Fatherland Liberation War Memorial Hall
March 27th, 2013Today NK News ran this story on the unfinished “Victory in the Fatherland Liberation War Memorial Hall” (조국해방전쟁승리기념관). I thought I would add some images of the interior of the building that were shown on North Korean television:
In addition to the construction of this building, the “Victory in the Fatherland Liberation War Museum” and the “Victory in the Fatherland Liberation War Memorial” are all under renovation. As previously reported (in December 2012), the Pueblo has also been moved here.
Collection of DPRK laws and regulations
March 27th, 2013A much-appreciated colleague has sent me a PDF document published by the DPRK’s Committee for the Promotion of External Economic Cooperation in 2003. It that contains hundreds of pages of DPRK laws and regulations.
Click here to open the PDF document
Here is a list of the contents:
1. The Law of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea on Foreign Investment
2. The Law of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea on Equtiy Joint Venture
3. Regulations for the Implementation of the Law on Equity Joint Venture
4. The Law of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea on Contractual Joint Venture
5. Regulations for the Implementation of the Law on Contractual Joint Venture
6. The Law of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea on Foreign Exchange Control
7. Regulations for the Implementation of the Law on Foreign Exchange control
8. The Law of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea on Foreign-Invested Bank
9. The Law of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea on the Leasing of Land
10. The Law of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea on Foreign-Invested Business and Foreign Individual Tax
11. Regulations for the Implementation of the Law on Foreign-Invested Business and Foreign Individual Tax
12. The Customs Law of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea
13. The Law of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea on the Protection of Environment
14. The Insurance Law of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea
15. The Law of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea on External Economic Arbitration
16. The Law of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea on External Civil Relations
17. The Notary Public Law of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea
18. The Civil Proceedings Act of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea
19. The Law of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea on Processing Trade
20. The Law of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea on Bankruptcy of Foreign-Invested Enterprises
21. The Law of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea on the Rason Economic and Trade Zone
22. The Law of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea on Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprises
23. Regulations for the Implementation of the Law on Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprises
24. Regulations on the Financial Management of Foreign Invested Enterprises
25. Regulations on the Introduction of Latest Technologies by Foreign-Invested Enterprises
26. Regulations on the Naming of Foreign-Invested Enterprises
27. Regulations on the Registration of Foreign-Invested Enterprises
28. Labor Regulations for Foreign-Invested Enterprises
29. Regulations on the Resident Representative Offices of Foreign Enterprises in the Rason Economic and Trade Zone
30. Regulations on Entrepot Trade in the Rason Economic and Trade Zone
31. Regulations on Contract Construction in th Rason Economic and Trade Zone
32. Regulations on Forwarding Agency in the Rason Economic and Trade Zone
33. Regulations on Statistics in the Rason Economic and Trade Zone
34. Regulations on Tourism in the Rason Economic and Trade Zone
35. Regulations on Financial Management of Foreign-Invested Enterprises in the Rason Economic and Trade Zone
36. Regulations on Foreigner’s Immigration Procedure and Stay in the Rason Economic and Trade Zone
37. Customs Regulations For the Rason Economic and Trade Zone
38. Regulations on Finding in the Rason Economic and Trade Zone
China-North Korea railway links to undergo upgrade
March 26th, 2013Pictured Above (Google Earth): The Namyang (DPRK) – Tumen (PRC) rail and bridge crossings. I suspect that this is the specific area that will see renovation
According to the Global Times:
The government of northeast China’s Jilin Province announced Tuesday plans to upgrade railways links to neighboring North Korea, aiming to boost cross-border economic and trade ties.
…
The China Tumen-North Korea Rajin Railway and China Tumen-North Korea Chongjin Railway will be upgraded under the Jilin government plan. A special highway passenger line linking Tumen to North Korea is also set to be opened in coming years.
The plan aims to improve the industrial cooperation between China and North Korea’s Rason and push the development of the Tumen Korean Industrial Park to a higher level.
Jin Qiangyi, director of the Asia Research Center of Yanbian University, told the Global Times that the industrial cooperation between China and North Korea has been going on for many years and does not breach international sanctions against Pyongyang.
Such cooperation could improve employment in border areas of both countries and contribute to development and stability in the area amid heightening tensions, said Jin.
