Archive for August, 2007

Foreigners in Pyongyang

Sunday, August 12th, 2007

Korea Times
Andrei Lankov
8/12/2007

The Pyongyang of the 1970s and 1980s had a very small number of expatriates. Outside the capital, foreigners were unheard of _ unless they were Soviet or East European engineers who were contributing to some construction project. Nevertheless, a modest ex-pat community existed, and had its own traditions and folklore.

Since there were so few foreigners in Pyongyang, they attracted everyone’s attention _ especially on the city’s outskirts, where few foreigners ever ventured. Adults would stare at them, while kids would run behind the strange-looking visitor, shouting: “A foreigner, a foreigner!” Older children never forgot to take their hats off and greet foreigners with a respectful bow.

The children’s surprise was understandable. Most of them had seen foreigners only in the movies, if ever. The vast majority of the small foreign colony were diplomats who seldom ventured out of their respective embassies or, at least, out of their cars. Tourists also never left the city centre. Hence, a foreigner walking a Pyongyang street was a very unusual sight indeed.

A Soviet diplomat once went to a small currency shop located in our foreign students’ dormitory. This shop had only one sales assistant, a woman in her mid-30s. At the time she had her five-year old daughter with her. The girl was obviously seeing a foreigner for the first time in her life. However, it turned out that she had seen foreigners before in movies. Now, most Westerners depicted in North Korean cinema were perfidious and corrupt “American imperialists.” Thus, the polite girl greeted the stranger in the way foreigners were usually referred to in the movies. She said: “Hello, uncle American imperialist scoundrel!” (Anny?ng hasipnikka, mijenom aj?ssi!)

It’s difficult to say how many foreigners were in Pyongyang in the mid-80s. Most probably, in the whole country with its population of 20 million there would have been scarcely 1,000 permanent foreign residents (this figure excludes tourists and other short-time visitors). At the time, there were about 20 embassies in North Korea, mostly with a small staff. There were also about a hundred foreign specialists with their families, and a couple hundred students.

More “permanent” foreigners in the city were embassy staff. The majority of the smaller countries that had diplomatic relations with the DPRK appointed their Ambassador to China to represent their interests in North Korea as well, so permanent missions were few in number. Around 1980, the North Koreans built a special `embassy quarter’ in Eastern Pyongyang. Only a few embassies remained in Western Pyongyang _ including those of China and the then USSR.

In the center of the `embassy quarter’ there was a Pyongyang supermarket where foreigners bought some products, otherwise unavailable in the city. The shop accepted the `green’ currency certificates which could be exchanged for `soft’ currency of the Communist countries (in the late 80s they were more properly renamed `red’). Hard currency could be used in special hard-currency shops, first and foremost – in the central hard-currency supermarket which was aptly named Rakwon (`Heaven’). It was located in the centre of the city, and a majority of the shoppers were Koreans who had access to the hard currency.

In a small extension to the Pyongyang supermarket there was a remarkable institution known among ex-pats as the “kimch’i-bar.” I do not know why this rather cosy cafe was named a `bar’, nor what relation it bore to the famous Korean pickles. This small cafe was a usual meeting place for foreigners. In this cafe in 1984-85 one often would come across, say, the entire staff of the Maltese Embassy. For some incomprehensible reason, a leftist government of this Mediterranean island not only established diplomatic relations with North Korea, but actually dispatched an ambassador there. The poor gentleman had nothing to do, and he spent all his working days sipping beer in the `kimch’i-bar’…

However, the main meeting place was the Diplomatic Club, which was located near the old iron bridge over the Taedonggang River. It boasted a good restaurant, a cinema, and even a disco (social dancing was banned in North Korea from 1957 to 1985). Every evening the cinema showed foreign movies – of course, not from the decadent West, but from the brotherly Communist countries.

However, the major centres of Pyongyang ex-pats’ lives were hotels. Many interesting things happened in their lobbies and rooms.

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Kim Jong Il Gives On-site Guidance to Hamhung Wood Processing Factory

Sunday, August 12th, 2007

KCNA
8/12/2007

General Secretary Kim Jong Il gave on-site guidance to the Hamhung Wood Processing Factory.

After being briefed on the history of the factory at the room devoted to its history, he walked round the house of culture and other cultural facilities. He noted with appreciation that the workers of the factory are fully enjoying diverse cultural life at the modern house of culture and having brisk mass sports activities.

