Archive for 2008

Forced Construction of Kim Jong Il Road in Bitter Cold

Monday, January 21st, 2008

Daily NK
Moon Sung Hwee
1/21/2008

Tens of thousands of a Shock Brigade (state construction workers) of North Korea are forced to build roads under minus 20 degree Celsius weather to prepare for Kim Jong Il’s unforeseen visit to the area, an inside source told the Daily NK.

The informer said, on the 3rd of January, “Since mid December, thirty thousands of Shock Brigade for the Propaganda of the Party Ideology (shortly June 18 Shock Brigade) had been poured into building road in Samsoo, Yangkang Province.”

He added that the Shock Brigade was connecting road between Wangduk Station in Hyesan (exclusively for Kim Jong Il) and Samsoo Power Plant. Kim Jong-Il was rumored for planning on surprise visit to the power plant. The road would be 22 km in length.

There was actually a road built in 2003 between Wangduk and Samsoo Power Plant. However, the road was ordered to be renovated due to Kim Jong Il’s dissatisfactory remark on it in his March 2006 visit to the area.

During the 2003 road construction, the Hyesan city government mobilized tens of thousands of residents plus June 18 Shock Brigade to finish it on time. Nevertheless, as Kim Jong Il showed discontent, Yangkang Provincial party officials and June 18 Shock Brigade officers were criticized harshly.

The problem was that the road was through downtown Hyesan, and a section of it was to meandering, thus dangerous to protect “the Comrade General.”

“After that, June 18 Shock Brigade, who just finished constructing Hyesan-Dancheon road, were reinforced and put to refurbish the Kim Jong Il’s private road,” the informant added.

The road currently under construction is to connect Wangduk and Samsoo Power Plant while circumventing populated area of Hyesan. And, of course, since the road is built as a “Number 1 Road,” it is solely for Kim Jong Il’s use, not even for party officials let alone ordinary people.

According to the informant, condition of road construction is harsh. Workers of the Shock Brigade are forced to work in bitter cold. When asked about disgruntlement of the workers, the informant replied, “This sort of hardship happens every time the General visits a certain area. Who can argue with the General’s order?”

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(UPDATED) DPRK to receive tangerine shipment

Saturday, January 12th, 2008

(UPDATE) Well, It looks like Jeju will be sending a smaller shipment of tangerines to the DPRK without Seoul’s direct financial support:

The provincial government of Jeju Island will go ahead with its annual shipment of tangerines and carrots to North Korea this week despite the central government’s refusal to pay part of the cost, officials said Monday.

The semi-tropical island has sent more than 10,000 tons of tangerines and carrots to North Korea every winter since 1998, with the central government paying for about half the cost.

But the humanitarian project came to a halt this winter as Seoul’s Unification Ministry refused its customary funding of the shipments amid frozen inter-Korean relations.

The Jeju government decided to send a smaller shipment of aid this year — 300 tons of tangerines and 1,000 tons of carrots worth about 600 million won (US$441,176) — to North Korea starting on Friday, ministry spokesman Kim Ho-nyoun and Jeju officials said.

“The North said it will receive the shipment as part of non-governmental inter-Korean projects,” the spokesman said. “The ministry will also approve the shipment.” (Yonhap)

(ORIGINAL POST)
According to Yonhap:

South Korea’s tangerine shipment to North Korea will be suspended for the first time in 10 years this winter, as Seoul refused funding the shipment amid frozen inter-Korean relations, officials said Friday.

The provincial government of the semi-tropical island of Jeju has sent more than 10,000 tons of tangerines to North Korea every winter since 1998, with the central government paying for about half the cost.

But the Unification Ministry rejected this year’s motion for funding in the midst of growing tension across the border, officials from Jeju and the ministry said.

“We can’t carry out the project this year,” Yoon Chang-hwan, a Jeju official in charge of tangerine policy, said over the telephone. “It is not a situation in which we can collect money to send them on our own — the government did not allow them to be sent.”

Jeju Island had requested 2 billion won (US$1.55 million) from the Unification Ministry to ship 10,000 tons of tangerines, a local specialty that does not grow in North Korea’s cold weather, Yoon said.

