Archive for the ‘Mt. Kumgang Tourist Special Zone’ Category

DPRK signals faith in joint projects amid tensions

Monday, August 7th, 2006

From Joong Ang Daily:

North sends upbeat note on inter-Korean projects
8/7/2006

North Korea has reaffirmed its commitment toward inter-Korean economic cooperation projects, a South Korean operator of an inter-Korean business project said yesterday.

“We are confident that ongoing inter-Korean economic cooperation projects such as the Mount Kumgang tours will produce new meaningful results,” the North’s Asia Pacific Peace Committee said in a letter to Hyundai Asan Corporation, the operator of a tour program to Mount Kumgang.

The North sent the letter on Tuesday, marking the third anniversary on Friday of the death of Chung Mong-hun, the late chairman of Hyundai Asan, an arm of Hyundai Group in charge of various business projects in the communist country.

Mr. Chung committed suicide in 2003 after being interrogated by prosecutors about slush funds he allegedly provided to politicians to promote his company’s North Korea business projects, including an inter-Korean industrial complex in the North Korean border town of Kaesong.

It is the first time that Pyongyang expressed its stance toward inter-Korean economic cooperation projects currently underway since it launched missiles in early July.

There have been concerns that inter-Korean cooperation efforts may hit a snag after the test-launches. In response, the South suspended humanitarian aid, including fertilizer aid. The North reacted by halting reunion events for families separated by the 1950-53 Korean War, and also suspended the construction of a 12-story reunion center at the Mount Kumgang resort on the North’s east coast. More than 1 million South Koreans have visited since the resort was launched in 1998.

Far fewer South Koreans visited the scenic mountain resort last month, according to Hyundai Asan. The number of people taking the cross-border tour in July dropped 43 percent compared with the same period last year. A total of 19,605 people traveled there last month, according to the company. 

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Isolated North Korea pulling back even more

Tuesday, August 1st, 2006

Joong Ang Daily
August 01, 2006

With North Korea more isolated than ever from the international community over its nuclear program and recent missile launches, Pyongyang is taking steps to tighten controls on its people in a bid to show it can defy the international community, North Koreans interviewed in Beijing said.

“It seems that we have to sing the revolutionary songs again,” said one North Korean in Beijing, saying it was time for his country to get mentally tougher. “Nobody listens to us, thus the only way left is to stick together,” the North Korean said.

If Pyongyang hoped to gain more concessions in nuclear negotiations and resolve the issue of financial sanctions imposed by Washington on Banco Delta Asia through its missile launch, the results have been the opposite.

A United Nations Security Council resolution backed by Pyongyang’s long-time ally, Beijing, was adopted. The Bank of China also froze North Korean accounts at its Macao branch, a Korean lawmaker has said.

In addition, a senior official of the United States Treasury Department said recently, Singapore and Vietnam have made commitments to clamp down on illicit North Korean financial activities such as money laundering.

A source in Seoul who is familiar with North Korea’s circumstances said yesterday that Pyongyang has decided to halt exchanges with the outside until April of next year. The Arirang Festival scheduled for this month has already been cancelled.

Experts said a series of economic measures aimed at reviving the North’s ailing economy, which have been underway since 2001, will also likely be put on hold.

“Inside the North, there are even some calling for a halt of the Kaesong Industrial Complex and the Mount Kumgang tours,” said the source, who added that large numbers of North Korean college students are submitting requests to enlist in the military.

Recently, a senior North Korean official on a visit to Beijing said the North is fully prepared to engage in “a march of suffering.” Recent rhetoric coming out of Pyongyang reflects a war-like atmosphere in the country. The state-run Rodong Sinmun has warned that “invaders would be swept away by the fierce anger of the country.”

A government official in Seoul yesterday admitted that in the short run, diplomatic efforts to lure Pyongyang back to nuclear negotiations would be tough. “We are in a difficult situation, but what else can we do but try?” said the official.

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ROK contractors to leave Kumgang

Friday, July 21st, 2006

From Yonhap:

Hyundai Asan withdraws all workers, equipment from N.K.

South Korea’s Hyundai Asan, the North Korean business arm of the Hyundai Group, pulled its workers on Friday from the construction site of a separated family reunion center on North Korea’s Mount Geumgang.