Then he looked round the computer control room, the sawing shop, the processing shop, the finishing shop and other production processes one by one to acquaint himself in detail with the technological updating and production there.

He highly appreciated the feats performed by the officials, workers and technicians of the factory and extended warm regards to all its employees, noting that the appearance of the factory has undergone a radical change and the production sharply gone up in a few years as they have dynamically pushed forward the technological updating through their concerted efforts.

It is the main thrust of the on-going general march to speed up the technological updating for the modernization of economy and give fullest play to its potential, while directing primary efforts to rapidly improving the standard of people’s living, he said, underscoring the need for all the factories and enterprises to boldly carry out this work.

He set forth tasks to be implemented by the factory, saying that what is important for the production of wooden products is to improve their quality and increase their variety.

He was accompanied by Hong Song Nam, chief secretary of the South Hamgyong Provincial Committee of the WPK, Kim Ki Nam, secretary of the Central Committee of the WPK, and Pak Nam Gi, department director of the C.C., WPK.  Nam Gi, department director of the C.C., WPK.

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N. Korea struggling to cope with flood damage, no deaths reported

Saturday, August 11th, 2007

Yonhap
8/11/2007

North Korea said Saturday that it is struggling to cope with flood damage across the country, but no deaths were reported.

Rice farms, residences and public buildings have been submerged or destroyed in dozens of regions due to heavy rain that started on Thursday, reported the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), the North’s official news outlet monitored in Seoul.

The North Korean government “has mobilized all of its capacity,” dispatching recovery workers to several regions, and “is working on projects to place people’s lives in good condition by sending daily necessities like medicine to those in damaged regions,” the report stated. No deaths were mentioned.

Meanwhile, “showers and heavy rains … are continuing in many regions” of the country, it added.

Up to 367 mm of rain fell in Pyonggang County in the country’s eastern Kangwon Province, while the capital, Pyongyang, received over 257 mm of rain in just three days.

Due to heavy deforestation, North Korea frequently suffers from flooding during the summer monsoon season. Last year, the South Korean government provided food and supplies to the communist country to help repair damage amid increased tension following Pyongyang’s July test-firing of several ballistic missiles into the East Sea.

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Kim Jong Il Gives On-Site Guidance to Hungnam Fertilizer Complex

Saturday, August 11th, 2007

KCNA
8/11/2007

General Secretary Kim Jong Il gave on-the-spot guidance to the Hungnam Fertilizer Complex.

He was accompanied by Chief Secretary of the South Hamgyong Provincial Committee of the WPK Hong Song Nam and Secretary Kim Ki Nam and Department Director Pak Nam Gi of the WPK Central Committee.

He first went round the revolutionary museum.

Noting that the complex turned into the nation’s dependable big fertilizer producer under the wise leadership of President Kim Il Sung, he said that the undying revolutionary feats of the President would always remain shining in the history of the country.

Then he looked round the newly reconstructed fertilizer production processes to learn about the construction and production there.

Watching the gigantic fertilizer production processes which demonstrate the might of the Juche-based industry, he expressed great satisfaction over the fact that the complex has successfully built a great structure in the spirit of self-reliance fully meeting the need of the new century.

It is a great success that the complex has completed the difficult and complicated reconstruction project requiring high technology in a brief span of time by its own efforts and technology, he said, highly appreciating the feats performed by the officials, workers and technicians of the complex who have devoted all their wisdom and energies to the project and the scientists, technicians and workers of the State Academy of Sciences, the Hamhung Branch of the academy, Hamhung University of Chemical Engineering, the Ryongsong Machine Complex and other units who helped them in the project with an attitude befitting master.

Noting that the successful completion of the updating of the fertilizer production processes, a product of the spirit of self-reliance, is one more demonstration of the might of the nation’s rapidly developing science and technology, he stressed that there is nothing impossible when they strive hard to introduce advanced science and technology in a bold and positive manner.
 
Now that the fertilizer production processes have been updated, it is necessary, accordingly, to improve the management of equipment and technical control and raise the level of technical skills of the workers and thus keep the fertilizer production going at a high rate, he stressed.

He set forth tasks to be fulfilled by the complex, saying that the complex has a very important duty to fulfill for the purpose of developing the nation’s agriculture.

In order to solve the problem of food, a key point in the issue of clothing, food and housing, it is necessary to actively develop agriculture and increase the supply of fertilizers for successful farming, he noted, underscoring the need to focus efforts on the fertilizer production, always bearing in mind the President’s proposition that “Fertilizer immediately means rice and rice, socialism.”