Read the full articles here:
S. Korea suspends tangerine shipment to N. Korea for first time in decade
Yonhap
12/26/2008

S. Korean island to send tangerines to N. Korea despite frozen ties
Yonhap
Kim Hyun
1/12/2009

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Expansion of Electrical Infrastructure in Samjiyeon for Mt. Baekdu Tours?

Friday, January 11th, 2008

Daily NK
Moon Sung Hwee
1/11/2008

Rodong Sinmun, the official mouthpiece of the Chosun (North Korea) Workers Party, discussed the construction of new electrical infrastructure in Samjiyeon in a feature titled, “The New Legend from the Night-less City, Samjiyeon,” on December 26.

Rodong Sinmun praised Samjiyeon’s current condition, saying that “It is literally a night-less city where countless lights from houses and streetlights along the beltway shine like stars.”

The newspaper implied that providing electricity to hotels and other lodging for visitors was the reason for setting up the electrical infrastructure, noting that “Visitors who have completed long distance marches would want to take a rest, sing songs, and play accordions in the heated rooms of lodgings by the lake of Samjiyeon.”

The newspaper revealed, “The electricity produced by the Samsoo Power Plant, which was completed in May 2007, is now flowing to Samjiyeon.”

It added, “The June 18 Shock Brigade and workers form the Ministry of Electric Power pursued the lofty goals of the great General to expand the electrical infrastructure of the Mt. Baekdu region. They provided materials and equipment for the construction of power-transmission wires and towers and built them.”

To accomplish the goal of the North Korean authorities, in there words: “to improve the hometown of the General to meet global standards” – the Propaganda and Agitation Department organized the “Shock Brigade for the Propagation of the Party Ideology” (June 18 Shock Brigade) and made the brigade tear down houses and start reconstructing the city.

Although North Korean authorities said that they redeveloped the Samjiyeon district for the purpose of restoring Kim Jong Il’s hometown, a rumor is spreading among cadres that this reconstruction project was actually carried out in preparation for the commencement of Mt. Baekdu tours for South Koreans, according to inside sources.

In 1998, when the North and Hyundai Asan started Mt. Geumgang’s tour business, they agreed that Hyundai would offer 942 million dollars to the North in return for the right to use the tour site and to run the tour business for 30 years. Similar preparations to the ones being made in Samyijeon were completed prior to the opening of the Geumgang site.

It appears that North Korea has been carrying out construction work in Samjiyeon since 2001. Experts point out that reconstruction of the houses in the area was inevitable because these sites would soon be revealed to South Korean tourists.

North Korean authorities stressed that the newly-built houses are on par with international standards but residents complain of insufficient electrical supplies, according to the inside sources.

Sources said that the power situation was so dire that residents are forced to cook outdoors and bring heated stones in their houses for heating.

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DPRK Regulations on Certification

Friday, January 11th, 2008

From Naenara:

The DPRK government adopted the “Regulations of the DPRK on Certification” on June 30, 2003 by Decision No. 37 of the Cabinet, and is enforcing them with an aim to establish the scientific quality management system in all organs and enterprises, and to upgrade the quality of products for improving the people’s livelihood and facilitating foreign trade.

The regulations consist of 37 articles in four chapters: Chapter 1. General provisions (Article 1–8), Chapter 2. Quality certification bodies (Article 9–18), Chapter 3. Assessment on quality certification (Article 19–31) and Chapter 4. Supervision and control (Article 32–37).

Chapter 1. General Provisions

The management and guidance in quality certification shall be undertaken in a unified way by the State Administration for Quality Management (hereinafter referred to as SAQM).

The SAQM shall publish the products that are subject to compulsory certification step by step in accordance with the urgent requirements. The compulsory certification products can be exported only under certification.

The compulsory certification products exported to and imported from foreign countries which concluded certification agreement with our country are not subject to quality inspection at trade ports, border railway stations, airports and frontier transit points.

The term of validity for certification shall be three years. The quality certification bodies and certified organizations shall fall under surveillance and reassessment within the period defined by the SAQM.

The SAQM shall promote exchange and cooperation with international organizations and foreign bodies in the field of quality certification.

