Archive for December, 2006

Seoul vows support for Mt. Kumgang tourism program

Wednesday, December 6th, 2006

Yonhap
12/6/2006
Byun Duk-kun

Unification Minister Lee Jong-seok returned to South Korea Wednesday after a two-day visit to North Korea aimed at rallying support for a cross-border tourism program criticized by the United States.

The South Korean government’s point man on North Korea arrived in the country’s eastern city of Goseong shortly after crossing the heavily-fortified border with North Korea around 5 p.m.

Lee was the highest-ranking South Korean official to visit the South Korean-developed tourist destination in Mount Geumgang since the communist North tested a nuclear device about two months ago.

The visit was geared towards meeting South Korean officials and businesspeople at the North Korean resort, but it followed Washington’s intensified criticism against the tourism program.

The United States had long opposed the inter-Korean tourism program, but never too explicitly. It asked the Seoul government to halt the country’s cross-border project with the North after Pyongyang conducted its first nuclear weapons test on Oct. 9.

The Mount Geumgang tourism program appears to be “designed to give money to North Korean authorities,” Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill said while traveling here in October.

Hill represents Washington in international negotiations aimed at persuading the North to abandon its nuclear ambitions. The talks are also attended by the two Koreas, Japan, China and Russia.

Seoul remained taciturn on the U.S. demand, only taking what U.S. critics called “eye-washing measures.”

The unification minister, however, said the tourism program must “continue” and “be developed further.”

“We must never take a break from trying to ease tension between the North and South Korea, no matter how difficult the times and conditions are,” the minister said while meeting with reporters at the North Korean resort,

“In that sense, these projects (with North Korea) must continue to be developed and widened,” he added.

Seoul was never expected to halt, let alone suspend, the tourism program, but the minister’s remarks come amid international efforts to punish the North for its nuclear test.

Shortly after the Oct. 9 test, the United Nations Security Council approved a resolution that prohibited the transfer to North Korea of any financial resources or assets that can benefit the communist nation’s nuclear and weapons of mass destruction programs.

Millions of dollars have been paid to Pyongyang since the Mount Geumgang resort opened in 1998, while Hyundai Asan, the South Korean developer of the resort, regularly pays large amounts of money to the North in the form of admission fees levied on South Korean tourists traveling there.

The South Korean government claims the money is unlikely to be used for the North’s nuclear or WMD programs, though it admits there is no way of knowing for certain.

The U.N. Security Council has yet to decide whether Seoul’s continued, and apparently renewed, support for the Mount Geumgang tourism program runs counter to its North Korea sanctions resolution.

“I believe no one can dispute the positive effects that the Mount Geumgang tourism program and the Kaesong industrial complex project have had on North-South relations,” said Lee.

The unification minister has offered to step down from his Cabinet post and is expected to be replaced next week by Lee Jae-joung, senior vice chairman of the presidential National Unification Advisory Council.

He was scheduled to arrive in Seoul later in the day.

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ROK to join U.S.-led container security system

Wednesday, December 6th, 2006

Yonhap
12/6/2006

South Korea is set to announce its participation in a U.S.-led campaign to stop container-borne radioactive materials after refusing to help interdict North Korean ships suspected of carrying weapons of mass destruction.

A Foreign Ministry official confirmed Wednesday that Seoul decided to join the International Container Scanning Network, or ICSN.

“The government plans to formally announce the decision later this week,” the official said, asking not to be identified.

The ICSN calls for its members to install state-of-the-art radioactivity detectors at their major ports so customs officials can screen the contents of containers without opening them.

International efforts to curb the flow of nuclear materials have gained more urgency since North Korea conducted a nuclear test in October.

Seoul’s decision to join the ICSN was widely interpreted as designed to offset its limited participation in the Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI).

South Korea said last month that it would stay away from any PSI-related activity in the vicinity of the Korean Peninsula, citing its unique geopolitical situation. South Korea remains technically at war with the communist North and the two sides are vulnerable to military clashes especially in the poorly-demarcated West Sea.

South Korea described its position in the PSI as “special status,” as it kept the door open for PSI activities in remote areas.

Government officials, however, said the PSI was not considered when it made the decision to join the ICSN, a project still being tested.