The pullout follows an earlier notification from the communist state that the South Korean workers should withdraw from the construction site before Saturday.

A group of 24 workers returned to the country earlier in the day and an additional 104 workers were pulled out around 5:10 p.m., according to the company.

The withdrawal comes as the first visible sign of soured relations between the divided Koreas after North Korea launched seven ballistic missiles, including a long-range Taepodong-2, on July 5, despite strong opposition and appeals from the South.

Pyongyang said earlier in the week that it was no longer able to continue inter-Korean humanitarian projects, mainly Red Cross-sponsored programs to reunite North and South Korean families separated by the countries’ division.

The announcement came after Seoul said it would suspend humanitarian aid shipments to the impoverished North until the missile crisis is resolved.

North Korea accused the Seoul government of abandoning its northern brethren to please Washington and Tokyo, which spearheaded the passage of a U.N. Security Council resolution condemning the North’s missile launches. The countries are apparently looking to impose additional sanctions.

South Korean Unification Minister Lee Jong-seok dismissed the accusation Thursday, saying the suspension of aid shipments was based on his country’s “own judgment.”
“The reason the government decided to suspend additional food and fertilizer aid was because the North aggravated the situation without considering our position or concerns,” the minister said in a regular press briefing.

The South Korean company, which is also the North’s business partner for a cross-border tour program to the North’s mountain resort, has been working to construct the 12-story separated family reunion center.

North Korea has agreed to allow two South Korean engineers to stay and continue with other business tasks while overlooking the incomplete facility, Yang said.

Another group of 29 Korean-Chinese workers would also be reassigned to the company’s tourism section in the North, according to Yang.

A Hyundai Asan spokesman said Thursday that tours to Mount Geumgang will continue.

The Koreas officially remain in a state of war since the fratricidal Korean War (1950-53) ended only with a cease-fire. More than 90,000 people from the South alone remain separated from their loved ones.

From Yonhap 7/20/2006 (via the Lost Nomad):

N. Korea tells S. Korean contractor to leave site of family reunion center
By Byun Duk-kun

North Korea has told a South Korean company to withdraw all of its workers from the construction site of a separated family reunion center before Friday, one day after it said it would no longer hold reunions of families separated by the division of the Koreas, the Unification Ministry said Thursday.

The one-day notice came in a letter faxed to Hyundai Asan, the North Korea business arm of the Hyundai Group, Yang Chang-seok, a spokesman for the Unification Ministry, told reporters.

“The main point of the letter was for Hyundai to halt its construction of the family reunion center on Mount Geumgang by Thursday and have all of its construction workers leave the site before the end of Friday,” Yang said.

The message was delivered Wednesday shortly after the head of North Korea’s Red Cross society told his South Korean counterpart that his country can no longer hold the humanitarian project to reunite separated families due to what it claimed to be Seoul’s submission to international calls for economic sanctions against the communist state.

Seoul suspended its humanitarian aid for the impoverished North after Pyongyang launched seven mid- and long-range missiles on July 5, despite repeated opposition and warnings from the South and its allies.

South Korea’s point man on North Korea, Unification Minister Lee Jong-seok, said in an earlier press briefing that North Korea’s decision to halt the humanitarian project was regrettable, but that the suspension of aid was not intended to be a sanction or to put pressure on the North.

The decision, according to Lee, was based on Seoul’s “own judgement” that the North has seriously undermined security and peace on the Korean Peninsula by test-firing the missiles despite Seoul’s concerns.

The U.N. Security Council on Saturday adopted a resolution that condemned the North’s missile launches while prohibiting missile-related dealings with the Stalinist state.

Lee said the U.N. resolution must be interpreted “strictly,” a repeat of his opposition against imposing other economic sanctions on the North.

Currently, 150 South Korean workers are working at the North’s mountain resort to build the 13-story reunion facility, according to Yang.

“We are moving toward pulling the workers out,” he said.

The divided Koreas have held 14 rounds of the Red Cross-sponsored reunions between separated families since the historic inter-Korean summit in 2000.

More than 90,000 people from the South alone still remain divided from their loved ones on the other side of the heavily fortified inter-Korean border, according to the ministry.