Chapter 2. Quality Certification Bodies

The quality certification bodies shall take charge of the assessment of quality management system of the organizations applying for certification. The quality certification bodies shall be designated by the SAQM.

The quality certification bodies shall undertake product certification, assessment and registration of quality management system, personnel certification, certification testing and training of certification assessors.

Chapter 3. Assessment on Quality Certification

The organizations and individuals who will be certified shall submit the written applications confirmed by their upper body to the relevant central organ to which the quality certification bodies belong.

The applications for product certification and registration of quality management system include the description of quality management system of a product or its production process and the confirmation of the relevant quality supervision body. The application for personnel certification shall comprise the confirmation of the organization to which the applicant belongs.

Upon the receipt of application, the relevant central organ shall confirm whether the application is formulated or not as required by the regulations and send it to its affiliated certification body in time.

In regard to the product certification assessment, the quality certification body shall examine mainly samples and document as well as the quality management system of processes which may affect the quality of products.

The assessment of product certification shall be completed within 60 days.

The assessment of quality management system consists of the document review and on-site assessment.

The document review aims at identifying whether the documents related to quality management system are properly made or not. The on-site assessment aims at ensuring the conformity of quality management system with the contents of the documents and their effectiveness. The registration of quality management system shall be completed within 90 days from the notification of assessment to the applicant.

The quality supervision organs may commit the organizations to inspect the quality of their products which have been certified and registered.

The quality certification bodies and the certified organizations shall use the relevant marks.

Chapter 4. Supervision and Control

The supervision and control on quality certification shall be exercised by the SAQM and the relevant supervision and control organs.

In case of any incidents in sale and export of the certified products or products manufactured through the certified process, the SAQM shall investigate them and take the necessary measures.

In case of any errors in quality certification due to irresponsibility of the quality certification organ and its official, the SAQM shall take strict sanctions such as disqualification and deprivation of authority against them.

In case the relevant organization and personnel violate the regulations and the order concerning quality certification, the SAQM and quality certification bodies may deprive it/him of its/his certificates and marks already issued.

In case of encroachment on the interests of the State and people or damage to the dignity of the country, the person concerned shall suffer from administrative and judicial sanctions according to the degree of seriousness.

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Customs Director of Hoiryeong Arrested for Assisting in Drug Trades

Thursday, January 10th, 2008

Daily NK
Yang Jung A
1/10/2008

It was confirmed that the customs director of the city of Hoiryeong in North Hamkyung province was arrested last December for alleged corruption.

Multiple sources in Hoiryeong reported on the 8th that “The customs director of Hoiryeong was arrested at the end of last December on suspicion of assisting in the drug trade with China. It is known that a large sum of U.S. dollars was found in the customs director’s house.”

A source in North Korea reported through a phone call that, “The arrested customs director regulated small-scale merchants heavily and gave benefits to a couple of merchants who regularly gave bribes. Ultimately, the result was that access to commercial licenses in Hoiryeong was limited to the merchants who dominated the jangmadang.

Hoiryeong is one of the major crossing points along the North Korea-China border. Recently, cases of extortion in which the customs director demanded bribes in exchange for not confiscating goods were on the rise. Criticism had been rising.

The outcry from Korean-Chinese who regularly visit relatives in North Korea has been especially loud. Customs officers have required bribes from the Korean-Chinese who visit North Korea to deliver food, clothing, medicine, and daily necessities claiming them as customs fees. Such actions have become commonplace. (more…)

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U.S. counterfeiting charges against N. Korea based on shaky evidence

Thursday, January 10th, 2008

McClatchy News
Kevin Hall
1/10/2008

Two years ago, as he was ratcheting up a campaign to isolate and cripple North Korea’s dictatorship financially, President Bush accused the communist regime there of printing phony U.S. currency.

“When someone is counterfeiting our money, we want them to stop doing that. We are aggressively saying to the North Koreans just that — don’t counterfeit our money,” Bush said on Jan. 26, 2006.