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N. Korea Faces Suspicion of Reinsurance Fraud

Tuesday, December 5th, 2006

The Fox News and the Korea Times (both stories below) are reporting that a growing number of insurers and reinsurers are growing suspicious of claims made by the North Korean government.  The story of North Korean insurance claims first emerged in September 2006 when the US started closing down DPRK bank accounts across Asia.  Insurers in these cases, though, were allowed to travel to the DPRK to examine the damage, even to sensitive areas. 

The stories below…

Fox News
North Korea Suspected of Collecting Millions in Reinsurance Fraud
Monday , December 04, 2006
By George Russell

[edited] A growing number of major underwriters around the world strongly suspect that communist dictator Kim Jong-Il’s regime is running an elaborate major insurance and reinsurance scam on them, to the tune of tens of millions of dollars or more.

The alleged fraud involves a wide variety of North Korean industrial and personal calamities where insurers have been presented with perfect government-controlled documentation of accidents, including deaths, along with carefully gathered photographic evidence, all compiled in a startlingly brief time.

That paperwork is coupled with a resistance to letting foreign insurance adjusters examine some of the most crucial physical evidence, except after long delays and under a watchful eye, if at all.

The growing concern in the reinsurance industry is that the property damage being claimed is vastly overstated, and the circumstances of some alleged accidents may have been altered, or that deaths for which insurance payment is claimed may have had nothing to do with the accidents.

The number of apparently ordinary people in the dictatorship who have suddenly been found to have foreign-backed life insurance is raising insurers’ eyebrows.  The chief concern is that only the Kim Jong-Il regime controls the information required to trigger the payments.

According to Michael Payton, a lawyer who represents several of the major insurers, the full extent of the reinsurance claims may involve more than $150 million. U.K. insurers facing these claims have only just begun to talk to each other about the potential scale of their North Korean losses.

North Korean insurance risk is also handled in a wide variety of other Western European markets, and as far away as Russia, India and Indonesia.

So far, there is little attempt to begin discussing the fraud possibilities across those national boundaries.

“I’ve never seen anything like it before,” said Payton, senior partner in the London-based international law firm of Clyde & Co., which specializes in insurance law. “The apparent involvement of the state in every detail of these claims, coupled with the impossibility of obtaining the usual corroborative facts independent of the state, makes these claims unique, in my experience.”

The suspected scam involves the huge international market for reinsurance, in which insurers reduce their risk on every kind of accident, from environmental catastrophes and crop failure to airline and auto crashes, by reselling much of their policy exposure to other syndicates of insurers outside their own countries. Huge sums are routinely covered in reinsurance; globally, the reinsurance market last year was valued at some $1.5 trillion.

One of the world’s most important reinsurance markets is Lloyd’s of London, some of whose syndicates are represented by Clyde & Co. But a number of major players in the global reinsurance market have exposure to North Korean claims.

The reinsurance industry has been badly staggered in recent years by huge claims from storms like Hurricane Katrina and terrorist disasters like the Sept. 11 attacks. In such a huge pool of often-complicated risk deals, North Korean reinsurance claims still represent only a drop in the bucket.

Nonetheless, it is a deeply troubling drop, because even though statistics are difficult if not impossible to come by, reinsurance industry sources believe there has been a recent sharp increase in claims coming out of North Korea.

The central focus of concern is the absolute control of ownership and information in North Korea by Kim Jong-Il and his regime. All North Korean insurance is controlled by one state-owned firm, the Korea National Insurance Corporation (KNIC), formerly known as the Korea Foreign Insurance Company, which in turn purchases reinsurance coverage abroad for risks that it has assumed in its domestic market.

Normally, most domestic insurers will use one, or at most two firms of brokers to obtain reinsurance. KNIC may use many, according to industry sources, and the brokers may well have no idea what business their colleagues are doing, or in what reinsurance markets.

“The North Koreans are extremely clever at spotting the gaps in the market,” an industry source says. “There is no transparency.”

Suspicions in London began to gel in July 2005, when North Korea reported that a medical rescue helicopter had crashed into a government-owned warehouse that authorities said was crammed with disaster relief supplies.

The entire contents of the warehouse, which ran to hundreds of thousands of items, were destroyed, KNIC said, submitting within 10 days a list compiled by the relief center of every single commodity that it said had been lost.

Along with the lengthy list came a reinsurance claim for more than 40 million euros, or almost $50 million at then-current rates, for 95 percent of the damages. The reinsurance was placed through London, but the risk was spread among reinsurers worldwide.