…
Read the full story here:
China-North Korea railway links to undergo upgrade
Global Times
2013-3-27
Chrome blocking Naenara
March 25th, 2013Above: What I see when I try to log onto Naenara.kp
For several days now, Google Chrome has blocked access to the DPRK’s Naenara portal because it contains malware.
Here is the information that Chrome provides about the site:
What is the current listing status for naenara.com.kp?
Site is listed as suspicious – visiting this web site may harm your computer.Part of this site was listed for suspicious activity 2 time(s) over the past 90 days.
What happened when Google visited this site?
Of the 5628 pages we tested on the site over the past 90 days, 18 page(s) resulted in malicious software being downloaded and installed without user consent. The last time Google visited this site was on 2013-03-19, and the last time suspicious content was found on this site was on 2013-03-15.
Malicious software includes 143 exploit(s), 9 trojan(s). Successful infection resulted in an average of 16 new process(es) on the target machine.Malicious software is hosted on 3 domain(s), including zief.pl/, ecpage.sakura.ne.jp/, chura.pl/.
This site was hosted on 1 network(s) including AS131279 (STAR).
Has this site acted as an intermediary resulting in further distribution of malware?
Over the past 90 days, naenara.com.kp did not appear to function as an intermediary for the infection of any sites.Has this site hosted malware?
No, this site has not hosted malicious software over the past 90 days.How did this happen?
In some cases, third parties can add malicious code to legitimate sites, which would cause us to show the warning message.
Other sites on the .kp domain appear to be functioning normally.
Are there any brave souls with a spare computer that want to investigate this?
RoK approves private aid to DPRK
March 22nd, 2013According to Yonhap:
Under the approval, Eugene Bell, a South Korean charity group, will ship tuberculosis medicine worth 678 million won (US$606,500 to eight tuberculosis clinics run by the South Korean group in North Korea. The shipment is expected to be delivered in April, the official said.
This marks the first aid package approved by the ministry since Park took office on Feb. 25. The last aid request was granted in November last year under President Lee Myung-bak.
…
“The approval is strictly for humanitarian purposes and should not be read as a message to condone North Korea’s recent provocations,” Kim said.
“The planned medicine aid can help cure about 500 multidrug-resistant tuberculosis patients in the North whose lives would be at serious risk without the medicine,” the spokesman said. It is difficult for North Korea to produce quality medicine to cure the difficult type of tuberculosis, he added.
…
President Park has repeatedly said despite relations with the North, she will continue to allow humanitarian aid to less-privileged North Koreans as part of her signature North Korean policy to build trust with the country. She, however, pledged to sternly respond to any provocations by the North.
“The spread of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis is so serious that North Korea is judged to have missed the crucial ‘golden time’ to root out the tuberculosis,” Stephen Linton, the chairman of Eugene Bell, said in a news conference in November following a two-week visit to the country.
The charity foundation has been running a medical service program for tuberculosis patients in the North since 2000 and sends drugs on a regular basis to the impoverished country.
Read the full story here:
Seoul approves first private-level aid provision to N. Korea under new administration
Yonhap
2013-3-22
North Korea enacts new tax regulations in Mt. Kumgang tourist zone
March 21st, 2013Institute for Far Eastern Studies (IFES)
2013-3-21
North Korea announced that it has instituted a new law to begin levying tax in the Mount Kumgang Tourist Zone which has been — until now — a tax-free zone. In addition, a personal protection regulation for tourists was also added to its tourism regulations. North Korea has been modifying laws pertaining to the Mt. Kumgang area in order to develop it as a special tourism zone.
Last week, Yonhap News reported that it had obtained from North Korea a book that was released last November on North Korea’s laws and regulations on international economic policy. According to the book, North Korea adopted in June 2012 a new tax regulation for the Special Zone for International Tour of Mount Kumgang. The law was passed by the Presidium of the Supreme People’s Assembly.
The new tax regulation stipulated that any companies or individuals (foreigners and oversees Koreans) who conduct business transactions or make profit from the Special Zone for International Tour of Mount Kumgang are subjected to tax.
The business income tax applied in the Mount Kumgang zone are on average about 14 percent of one’s yearly profit (infrastructure projects including airport, railways, roads, and port construction only pay 10 percent) and individual income tax ranges from 5 to 30 percent when monthly income is 300 euros (approximately 430,000 KRW).
The tax regulation also covers property, inheritance, transaction, business, and local tax. This comes as a subordinate law under the Special Law for International Tourism in Mount Kumgang, which was enacted in May 2011 and subsequently revoked the monopoly rights of Hyundai Asan.