However, a 10-month McClatchy investigation on three continents has found that the evidence to support Bush’s charges against North Korea is uncertain at best and that the claims of the North Korean defectors cited in news accounts are dubious and perhaps bogus. One key law enforcement agency, the Swiss federal criminal police, has publicly questioned whether North Korea is even capable of producing “supernotes,” counterfeit $100 bills that are nearly perfect except for some practically invisible additions.

Many of the administration’s public allegations about North Korean counterfeiting trace to North Korea “experts” in South Korea who arranged interviews with North Korean defectors for U.S. and foreign newspapers. The resulting news reports were quoted by members of Congress, researchers and Bush administration officials who were seeking to pressure North Korea.

The defectors’ accounts, for example, were cited prominently in a lengthy July 23, 2006, New York Times magazine story that charged North Korea with producing the sophisticated supernotes.

The McClatchy investigation, however, found reason to question those sources. One major source for several stories, a self-described chemist named Kim Dong-shik, has gone into hiding, and a former roommate, Moon Kook-han, said Kim is a liar out for cash who knew so little about American currency that he didn’t know whose image is printed on the $100 bill. (It’s Benjamin Franklin.)

The Secret Service, the Federal Reserve Board and the Treasury Department all declined repeated requests for interviews for this story.

The first international test of the U.S. charge occurred in July 2006, when at the request of the Bush administration, the international police agency Interpol assembled central bankers, police agencies and banknote industry officials to make the U.S. case against North Korea.

The conference in Lyon, France, followed Interpol’s issuance in March 2005 of an orange alert — at America’s request — calling on member nations to prohibit the sale of banknote equipment, paper or ink to North Korea.

But after calling together more than 60 experts, the Secret Service — the lead U.S. agency in combating counterfeiting — never provided any details of the evidence it said it had, instead citing “intelligence” and asking those assembled to accept the administration’s claims on faith alone.

“I can’t remember if I was laughing or asleep,” said one person who was in the room and discussed the meeting with McClatchy on the condition of anonymity because of active contact with the Secret Service.

Interpol’s secretary general is an American, Ronald K. Noble, a veteran of the Secret Service from 1993 to 1996. He declined to discuss the supernotes in detail because he’s sworn to secrecy about classified reports he received in his old job. Noble said the Secret Service made clear it was “not at liberty to share all of the information” to which it had access.

The most definitive reaction came in May 2007 from the Swiss Bundeskriminalpolizei, which is on the lookout for counterfeit currency and has worked closely with U.S. financial authorities in the past. Calling on Washington to present more evidence, the Swiss said they doubted that North Korea was behind the supernotes.

The Swiss police agency’s doubts are based in part on the small quantity of supernotes that have been seized since a sharp-eyed banker in the Philippines first discovered them in 1989 — about $50 million worth, less than it would cost to buy the machinery to make the unique paper and print the notes.

The Swiss agency also doubted that North Korea has the technical expertise to produce the notes.

“Using its printing presses dating back to the 1970s, North Korea is today printing its own currency in such poor quality that one automatically wonders whether this country would even be in a position to manufacture the high-quality ‘supernotes,’ ” the Swiss agency reported.

It also noted that whoever is printing the supernotes has produced at least 19 different versions, each corresponding to a tiny change in U.S. engraving plates.

“It’s by far the most sophisticated counterfeiting operation in the world,” said James Kolbe, a recently retired Republican congressman from Arizona who oversaw funding for the Secret Service. “We are not certain as to how this is being done or how it’s happening. We are not certain as to how (the North Koreans) could gain access to the sophisticated (technology) to do it. It is extremely sophisticated.”

The hardest evidence to surface so far is the 2004 indictment of Sean Garland, a leader of an Irish Republican Army splinter group, who in the late 1990s allegedly ferried more than $1 million in supernotes to Europe, mostly from the North Korean Embassy in Moscow. Garland is now in the Republic of Ireland, but the Irish Embassy said the U.S. hasn’t sought his extradition.

Former U.S. officials who helped promote the allegations about North Korea offered different views about how the administration reached its conclusions.

David Asher, who was the coordinator of a working group at the State Department that collected details on North Korean criminal activities, said his group turned up evidence of the counterfeiting and didn’t rely on “intelligence” to make its case.