“They provided details including tens of thousands of children’s gloves, handkerchiefs, leather gloves, toilet soap and washing soap, within 10 days,” Payton said. “In the chaos which follows an accident of this kind, that is unheard of.

“A similar loss report in Britain might take months to compile.”

The North Koreans also supplied photos of the devastation, which insurers turned over to leading experts at photographic estimates of fire damage. The experts concluded that the volume of debris remaining within the warehouse, as assessed from the photographs, did not support the high volumes of relief supplies that were claimed to be there before the fire.

“The North Korean claims are supported by meticulous paperwork, something at which the North Koreans excel,” Payton said.

“For example, where death certificates and hospital reports are required, the regime’s attitude is ‘tell us what you want, we’ll give it to you.'”

In the case of a ferry accident that allegedly took place last April, near the coastal city of Wonsan, North Korean authorities declared that 129 people had died aboard the vessel after it struck a rock about 1,000 yards off the Korean coast, and only about 100 yards from an island. All of them, the Koreans claim, had been automatically covered with life insurance when they bought their ferry ticket, and that insurance risk had been passed on to the London market through a common reinsurance product known as “excess loss personal accident reinsurance.” Here the claims from reinsurers totaled about 5 million euros, or roughly $6 million.

The North Koreans claimed that most of the victims had died of hypothermia in the freezing water. Industry sources say that when insurance investigators discovered that weather conditions were warmer than claimed at that time, the North Koreans responded that severe winds were blowing from Siberia in the spring, making the water unusually frigid.

When insurers asked for permission to send an independent diver to inspect the ferry wreck, they were refused.

To get North Korea’s side of the story, FOX News approached the regime’s official insurance representative in London, Song Ryon Ko, at his home. Song refused to discuss the issue and hastily closed his door.

Britain’s Foreign Office says the lack of firm proof of fraud is why it hasn’t taken action on the reinsurance issue, although British diplomats say they are aware of it. But as the British government is trying to put limits on Kim Jong-Il’s nuclear weapons program, the lack of an official British reaction could also be an attempt not to rock the boat, as well as to protect its diplomatic presence in Pyongyang.

Other experts on North Korea who are unaffiliated with the British or U.S. governments are much more willing to take the reinsurance industry’s concerns at face value.

“Anything that might be called white-collar financial crime might be an easy target for the regime,” said Alexander Neill, head of the Asia-Pacific security program at the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies in London.

“If you look at the Kim family regime or the North Korean regime much more as a criminal organization, but on a state level, I think that’s a better way to look at it. There’s a whole dark underworld of operations which can be undertaken with criminals who are apolitical.”

David Asher, a former senior adviser on East Asian affairs at the U.S. State Department, and coordinator of the Bush administration’s North Korea Working Group, agrees.

While unfamiliar with the current fraud allegations, Asher said he is aware of previous North Korean forgery of insurance policies for its shipping, including fake Lloyd’s of London coverage. “The country will do anything to raise funds,” he said. “They’re not a nation-state, they’re a criminal state.”

Kim Jong-Il’s regime depends on hard currency to maintain its privileged lifestyle and its internal solidarity. Criminal activity is “deep rooted, at every level of government,” Asher said.

Korea Times
12/5/2006
By Jung Sung-ki

The Kim Jong-il regime is suspected of collecting huge amounts of dollars through an international reinsurance fraud, believed to be a new illicit source of hard foreign currency for the impoverished state, a U.S. broadcaster reported Tuesday.

Fox News said a growing number of major underwriters around the world strongly suspect that the regime is running an elaborate major insurance and reinsurance scam on them, to the tune of tens of millions of dollars or more.

The report said the alleged fraud involves a wide variety of North Korean industrial and personal accidents where insurers have been presented with perfect government-compiled documentation of events, including deaths, along with carefully gathered photographic evidence all in a startlingly brief time.

That paperwork is coupled with a resistance to letting foreign insurance adjusters examine some of the most crucial physical evidence, except after long delays and under the state’s watchful eye, if at all, it said.

The report said growing concern in the reinsurance industry is that the property damage being claimed is vastly overstated, and the circumstances of some alleged accidents may have been altered, or that deaths for which insurance payment is claimed may have had nothing to do with the accidents.

The chief concern is that only the Stalinist regime, well-known to be brutal, unscrupulous and desperately short of foreign currency, controls the information required for the payments, it said.