He pointed out that in order to boost the production and supply of efficacious fertilizers it is necessary to keep energetically pushing ahead with the technological updating to furnish all the production processes of the complex with latest equipment and intensify the drive to introduce advanced technology.

He underlined the need for the complex to establish a fertilizer production system depending on locally-available raw and other materials and conduct strenuous scientific researches to steadily cut down the production cost for the purpose of strengthening the Juche character of the chemical fertilizer industry.

He had a photo session with the labor innovators of the complex.
 
At the end of his on-site guidance, he together with the innovators who have performed feats in the reconstruction project appreciated a performance given by the employees art group of the complex at the Workers’ House of Culture.

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More DPRK market (jangmadang) footage

Thursday, August 9th, 2007

shoes.JPGAgain, while trapsing through the jungle of YouTube videos on North Korea, I stumbled on this clip shown on Japanese television which was secretly recorded in a North Korean market.  Since my Japanese ranges from rusty to nonexistent, I do not know where it is.

What does this clip teach us?  That some North Koreans are becomming more sophisticated shoppers/ consumers–looking to the outside world to get a sense of what’s fashionable.  Chinese entrepreneurs are hard at work building brand loyalty for western companies that are not yet aiming for the DPRK market.  Chinese knockoffs of Nike, the North Face (mislabeled “the Nice Face”), and fake designer apparel are all on display.  I imagine no North Korean citizen expects to ever see these goods in the local Public Distribution Office. 

Japanese narration highlights (thanks, Tony):

  • Are the North Koreans familiar with these western brands? Some are familiar and others are not so sophisticated.
  • These items sell really fast.  You can buy a Rolex Watch (knock off) for 800 Yen (appx. $8 or appx 2,400 North Korean Won).
  • The narrator contrasts lifestyles.  He compares shoppers that can afford these market goods with others in the same village who cannot.
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Seoul to Unveil Investment Plan in NK Infrastructure

Thursday, August 9th, 2007

Korea Times
Ryu Jin
8/9/2007

South Korea is expected to propose a large-scale investment plan in social overhead capital (SOC) in North Korea in the inter-Korean summit late this month to help the impoverished state revive its economy, according to officials on Thursday.

Officials in Seoul said that the package proposal will likely include the provision of electricity, renovation of the Pyongyang-Gaeseong highway, improvement of facilities in Nampo port and establishment of a fertilizer factory.

President Roh Moo-hyun and North Korean leader Kim Jong-il are set to meet in Pyongyang Aug. 28-30, seven years after Roh’s predecessor, Kim Dae-jung, met with the reclusive North Korean leader.

While the Roh administration finds itself in a difficult position to give direct assistance to the North, such as provisions of rice and fertilizer — not to mention cash — it appears to have opted for “indirect’’ SOC investment, according to the sources.

Former President Kim Dae-jung won the Nobel Peace Prize for the first-ever summit in June 2000, but his achievement was partly tainted by later revelation that Seoul had secretly transferred $500 million to Pyongyang to foster the historic summit.

Roh, who has put more weight on transparency in North Korea affairs, often stressed the need to help North Korea repair its devastated economy with its own hand and get out of its economic slump.

In February, the Unification Ministry drew up a roadmap for a large-scale economic cooperation, focusing on “what the North really wants.’’ Seoul will likely make some offers to Pyongyang in the upcoming summit, according to government sources.

Dubbed “Roadmap to Hope,’’ the ministry plan includes as many as 16 items such as the provision of 2 million-kilowatt electricity, worth some $900 million every year, and renovation of the 170-kilometer Pyongyang-Gaeseong highway ($307.7 billion).

Other items include the improvement of facilities in Nampo port, the construction of a 330,000-ton fertilizer plant and installation of tree nurseries in Pyongyang, Gaeseong and Hamheung.

“We are sorting out items that could be offered,’’ a high-profile government official said on condition of anonymity. “I think our proposal for the SOC investment could be discussed in the working-level preparatory talks in Gaeseong next week.’’

Experts estimated that the aid package could reach 9 trillion won to 13 trillion won ($9.7 billion to $14 billion) in the coming several years, if major items such as the highway renovation are included on top of the ongoing supply of heavy fuel oil.

Seoul is expected to demand the establishment of liaison offices across the border and the regularization of military talks headed by the defense ministers from the two sides in return for the economic incentives, according to the sources.