The Koreas officially remain in a state of war since the 1950-53 Korean War ended only with a cease-fire, not a peace treaty.

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DPRK suspends family reunions

Wednesday, July 19th, 2006

Well, since the ROK has suspended further food/fertilizer aid to the DPRK in response to the current missle situation, the DPRK has suspended family reunions.

From the Joong Ang:

In a tit-for-tat reaction to Seoul’s decision to suspend rice and fertilizer aid, Pyongyang yesterday canceled a separated family reunion and said future ones were in jeopardy.

The Korea Central News Agency broadcast a letter from the North Korean Red Cross to its counterpart in Seoul. The letter said Seoul had refused to talk seriously about a family reunion the North had proposed be held during the Chuseok holidays in October. “Furthermore,” the letter continued, “the South refused to ship rice and fertilizer, one of the inter-Korean humanitarian projects that are conducted on the basis of reciprocity.” Pyongyang, the letter went on, sees no reason to continue family reunions.

“We want to make clear that the video conference call reunion, scheduled to mark August 15, and the construction of a reunion venue at Mount Kumgang will be terminated,” the letter concluded. The Japanese surrendered on Aug. 15, 1945, to end World War II. Both Koreas celebrate a Liberation Day holiday on that date. Although reunions have been held frequently at Mount Kumgang, the two Koreas had agreed to build a permanent reunion site there rather than using tourist hotels.

The Unification Ministry said it would do its best to restart the reunions. It said it anticipated that reaction by Pyongyang but regretted it.

And from the BBC:

The North accused the South of “sacrificing” humanitarian co-operation under pressure from Japan and the US.

Seoul announced the suspension of rice and fertiliser deliveries after inter-Korea talks collapsed last week.

The talks followed North Korea’s missile tests on 5 July, which have raised international concern.

Pyongyang test-fired seven missiles, including a long-range Taepodong-2 believed capable of reaching Alaska.

South Korea says it will not discuss further humanitarian aid with its neighbour until progress is made on resolving issues relating to the missile tests and the North’s nuclear ambitions.

After the high-level talks in Busan fell apart last week, the delegation from Pyongyang issued a statement warning of consequences for inter-Korean ties.

In the latest statement, North Korea’s Red Cross head Jang Jae-on accused the South of “abusing the humanitarian issue for meeting its sinister purpose to serve the outsiders”.

“Our side is, therefore, of the view that it has become impossible to hold any discussion related to humanitarian issues, to say nothing of arranging any reunion between separated families and relatives between the two sides,” he said.

A video reunion meeting scheduled for 15 August would not take place and the planned construction of a reunion centre in the North’s Mt Kumgang was “impossible”, he said.

The reunions bring together families divided by the partitioning of the Korean Peninsula in 1953. The policy has been a key part of reconciliation efforts between the two Koreas.

Earlier, South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun told a meeting of security advisers that Pyongyang’s missile tests were “wrong behaviour” that increased regional tensions.

But he warned against overreacting, saying: “An excessive response to North Korea’s missile tests creates unnecessary tensions and confrontation.”

On Tuesday, the Japanese government said it had begun work on its own set of sanctions for North Korea, in addition to those agreed by the UN Security Council.

The council unanimously passed a resolution on Saturday which condemned the missile launches, but it was softer than the draft initially proposed by Japan.

Japan would look into banning cash remittances to the North from Korean residents, Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe told reporters.

But on Wednesday, Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi said he would not rush to impose more sanctions.

“We should wait and see for a while whether North Korea will seriously respond to the (UN) resolution,” he said.

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New York Times finally gets journalist into Kaesong Zone

Tuesday, July 18th, 2006

Most of the big papers got into Kaesong back in February.  The NY Times got it in July.  Better late than never.  I am adding it to this blog so I can reference it later:

South Brings Capitalism, Well Isolated, to North Korea
By NORIMITSU ONISHI

KAESONG, North Korea — Just north of the demilitarized zone dividing the Korean Peninsula, in possibly the world’s most heavily guarded special economic enclave, 500 managers from the South and 7,000 workers from the North are engaged in a capitalist experiment that is anathema to the United States.