“I’ve never seen anything like it before,” Michael Payton, a lawyer who represents several of the major insurers in the United Kingdom, was quoted as saying by the report. “The apparent involvement of the state in every detail of these claims, coupled with the impossibility of obtaining the usual corroborative facts independent of the state, makes these claims unique, in my experience.”

Payton estimated that the full extent of the reinsurance claims may be up to $150 million, and U.K. insurers facing these claims have only begun to talk to each other about the potential scale of their North Korean losses.

The cash-strapped regime has a worldwide reputation for its criminal dealings in weapons sales, drugs and near-perfect counterfeit U.S. $100 bills.

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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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N. Korea promises aid to Zanzibar’s agricultural sector

Tuesday, December 5th, 2006

Since North Korean diplomats and and embassies self-finance their operations (i.e. they don’t get any funds or salaries from back home to run the pace) I would suspect that the word “aid” is not really the right word.  I suspect it is more of an “investment”.

Kyodo News (Hat Tip DPRK Studies)
12/5/2006

North Korea has promised to give the East African island territory of Zanzibar more than $1 million in aid to help its agricultural sector, Chinese state media reported Tuesday.
Soon Chun Lee, North Korea’s ambassador to Tanzania, made the pledge when he met Zanzibari President Aman Abeid Karume in Zanzibar, according to Xinhua News Agency.

Starting from early next year, North Korea will finance water projects and mango reservation projects in the isles, Xinhua reported, adding that the country will also dispatch agricultural experts to the Indian Ocean archipelago.

Karume expressed his thanks for North Korea’s “assistance in boosting the agricultural development of the isles,” Xinhua said.

The promise of aid comes as North Korea faces a shortfall of food this year that will be at least 500,000 tons, Jean-Pierre de Margerie, the World Food Program’s North Korea country director, told Kyodo News on Tuesday. That amount of food is worth at least $100 million.

De Margerie added that the food shortage in North Korea could be even worse next year, reaching 1 million tons. In a country that produces about 5.3 million tons of food a year, that is a shortfall of nearly 20 percent. 
 
North Korea, which experienced a famine in the 1990s, has been fed in recent years by multilateral aid given through the WFP and direct bilateral assistance from China and South Korea.

But food shipments through these channels decreased this year, in part because the North Korean government told the WFP that the emergency food crisis was over and so the U.N. body should scale back its operations, said de Margerie.

“We estimate that 6 million people need food assistance in the country, and because aid has not come this year, lots of people did not have enough to eat. Lots of vulnerable regions cannot meet their basic food needs,” he added.

According to the World Bank, Zanzibar, which has a political union with Tanzania, is one of the world’s poorest territories.

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EU investigating DPRK working conditions–in Europe.

Monday, December 4th, 2006

Donga (Hat tip to One Free Korea)
12/4/2006

The European Parliament has begun an investigation in response to allegations that the North Korean government dispatched hundreds of workers to European countries and forced them to send their wages home.

Last Saturday, the Mainichi Daily of Japan reported that the European Parliament planned to finish its investigation by next spring and issue a report thereafter. For the investigation, the parliament is also considering questioning people in countries where North Korean workers stay.

It is estimated that the number of workers that the North Korean government sent to overseas countries such as the Czech Republic, Poland, Russia, the Middle East, and Africa is anywhere from 10,000 to 15,000. Currently, 400 North Korean workers, mostly women, are staying in the Czech Republic and working in sewing factories in the suburbs of Prague, the capital of the Czech Republic.

Their monthly salaries are well above the country’s minimum wage of about 285,000 won. However, the European Parliament estimated that a large part of their salaries is deposited into a collective bank account controlled by the North Korean government. In addition to this, the North Korean government takes away more of workers’ salaries by forcing them to buy propaganda videos produced by the government.

The Mainichi Daily also covered the case of one North Korean man who is working for a shipbuilding company located in Gdansk in the northern part of Poland. The story reported that North Korean workers’ salaries goes to the bank account of a North Korea’s state enterprise first, and in the end only 30 or 40 percent of it is left in the hands of workers.

A source from a company that arranges North Korean workers to go to factories in Poland said, “They get paid 4,000 Zloty, or about 1.3 million won, a month, which is sent to the bank account in Poland of a North Korea state enterprise, and workers are only receiving 400,000 or 500,000 won a month.”

István Szent-Iványi, vice-chairman of the delegation for relations with the Korean Peninsula in the European Parliament, said, “North Korean workers are treated like slaves now because they are working under inhuman conditions and thoroughly monitored by their government.”