But the large-scale economic assistance is expected to trigger fiery debate in the South, as conservatives, represented by the opposition Grand National Party (GNP), have often lashed out at the government’s “single-handed’’ assistance amid the nuclear standoff.

Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance and Economy Kwon O-kyu, who is to accompany Roh to Pyongyang, stressed on Thursday that the aid package would be offered “transparently’’ in close coordination with the international community.

“South-North Cooperation Fund, operated under the endorsement of the National Assembly, could be used first,’’ he told reporters. “I think we should also try to create a favorable environment for the inter-Korean economic projects in close cooperation with the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank.’’

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First Profit for Top 5 Companies in the Kaesung Industrial Complex

Thursday, August 9th, 2007

Daily NK
8/9/2007
Kim Yong Hun

Results from recent surveys conducted by the Korea Federation of Small and Medium Business’ regarding South Korean companies in the Kaesung Industrial Complex show that among the 24 companies, just five companies recorded a profit for the first time in 3 years.

Kaesung Industrial Complex Committee of Enterprises said, “Recently, companies that have finished investment from the last 3 years have started to make profit”. They predicted, “From now on, Kaesung Industrial Complex businesses will start to be resilient.”

Following, the committee added, “It is expected that as the five companies start to collect their investments funds, there will be an increase in companies that experience net profit.”

However, there are also criticisms that premature optimistic hope could bring a reserve effect. Currently, the remaining 19 companies (80%) are still seeing a loss and considering the technical learning ability of the North Korea laborers and low productivity of companies, it is too early to be optimistic of the Kaesung Industrial Complex businesses.

Experts especially worry that reflecting the fact that the Kaesung Industrial Complex is proceeding successfully, it can send a negative sign to the North.

“Premature Hopes Can Bring Failure to the Kaesung Industrial Complex Business.”

Dong Yong-seung, director of Economic Security Department of Samsung Economic Research Institute, gave a positive evaluation in a phone conversation with DailyNK and said, “The break-even point for ordinary companies is 5 years, but the fact that the Kaesung Industrial Complex businesses saw a net profit in 3 years means that the businesses are that successful.”

However, Mr. Dong also said, “If it looks to North Korea that the Kaesung Industrial Complex is going too well, a flawed message can be sent and problems can occur. To solve such problems, there needs to be a definite principle kept about direct payment of wages and wage increase that was agreed between the South and the North.”

Kaesung Industrial Complex Committee of Enterprises’ chief Lee Im Dong pointed to the fact that, “Due to the results from the survey, there may be a misunderstanding to the North that the Kaesung Industrial Complex’ situation is the ideal place. Although a problem of manpower supply and demand, laborers’ ability problems and other problems are piled, but North Korean staffs of Kaesung complex can be content with the result of that research and intent to stay in this state.”

Chairman Lee especially added that, “Extreme optimism towards the Kasung Industrial Complex will only add to the desire to form a union to increase the North’s wages and completion fee and cause an overall negative effect to the Kaesung Industrial Complex business.”

North Korea actually ignored the labor regulations of the Kaesung Industrial Complex that stated, “You cannot raise wages to exceed 5% from the previous year” and demanded a 15% wage increase to South Korean companies last month. North Korea claimed that it would refuse overtime work and special work from the 1st if this was not accepted but the South and the North conclusively agreed to a 5% increase at the start of the month.

“Kaesung Industrial Complex optimism can cause failure to businesses”

As a result of a survey, aside from 5 companies that have converted to a profit, 19 companies are still in a loss and the average productivities of these companies are lower than the productivity of domestic factories at a 53.7%.

From one side, the criticism is that the low productivity with the problem of Northern laborers learning technical skills is the key to solving the Kaesung Industrial Complex business.

Kim Kyu Chul, Representative of the North-South Forum had asserted previously that most of the Kaesung Industrial Complex businesses have been experiencing financial difficulty. He says, “The fact that most businesses are still experiencing a loss must be paid attention to.”

Representative Kim said, “Among the 5 companies that made net profit, 3 companies made 200mn won (USD215,000) and the remaining 2 companies made a lower profit. Compared to the tens of millions of invested funds, the net profit is at an unnoticeable level and thus, although there is a symbolic significance it is premature to say that there is actual administrative profit.”

He especially asserted that, “Aside from companies related to fiber and clothing, most companies in electronics and telecommunication parts production have been experiencing a loss. To state that it is a success just because a minority of companies experienced a net profit can actually obstruct the course of the Kaesung Industrial Complex business.”

