that listens to foreign radio broadcasts are not available. The only way to get this information is to estimate based on the number of North Korean refugees who claim to have heard foreign radio broadcastings. Fortunately, a survey conducted by three broadcast companies who broadcast in North Korea- Radio Free Asia, Voice of America and the Social Education Broadcasting of KBS- shows the ratio of listeners among North Korean refugees.
This survey verifies that there are people who listen to foreign radio broadcasts, but the statistics were announced, not printed, and are unavailable. It is possible that the results are inflated.
However, a more reliable survey was recently released. The Korean Press Foundation conducted a survey of 319 North Korean refugees who made it to South Korea within the last two years. 304 respondents provided valid responses. Among these 304 respondents, 13 people, 4.27%, have listened to foreign short wave radio broadcasts and 34 people, 11.2%, have listened to the foreign medium wave radio. This is quite a significant proportion.
Considering the possibility that North Korean refugees had listened to the radio more often than other North Korean citizens, let’s assume that one percent of the North Korean population listens to foreign programs. Out of a total population of 20 million, it means that there are 200,000 listeners. We can’t say this is a small number.
Then how do North Koreans get radios?
The radios recently sold in North Korea are made in China. Most Chinese radios have a function to receive a short wave, since countries with a huge territory usually use short wave. By contrast, a country like South Korea with a small territory does not need to use short wave. FM or AM is enough. As a result, short wave radios are hard to find in South Korea.
Big countries such as Russia, China, and the US use short wave to send signals over long distances. Therefore, it is easy to find short wave radios in those markets. Short wave radios in China are currently flooding into North Korea.
DPRK denies counterfiting operations
February 2nd, 2006North Korea is no longer forging US dollars, contrary to US claims, South Korea’s intelligence agency has said.
The agency had no evidence Pyongyang has made forged, so-called “supernotes” since 1998, a lawmaker briefed by the National Intelligence Service said.
US sanctions imposed in connection with the alleged forgery have stalled talks on the North’s nuclear ambitions.