However, one senior North Korean worker (aged 45) at a shipbuilding company in Gdansk said, “We are well fed now and enjoy a glass of beer every day. Every day seems to me like my birthday and the North Korean Embassy in Warsaw even delivers kimchi to us.”

The Mainichi Daily hypothesizes that North Korea may be sending workers oversea as a way of overcoming financial crisis.

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US-DPRK trade in 2006: US$ 3,000

Monday, December 4th, 2006

According to a report from the US Commerce Department, the US registered just $3,000 worth of exports to the DPRK, and it seems that it was just a single shipment of publicaitons.   This number does not count trade through third countries, and it does not count the occasional tourist or businessman who manages to get a visa.

US/DPRK trade would have been much higher this hear if the DPRK had gone through with the Arirang Mass Games last August.  Just about every tour company that offers trips to the DPRK was sold out with Americans eager to visit one of the most isolated countries in the world.

This story should be sobering to those who are trying to promote regime change in the DPRK through economic sanctions.  I personally think that the sanctions should be lifted for three reasons.  Firstly, only through increased trade will a constituency of elite North Koreans be able to consolidate resources and leverage their political influence for greater openness to international intergration.  Of course these things take time, but there are politicians in the DPRK who want this.  Blockades only strenghen the military and those prone to isolationist tendencies. Secondly, as far as I know, sanctions have never resulted in regime change.  Recent examples include Cuba, Iraq, South Africa, Lybia, Iran, and North Korea.  Sanctions punish the people who have no political recourse and entrench the ruling elites.  Thirdly, trade will promote the flow of information into the DPRK (which combined with non-militarism) will improve the domestic climate for opening up.

Here is the trade story:
Yonhap
12/4/2006

Bilateral trade between the United States and North Korea reached a mere US$3,000 in the first nine months of this year, a sharp drop from a year earlier, a state-run trade agency said Monday.

In the January-September period, the United States registered no imports from the communist country, with the only export item being publications, the Korea Trade Investment Promotion Agency (KOTRA) said in a report, citing the U.S. Commerce Department. The U.S. exported humanitarian food aid to North Korea worth $5.8 million last year.

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S. Korea’s aid to N. Korea reaches new record

Sunday, December 3rd, 2006

Yonhap
12/3/2006

South Korea gave North Korea a record amount of aid in the first 10 months of the year but most of it had been shipped before tension spiked over the communist country’s missile and nuclear tests, a government report showed Sunday.

South Korea has virtually suspended its regular aid shipment to North Korea, mostly fertilizer, since Pyongyang test-launched multiple missiles in July. Its Oct. 9 nuclear test further strained inter-Korean relations.

From January to October, the Seoul government supplied 211 billion won (US$227 million) worth of goods, mostly fertilizer, to North Korea, breaking the previous full-year record of 185.4 billion won in 1995, according to the Unification Ministry report.

In 2005, the Seoul government shipped aid supplies worth 135.9 billion won to the North suffering a chronic food shortage.

More than half of this year’s aid supplies, or worth 141.3 billion won, were shipped in the first half when the government sent 35,000 tons of fertilizers to Pyongyang. The remainder was send between July and October to help flood victims there.

The cumulative value of South Korean aid since 1995 reached 1.2 trillion won as of the end of October, the report said.

Private South Korean donors gave the North 69.4 billion won worth of aid during the January-October period, pushing their cumulative donations since 1995 to 620.1 billion won, it said.

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UN-FAO says DPRK needs 1 million tons of food aid

Sunday, December 3rd, 2006

Yonhap
12/2/2006

North Korea completed its crop harvest, and results suggest the country will need at least 1 million tons of food aid from the outside, according to a report released Thursday by the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

In “Crop Prospects and Food Situation,” the fourth such report put out by the FAO, North Korea was categorized as a nation with widespread lack of access to food.

“The 2006 cereal output is estimated lower than in the previous year, reflecting floods in July and October in parts of the country,” said the report.

“The total cereal import requirement in 2006/2007, including commercial imports and food aid, is expected to be at least 1 million tons.”

The 2006 harvest season was completed in October, the report said, but food rations for millions of people will remain reduced as a result of a suspension of food aid.

South Korea, on the other hand, was expected to have 3 million tons in cereal stock in 2007, slightly up from 2.8 million tons this year.

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