He also added, “The fact that 19 Kaesung Industrial Complex companies have plans to additionally invest means that rather than a positive sign that the business running well, it is to secure a plot for ordinary investment plans. Even though a company is having a difficult time administrating, it obtains factory plot to prepare for additional investments.”

There is also the point that there is a weak incentive for Northern laborers to want to work.

Chief of the Committee Lee said, “The speed of learning skills thus the laborers’ development speed is slow and because there is no economic incentive to work hard like democratic societies, the productivity is low compared to domestic companies.”

He added, “The result that 19 companies will continue to invest does not mean that the business is running well. Because the speed of reforming business environments is heading in a positive direction, companies have been investing and in the future, technical problems and customs clearance will need to be solved”.

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Director Daniel Gordon Returns to Seoul With “Crossing the Line”

Wednesday, August 8th, 2007

Korea Times
Lee Hwan-hee
8/8/2007

British film director Daniel Gordon will visit Korea Aug. 12-14 to promote the release of his documentary “Crossing the Line” (2006), a film about James Joseph Dresnok, one of the four American soldiers who defected to North Korea during 1960s and the only one who is still living there.

The other three are Charles Robert Jenkins, who made the news in 2004 by turning himself in to the U. S. Army in Japan to face desertion charges, and Larry Allan Abshier and Jerry Wayne Parrish, both deceased.

The film is Gordon’s third documentary on North Korea; the previous ones are “The Game Of Their Lives” (2002), about the North Korean national football team who defeated Italy to advance to the quarterfinals of the 1966 World Cup, and “A State Of Mind” (2004), about two North Korean child gymnasts participating in the “Pyongyang mass games.”

Dresnok and the filmmaker were interviewed by the CBS News Program “60 Minutes” last January and Dresnok told the program, “I really feel at home” in North Korea, and said “I wouldn’t trade it for nothing,” in contrast to Jenkins who likened his stay in North Korea as an extended prison sentence. Jenkins penned a memoir “To Tell the Truth” in Japan, the home country of his wife, in 2005 (translated into Korean the following year).

Four years after his defection in 1962, Dresnok, and the other Americans, sought asylum in the Soviet embassy, unable to endure the hardships of living in North Korea, but the Soviets handed them back to the North Koreans, and Dresnok eventually adjusted, relatively speaking, to North Korean life. He found fame by starring in several North Korean propaganda films, playing villainous Americans. He also translated some of Kim Il-Sung’s writings into English.

He has been married three times; twice in North Korea, to an Eastern European woman, and the daughter of a Korean woman and an African diplomat; and has three children. His eldest son, James, considers himself a Korean.

Gordon will attend a screening and have a question and answer session with audience members during his visit. The film was shown at the 2006 Pusan International Film Festival, as well as the 2007 Berlin International Film Festival and the Sundance Film Festival.

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N. Korea eyes better relations with U.S. through inter-Korean summit: experts

Wednesday, August 8th, 2007

Yonhap
Kim Hyun
8/8/2007

North Korea’s agreement to hold a second inter-Korean summit is seen as an attempt to improve relations with the United States, and possibly normalize its diplomatic ties, experts said Wednesday.

The communist North could also want the summit to elicit more aid from South Korea and to influence the coming presidential elections in the South, they added.

“It seems North Korea has decided that its relations with the United States and its relations with the South could be in a win-win situation,” Koh Yu-hwan, a North Korea specialist with Seoul’s Dongguk University, said.

“In the summit, North Korea may try to generate an agreement on peace on the peninsula, and through the agreement it will try to reach out to the United States and even Japan to establish diplomatic relations in the Bush administration’s term,” he said.

The Bush administration has gradually softened its hard-line policy on Pyongyang since the communist nation conducted its first-ever nuclear bomb test in October last year. Thereafter, multilateral negotiations to end North Korea’s nuclear weapons program have made major progress, with Pyongyang shutting down its operating nuclear reactor in Yongbyon last month.

Announcing the summit set for Aug. 28-30 in Pyongyang, North Korea said the historic meeting will help bring “a new phase of peace on the Korean Peninsula, co-prosperity of the nation and national reunification.”

“With the United States now moving in the direction of softening on North Korea, North Korea seems to understand that there will be more things to gain from the U.S. after the summit with the South,” Lee Soo-seok, a North Korea specialist with the Institute of Unification Policy affiliated with Seoul’s Hanyang University, said.