As such, this law likely will impact South Korean investment in the Mount Kumgang tourism industry.
In the past, working closely with Hyundai Asan, North Korea designated the tourist area as a tax-free zone. There were also no separate laws regarding the levying of taxes on foreigners except for South Korean tourists, who were required to pay 50 USD per person.
In the ‘Tourism Regulations of Mount Kumgang International Tourism Zone,’ a clause was added that specified the special travel bureau for international tourism was responsible for the protection of personal safety and property of tourists in Mount Kumgang. The special travel bureau for international tourism is under the jurisdiction of the Guidance Bureau of the Special Zone of Mount Kumgang International Tourism.
North Korea’s decision to insert a clause ensuring the safety of tourists is likely due to the fact that this issue has continually been raised as a main concern since the death of a South Korean tourist in the zone in July 2008 and subsequent halt of inter-Korean cooperation in the Mount Kumgang project.
In addition to the new tax and tourism regulations, North Korea also made new regulations pertaining to the foundation and management of enterprises; customs; access, visitation, and housing; insurance, and environmental protection, among others.
Chinese oil exports to DPRK
March 21st, 2013Reuters reports on Chinese oil exports to the DPRK:
China did not export any crude oil to North Korea in February, customs data showed on Thursday, marking the first absence of deliveries since the same month in 2012.
Crude oil is the largest commodity by value that is supplied to North Korea under Beijing’s aid programme. It was not immediately clear if the lack of supply represented a unilateral action by China to punish North Korea for its nuclear test on Feb. 12.
Customs data showed the last time China missed monthly supply shipments was in February 2012. There were also no exports in February 2011.
…
Beijing normally supplies between 30,000 to 50,000 tonnes of crude oil to North Korea every month (222,000 to 370,000 barrels). Exports in 2012 totalled 523,041 tonnes, China General Administration of Customs data shows.
At $100 per barrel, China’s annual crude oil supplies last year would have been worth about $380 million.
Officials at the Ministry of Commerce were either not aware of the customs figures or declined comment. The ministry is a key agency that oversees the aid programme, which includes supplying commodities such as crude oil and diesel fuel.
Oil trading officials with knowledge of China’s oil aid to North Korea told Reuters last week that the ministry had some internal discussions about how to respond following Pyongyang’s latest nuclear test.
One of them said there may be “some kind of curb” in supplies but declined to elaborate.
The customs data showed a small quantity of diesel fuel flowed to North Korea in February amounting to about 4,000 tonnes (31,200 barrels). For the whole of 2012 China supplied 31,050 tonnes of diesel and 56,093 tonnes of gasoline to North Korea, customs data shows.
Prior to 2011, China suspended crude sales to North Korea in early 2007 and in September 2006, which also coincided with a nuclear test in October that year.
Read the full story here:
China did not export any crude in Feb to N.Korea (CORRECTED)
Reuters
Chen Aizhu
2013-3-21
Kim Cheol Woong performance in Virginia
March 20th, 2013Apologies to readers outside the DC area, but I am posting a “local” event. I hope to see you there.
North Korean pianist, Kim Cheol Woong, who now lives in Seoul, will be performing at an event in Burke, VA. You can learn more about Mr. Kim in this New York Times article.
Here is the marketing flyer with the date, time, and location:
Here is the flyer in Korean (한국)
Here is a, invitation letter (PDF) from NKUS, North Korean Refugees in the USA (Homepage, Facebook).
DPRK National Nutrition Survey final report
March 19th, 2013The official UN web page is here.
Here is the description:
Conducted in all provinces of DPRK from September 17th to October 17th, 2012, the National Nutrition Survey was a joint collaboration between DPRK Government, involving the Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), the Child Nutrition Institute, the MOPH and the National Coordination Committee as well as WHO, WFP and UNICEF.
Amongst others, the results of the survey show that Stunting remains an area of great concern in DPRK. About 28% of Korean children are stunted (Chronic Malnutrition) with provincial disparities. Acute malnutrition (4%) is present and varies according to provinces but even if the prevalence is not alarming, support is still needed to treat these children because of the high mortality risk associated with acute malnutrition. The survey also provides detail on children’s and women’s feeding practices.
You can download a PDF of the report here.
I have added this report to my “DPRK Economics Statistics Page”.