Asher, now a researcher at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative Washington policy organization, declined to provide any details.

But Bush, asked for proof that North Korea was counterfeiting supernotes, told McClatchy on Aug. 8, “I’m not at liberty to speak about intelligence matters.”

John Bolton, the former Bush administration official most identified with a hard line on North Korea, told McClatchy that he never saw hard evidence that the North Korean government was making the supernotes. But he said the evidence that the North Koreans distributed them is sufficient proof of bad behavior.

One former top U.S. intelligence official said that he never saw enough information to reach a conclusion.

“I never really saw the intelligence myself to make an independent judgment,” said Carl Ford, who quit as head of the State Department’s intelligence bureau in 2003 because he challenged the administration’s phony claim, based largely on defectors, that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction. The administration’s reluctance to disclose details on North Korea “doesn’t pass the smell test,” he said.

Another key piece of evidence, the alleged role that a tiny bank in the Chinese enclave of Macau played in helping North Korea launder counterfeit notes, also appears dubious. The U.S. Treasury blacklisted the Banco Delta Asia and issued a ruling in March 2007 that effectively shut the bank down.

But an audit by the international accounting firm Ernst & Young on behalf of the Macanese government and obtained by McClatchy found only a single case of counterfeit notes found at Banco Delta Asia. It occurred in 1994, and the fakes didn’t originate in North Korea. The bank found these notes itself and alerted authorities.

Macau has lifted its sanctions against the bank, but the Treasury Department, citing “intelligence,” maintains its blacklisting, although it did allow the bank to transfer $25 million back to North Korea.

Although banks around the world are still seizing supernotes, the Bush administration is no longer publicly accusing North Korea of producing them and has dropped the subject from talks on halting North Korea’s nuclear weapons program, according to State Department officials.

The question that remains is whether the administration is again retreating from a charge it can’t support or whether it’s soft-pedaling hard evidence to avoid derailing the effort to halt North Korea’s nuclear weapons program.

The mystery of the true origin of the supernotes also remains. Industry experts such as the former director of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, Thomas Ferguson, said the supernotes are so good that they appear to have been made by someone with access to some government’s printing equipment.

Some experts think that Iran probably made the notes, and others speak of criminal gangs in Russia or China.

Klaus Bender, the author of a book on the subject, “Moneymakers: The Secret World of Banknote Printing,” said that the phony $100 bill is “not a fake anymore. It’s an illegal parallel print of a genuine note.”

“It goes way beyond what normal counterfeiters are able to do,” said Bender, whose book first spotlighted the improbability of North Korean supernotes. “And it is so elaborate (and expensive) it doesn’t pay for the counterfeiting anymore.”

Bender claims that the supernotes are of such high quality and are updated so frequently that they could be produced only by a U.S. government agency such as the CIA.

As unsubstantiated as the allegation is, there is a precedent. In his new book on the history of the CIA, journalist Tim Weiner detailed how the agency tried to undermine the Soviet Union’s economy by counterfeiting its currency.

Making limited quantities of sophisticated counterfeit notes also could help intelligence and law enforcement agencies follow payments or illicit activities or track the movement of funds among unsavory regimes, terrorist groups and others.

“As a matter of course, we don’t comment on such claims, regardless of how ridiculous they might be,” said CIA spokesman Mark Mansfield.

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More than you wanted to know about Nampo

Wednesday, January 9th, 2008

nampo.JPG

Judging by this presentation it seems that by 2004 western consultants had already made their way to Nampo:

Click on the image to see the powerpoint presentation.

(more…)

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2007 Biggest year for inter-Korean exchange, at USD$1.79 billion

Monday, January 7th, 2008

Institute for Far Eastern Studies (IFES)
NK Brief No. 08-1-10-1
1/10/2008

The net worth of inter-Korean exchanges totaled 1,797,890,000 USD in 2007, up 33% from the 1.35 billion USD in the previous year. Exchanges between the two Koreas began in 1989, and topped one billion dollars for the first time in 2005. The almost 1.8 billion dollars in trade recorded in 2007 is the highest to date, and is equal to 65 percent of North Korea’s non-Korean trade volume of 2.996 billion USD in 2006.