Before Bush leaves office, North Korea expects to be removed from the U.S. list of terrorism-sponsoring nations and excluded from U.S-imposed trade sanctions, experts said, adding the North may hope the summit will serve as a stepping stone for those breakthroughs.

At the inter-Korean level, Pyongyang must have considered the coming presidential election, and calculated the summit would help rally South Korean liberal voters, who advocate detente with the North, experts said. President Roh Moo-hyun has been suffering from low public support and public surveys have indicated the conservative Grand National Party (GNP) would win the December presidential election. That prediction may have prompted Pyongyang to criticize the conservative GNP.

“The people of all classes in South Korea should achieve a grand alliance against the conservatives and gear up their struggle to bury the pro-American forces at the time of the presidential election,” North Korea said in a New Year editorial.

The GNP, meanwhile, said in a statement, “We oppose the South-North summit talks, whose timing, venue and procedures are all inappropriate.”

The summit also comes amid rumors that North Korean leader Kim Jong-il has health problems. He reportedly underwent heart surgery in Germany and is supposed to be looking for an heir, South Korean media reports said.

“Above all other needs, to establish a stable structure for his successor, North Korea needs to keep its relations with outside regions on good terms,” a government official said, requesting anonymity.

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N. Korea agrees to first denuclearize, receive benefits later: official

Wednesday, August 8th, 2007

Yonhap
Byun Duk-kun
8/8/2007

North Korea wants to receive various types of assistance, including development-aimed investment, in return for disabling its key nuclear facilities under a landmark denuclearization deal signed February, but it understands and agrees that the benefits could come a bit later than its steps to disarm, a South Korean official said Wednesday.

The North’s apparent concession removes a major hurdle to completing the denuclearization process before the end of the year, as the other countries in six-nation talks on ending North Korea’s nuclear ambition long believed the communist nation would never agree to get rid of its nuclear facilities unless incentives were provided before or simultaneously.

“The North Korean side said that even if its denuclearization steps are carried out in a short amount of time, and the provision of the promised energy and economic assistance takes relatively longer than its denuclearization steps, it will understand there can be a difference of time required and will exercise flexibility based on mutual trust,” a South Korean official told reporters, requesting that he remain anonymous.

North Korea took the position at a working meeting of delegates from South Korea, the U.S., China, Japan and Russia that opened at the inter-Korean border village of Panmunjom on Tuesday for a two-day run.

The talks resumed earlier Wednesday after the North’s delegation, headed by the country’s deputy chief of mission to the United Nations in New York, Kim Myong-kil, crossed the heavily fortified border to the South Korean side of the joint security area.

The main focus of this week’s meeting was to figure out how to ship by the end of the year the 950,000 tons of heavy oil or equivalent aid promised to the impoverished North in the February accord, a timeline insisted upon by the U.S., even though the communist nation has a storage capacity of only 200,000 tons a year.

Under the February agreement, signed by the two Koreas, the U.S., Japan, China and Russia, North Korea can receive energy assistance equivalent to 950,000 tons of heavy fuel oil in exchange for disabling its nuclear facilities at Yongbyon and submitting a complete list of its nuclear programs.

South Korean delegates earlier said that the first day of talks provided an opportunity to hear what North Korea wants, and that they anticipated more “in-depth” discussions with the North on what is within reach and how far the North should move toward denuclearization to get rewards.

North Korean delegates on Tuesday said their country wants to receive the promised oil, as well as what South Korean officials call “investment-based” assistance to help rebuild its dilapidated energy industry.

Pyongyang’s demand became clearer Wednesday, according to the South Korean official who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The North Koreans said their country wants to continue receiving 50,000 tons of heavy fuel oil each month, apparently until the end of the year, and the rest in “support and equipment for repairing and maintaining the North’s energy-generating facilities,” the official said.

South Korea has provided 50,000 tons of heavy oil to the North for shutting down the Yongbyon facilities as the first phase step in the February agreement, while Beijing, the host of the six-way nuclear disarmament talks, has reportedly offered to soon begin shipping the first 50,000 tons of the promised 950,000 tons in the second phase.

Pyongyang has said it will not completely denuclearize unless it is provided with enough benefits — including nuclear power plants.

South Korean officials who attended the two-day working meeting here said the subject never came up during the course of what the chief North Korean delegate, Kim, called “very productive and serious discussions.”

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