The South Koreans recently gave a tour of the enclave, the Kaesong Industrial Park, to 200 foreign business executives, diplomats and journalists. The hosts expressed optimism that it would bring peace to the peninsula, then they led the visitors through factories churning out goods for markets in the South and elsewhere.

In one of the 15 factories, Taesung Hata, a cosmetics company, about 500 workers wearing dark blue uniforms and white hats operated machines that produced plastic cosmetic containers. Next door, 1,500 workers sat in rows of desks with sewing machines, below ceiling fans and decorative red flowers, making orthopedic shoes called Stafild that were described as “Shoes for Unification.”

To hear the South Korean hosts tell it, when the special economic zone is completed in 2012, it will be bigger than Manhattan, house 2,000 companies and employ 700,000 North Koreans. Yet Kaesong’s significance is larger still, they say, because it will nudge the North toward embracing economic reforms and opening up to the world, the way Shenzhen did in China two decades ago, and open the path, as the shoes suggest, toward reunification.

[The hosts also said they had considered canceling the June 22 tour, which coincided with rising tensions over North Korean preparations for a missile test on July 5, but decided against it.]

Kaesong is South Korea’s biggest project in what some here call unification by “small steps,” or “de facto” unification. The South does not want formal unification for a few more decades, but its strategy is to narrow the yawning gap of half a century of division through various projects, from manufacturing here in Kaesong to uniting the two Koreas’ different Braille characters for the blind and sign language for the deaf.

“It’s de facto unification,” said Ko Gyoung-bin, who oversees the 18-month-old Kaesong project at the Ministry of Unification in Seoul. “It’s already under way. Unlike the German model, it won’t happen suddenly.”

The two Koreas agreed on building Kaesong in June 2002 when the South Korean president at the time, Kim Dae-jung, and the North’s leader, Kim Jong-il, met in Pyongyang. Since then, the exchanges have become so routine that sports authorities on both sides are moving toward fielding a unified team for the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics.

With cultural, academic, business, political or military exchanges going on between the Koreas nearly every week, 80,000 South Koreans visited the North last year. That did not include South Korean visitors to Kumgang Mountain, a North Korean resort opened to foreigners eight years ago. Kumgang has been visited by 1.25 million South Koreans.

South Korean regional and local governments, regardless of political leanings, have also undertaken projects with counterparts in the North. More than 60 private organizations now send South Koreans north to assist on agricultural, health and other projects.

“We go to North Korea, where we work with our counterparts to show them how to use certain agricultural machines or how to breed better cattle,” said Kang Young-shik, director of the Korean Sharing Movement, a private group that has undertaken the Braille and sign-language projects. “They need help from us, though they also feel the need to compete with us.”

Cho Yong-nam, a director general in the Unification Ministry, said South Korea had projects in 27 of 206 cities and counties in the North. The common theme, he said, is to raise standards in the North so that, in a unified Korea, North Koreans would not constitute “a displaced, misfortunate minority group.”

Companies that have come to Kaesong, which is managed by Hyundai Asan, a private company, have received tax breaks and other support from the South Korean government.

A new highway and railroad traverse the DMZ before reaching Kaesong, about 40 miles northwest of Seoul. Soldiers stand watch on either side of the demilitarized zone, with its barricades, barbed wire fences and land mines.

In working with North Koreans, South Koreans have said, they have encountered the sometimes unexpected effects of their division: North Korean construction workers, for example, were rated only one-third as efficient as their counterparts from the South; many North Koreans, with little experience handling machines, have required extensive training.

Sometimes, South and North Koreans had trouble communicating because the language spoken on either side of the DMZ has changed significantly. (One project supported by the South is a unified dictionary with new words that have appeared, or words whose meanings have changed, since the division of the peninsula after World War II.)

Last year, the activity here expanded trade between the Koreas to more than $1 billion for the first time, though only a few companies here are believed to be profitable.

Kaesong has also become an obstacle in negotiations between South Korea and the United States over a free-trade agreement. The South wants products made here to be included in the agreement, arguing, so far in vain, that most of the materials derive from the South.

The Bush administration, which has tried to isolate the North instead of engaging it, recently criticized Kaesong after long withholding judgment. It accused the South of economically propping up the North, as the United States was financially squeezing the North elsewhere.