Inter-Korean commercial trade was worth 1,431,170,000 USD, 54 percent higher than the 928 million USD in 2006, while non-commercial trade fell 13 percent, from 421,660,000 dollars in 2006 to only 366,720,000 dollars last year. Overall, commercial trade made up over 80 percent of cross-border exchanges, proving that inter-Korean exchanges continue to grow based on commercial transactions. Commercial trade growth was centered around the mining and fishery sectors (52 percent) and increased production in the Kaesong Industrial Complex (48 percent). Textiles and other goods processed on commission also grew by 30 percent.

Additional manufacturing by companies entering the KIC, as well as the installment of equipment used to increase output by those manufacturers already established in the first phase of the complex, saw a great jump last year. Additionally, South Korea loaned the North 80 million USD for equipment, cloth, soap, polyester fibers, synthetic leather, and other materials to be used in light industry, while the North repayed 2.4 million USD (3 percent) of the loan by delivering 1,000 tons of zinc. This was the first example of the North repaying funds to the South, and shows opportunities for the two Koreas to fulfill each other’s needs and carry out friendly economic cooperation in the future.

With increases in domestic use and export of Bukhan Mountain’s minerals and timber, improvements in communications, customs, and transport issues at the KIC and a growing number of companies moving into the complex leading to an increase in production and manufacturing activity, inter-Korean exchanges are expected to continue to grow in the future.

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Will the new ROK govt revisit inter-Korean projects?

Monday, January 7th, 2008

Yonhap (Jan 7, 2008) reports that newly elected South Korean president Lee Myung-bak will revisit the agreement struck between former President Roh and Chairman Kim Jong il last fall.

(excerpt) Projects under review will be the construction of a shipyard complex and its infrastructure in [Haeju] North Korea, along with the establishment of a “peace zone” along the disputed [Northern Line Limit] border in the West Sea, the site of deadly naval clashes between the two Koreas in 1999 and 2002.

“Humanitarian projects, such as the reunion of family members living separately in the two Koreas, and rice and fertilizer aid can be continuously pushed for, but economic cooperation projects should be carried out in parallel with the pace of North Korea nuclear talks,” a key member of the team was quoted as saying at the briefing.

——

Projects in the North are not the only things potentially headed for the chopping block–so it seems is the South Korean Ministry of Unification itself, which could potentially be merged with the South Korean Foreign Ministry. 

The incoming president, however, did suggest a carrot to go with his sticks.  Yonhap reported on January 4 that the new administration plans to launch a USD$40 million fund to promote economic growth in North Korea. 

(excerpt from Yonhap) The planned fund is in line with Lee’s ambitious plan to help increase the impoverished North’s per capita income to $3,000 within a decade if it makes the bold decision to abandon its nuclear program and open its market, said the team’s spokesman Lee Dong-gwan. There are no accurate data on the reclusive nation’s economy but some estimates put its per capita income at around $1,300.

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N. Korea repays Seoul aid with minerals

Friday, January 4th, 2008

In the 1980s Pepsi went on sale in the Soviet Union [as did eventually Coke].  Since the hard currency needed to buy the syrup was scarce, the Soviets traded it for Vodka (which they presumably had plenty of)–At least this is what I was able to piece together when I visited the USSR as a teenager.

Yonhap (January 4, 2008) reports that North Korea has adopted the same basic strategy to repay its external debts.  This is a positive move on the part of the North because it is the first time the North has made an effort at repaying its external bills.

(excerpt from Yonhap)  The South-North Korea Exchanges and Cooperation Support Association said 500 tons of North Korean-produced zinc, worth about US$1.2 million, arrived in the port of Incheon on Thursday and was unloaded on Friday. It was the second repayment by the communist country for economic assistance provided by Seoul.

Although the amount agreed upon by both countries for 2007 has been paid in full, the installment represents only 3 percent of the North’s total debt to South Korea [appx. USD$80 million]. Pyongyang had agreed to pay Seoul with $2.4 million worth of mineral ore to reimburse it for aid.

[…]reportedly mark[ing] the first time the North has redeemed any of its debt.

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