In a recent op-ed piece in The Wall Street Journal, Jay Lefkowitz, President Bush’s special envoy for human rights in North Korea, said projects like Kaesong strengthened Kim Jong-il by pumping “hundreds of millions of dollars into the North, with more to come.” Mr. Lefkowitz also said he had doubts about whether the North Korean workers actually got their wages.

Mr. Ko, of the Unification Ministry, rejected such accusations, saying the North Korean workers had to sign their names when they received their wages. The wages average $57 a month, nearly triple the average in the North, he said.

According to Hyundai Asan, employees work 48 hours a week. They were picked by North Korean officials, then approved by South Koreans. About 80 percent are high school graduates.

Visitors were allowed to speak freely to the North Korean workers, but the presence of supervisors and North Korean guides on the tour discouraged anything but innocuous answers.

Peter M. Beck, who is the Northeast Asia director for the International Crisis Group in Seoul and took part in the tour, said that he was impressed by the facilities but that it was still unclear how much of the wages went to the workers.

At Shinwon, a garment manufacturer, 300 North Korean workers were cutting and sewing shirts, dresses and blouses in a large, brightly lighted, air-conditioned factory.

“I’ve seen factories of this type in Kenya, Bangladesh, India and Papua New Guinea, and the conditions here compare very favorably,” said Frank Gamble, a retired banker and an official with the Australia-New Zealand Chamber of Commerce in Seoul, as he toured the Shinwon factory. “What South Korea is trying to do here in Kaesong, we’ve already seen in China and Vietnam and elsewhere. The United States was against investing in Vietnam, but now they’re beating down doors to get there.”

A North Korean official accompanying the visitors expressed anger at criticism from Americans.

“I think they’re ignorant,” he said, refusing to give his name. “They just criticize everybody, including China on human rights. They just want to impose their standards on the world.”

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DPRK cancels, but Kumgang hotel opens

Wednesday, July 12th, 2006

From the Joong Ang Daily:

An abrupt notification by the North that it would not attend caused the postponement of a celebration by the two Koreas of the launch of the Oegeumgang Hotel at Mount Kumgang in North Korea, which had been set to take place yesterday.

The 11-story, 179-room Oegeumgang Hotel still launched operations yesterday, as did Baekseju village, designed to promote rice liquor and a rest stop called Hwajinpo near Mount Kumgang.

The hotel will be open to foreign tourists who come on a Hyundai Asan package deal to visit the mountain.

Hyundai Asan Corp., the arm of Hyundai Group that spearheads inter-Korean business, said yesterday the North told them on Monday afternoon that it would not attend.

North Korea did not say why, but Hyundai said it may have been due to the international tension caused by its missile launches last week.

A Hyundai Asan spokesman said, “the absence is not likely to affect future business with North Korea.”

He added that the opening celebration date will be reset soon after discussions with the North.

Hyundai Asan also plans an event on Mount Kumgang with the North Aug. 4-6 to commemorate the late Hyundai Group founder Chung Ju-yung, who was born in North Korea. The North has not said if it will participate.

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Kumgang to get weather center

Thursday, July 6th, 2006

From the Korea Times

Two Koreas Discuss Setting Up Weather Center at Mt. Kumgang
By Lee Jin-woo

Tourists visiting North Korea’s scenic Mt. Kumgang resort are likely to be presented with more accurate weather forecasts as early as this fall, officials at South Korea’s Unification Ministry said Wednesday.

South and North Korea are in negotiations to open a weather forecasting center at the mountain to provide tourists with more accurate meteorological information in the region, notorious for its unpredictable weather, said a ministry official, who asked not to be identified.

“Negotiations between the two Koreas are currently under way to open a weather center. There are still some areas that the two sides need to agree upon,” the official said. “Pyongyang is showing a positive response to the plan though.”

In May, a survey team comprised of officials from the ministry, Hyundai Asan Corp. as well as the Korea Meteorological Administration (KMA) was dispatched to the area to gather information prior to beginning construction, sources said.

Hyundai Asan has led the tourism project under which more than 1.2 million South Koreans have visited the resort area since the communist state opened the outer part of Mt. Kumgang on its east coast in 1998. Last year, the annual number of South Korean visitors to Mt. Kumgang reached over 300,000 for the first time.

“It was early last year when we first requested local broadcasting companies to add weather forecasts for Mt. Kumgang and its adjacent areas,” said Kwon Kee-seob, who is in charge of public relations at Hyundai Asan. “The broadcasters, however, told us to discuss the matter with the KMA and the Unification Ministry to set up some facilities to gather information there.”

Kwon added over 2,000 South Koreans, including some 1,000 travelers, visit or stay in the North Korean territory on average everyday.

“We’ve got many phone calls from those who plan to make a trip to Mt. Kumgang, but have not been able to give them good weather information,” he said.

South Korean officials once considered making use of weather forecasts by the North Korean meteorological agency, but later gave up the plan due to the poor quality of weather information from the North, sources said.

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Kumgang contracts with foreign companies

Wednesday, July 5th, 2006

Kumgang resort goes international
 
Emerson Pacific Group, a Korean company that is now building a golf and spa resort at North Korea’s Mount Kumgang, said yesterday that it had reached an agreement with a British resort operator to co-manage those facilities.

A spokeswoman for Emerson Pacific said that her company would be responsible for development planning for the resort and fund it entirely; the British company, General Hotel Marketing, would oversee the resort’s construction and interior design, operating systems, staff training and global marketing. General Hotel Management operates 16 resorts around the world, including at Langkawi and Bali in Asia.

The agreement gives an international polish to the formerly inter-Korean project to develop tourism at Mount Kumgang, widely acclaimed from antiquity as the Korean Peninsula’s most scenic area.

Ralf W. Ohletz, the executive vice president of General Hotel Management, told the press yesterday that he was convinced that the resort “has the potential to become a global-scale tourist attraction.” He added that the locale ― North Korea ― made the project both challenging and attractive.

Emerson said it would spend about 80 billion won ($85 million) on the resort, which is scheduled to open next year. It is already selling memberships in the golf course there for 17 million won each.

Hyundai Asan, which is the overall operator of the tourism project at Mount Kumgang, said yesterday that the beach there will be open for swimming and picnicking beginning Saturday.

The tour operator also said the Oegeumgang Hotel, on the mountains’ eastern slope, has been remodeled and will be open on July 11. The 11-story building, with 179 rooms, was formerly a retreat for senior North Korean officials. 

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ROK to promote knowledge sharing with DPRK

Thursday, June 29th, 2006

From the Korea Times:

Seoul to Promote Knowledge Sharing With N. Korea
By Kim Sung-jin
Staff Reporter

The government Thursday said it will continue to promote various projects to exchange economic knowledge with the reclusive North Korea.

Vice Finance and Economy Minister Bahk Byong-won said Thursday that private economic cooperation between the South and the North has become brisker than ever with the Kaesong Industrial Complex and North Korean tourism projects getting into full swing, but inter-government cooperation is still very limited.

“What we need more than anything else to further advance the cooperative inter-Korean economic relations is an extension of knowledge-sharing programs with the North,” Bahk said. He made the remarks at a conference on knowledge sharing for the economic development of North Korea at the Westin Chosun Hotel in downtown Seoul.

Participants in the conference included the Asia Foundation’s country representative in Korea Edward Reed, head of political section of the Delegation of the European Commission to Korea Maria Castillo Fernandez, former Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation’s (SDC) North Korean office resident director Rudolf Strasser and Korea Institute for International Economic Policy (KIEP) president Lee Kyung-tae.

As Bahk noted, government-level economic exchange programs between the South and the North are still very limited although Seoul and Pyongyang agreed on revising a plan to dispatch economic inspectors across the demilitarized zone (DMZ) at the Inter-Korean Economic Cooperation talks held on Cheju Island between June 3 and 6.

“The Korean government will make consistent efforts to widen knowledge sharing with the North as well as with the international community,” Bahk said.

“We also hope that academia, non-government organizations and international organizations will play a leading role in extending inter-Korean knowledge sharing programs,” he added.

Annual inter-Korean economic transactions, including the transaction of merchandise and services such as tourism, have made a significant improvement over the past five years regardless of the political tension on the Korean Peninsula. They expanded to $1 billion in 2005 from some $200 million prior to the inter-Korean Summit held in 2000.

Meanwhile, the Korea International Trade Association (KITA) said Thursday that inter-Korean economic transaction, or trade, expanded 30 percent in the first five months of this year, thanks to vibrant industrial activity in Kaesong just across the inter-Korean border.

Between January and May, inter-Korean economic transactions amounted to $428.63 million, up 34.4 percent from the same period last year.

In the cited period, North Korea-bound South Korean goods jumped 35.4 percent to $264.97 million, and imports from the North increased 32.9 percent to $163.66 million.

Inter-Korean economic transactions are forecast to expand sharply next year as the number of South Korean manufacturers moving into the Kaesong industrial complex will reach 300 with the completion of the first phase of the industrial park construction project, up from current 15.

Seoul plans to help Kaesong house as many as 2,000 South Korean firms by 2012 when the complex is fully developed.

From Yonhap:

South Korea will intensify efforts in technical assistance and training for North Korea in order to help the communist state’s economy grow further, a government official said Thursday.

“We should help the North to enhance its understanding of economic principles and their operation mechanism, which will guarantee us more substantial and enduring results from economic assistance to North Korea,” Vice Finance Minister Bahk Byong-won said in a speech at a forum titled “Knowledge Sharing for Economic Development of North Korea.”

“Material assistance without economic knowledge and managerial capacity cannot contribute to sustainable economic growth,” he said.

Bahk said excessive transaction costs caused by the lack of adequate knowledge about economic principles, practices and international economy on the North Korean side have posed bigger threats to economic development than anything else.

“Some have suggested that inter-Korean cooperation has proceeded at a slow pace, but despite a rapidly changing environment, inter-Korean economic cooperation has shown remarkable strides,” he said.

Inter-Korean trade volume, which stood at US$2 million-$3 million before the 2000 inter-Korean summit, reached $1 billion last year, making South Korea the second-largest trading partner of North Korea, the official said.

Also, personnel exchanges and movement between South and North Korea have never been more frequent than recently, he said.

Bahk said economic cooperation between the Koreas, which has been regarded as one-sided, has also shifted to the one that is reciprocal and serves mutual interests, he said.

“South Korea, international organizations and nongovernmental organizations should seek to create synergies by exerting concerted efforts through sharing information among ourselves with regard to the knowledge-sharing experience with North Korea,” Bahk said.

The South Korean government will not spare any effort to vitalize knowledge sharing with North Korea for its economic development in close partnership with the international community, he said.

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Politics, blood ties trump trump profits in north

Thursday, June 22nd, 2006

Joong Ang Daily
6/22/2006

In the ground floor ballroom of the Yanggakdo Hotel annex in Pyongyang, the North Korean Chamber of Commerce hosted a trade information and investors’ relations conference on May 16. Senior North Korean trade ministry officials gave presentations on North Korea’s economic policy and investment climate. Rim Tae-dok, chief counselor of the trade ministry, said Pyongyang protected property rights of foreign investors and guaranteed the independence of their management. The North Korean official stressed that foreign investors would enjoy tax benefits and that the legal process of establishing companies in the North has been largely simplified.

Another senior North Korean official, Kim Ha-dong, also gave a presentation about Pyongyang’s export policy. Mr. Kim, a senior researcher at the trade ministry, said the communist country had been issuing permits for exports and imports after only a short review process. He encouraged investors to participate in trade.

The North Korean presentations were not very different from those given in any capitalist country, but the concept of “self-reliance” was prominent.

“We will build a self-reliant economy of Koreans and carry out trade on top of that,” Mr. Kim said. He added that North Korea’s self-reliance must not be damaged or controlled by foreign economies through trade.

During the JoongAng Ilbo’s 10-day survey of the reclusive communist country’s economic sites, Pyongyang’s dilemma ― self-reliant socialism versus economic development by attracting foreign investments ― was apparent. Some North Korean officials showed skepticism about China’s model of partially opening its economy, claiming that their country had to be run in a different manner.

“I have toured special economic zones in China several times,” said Ju Tong-chan, the North’s chairman of the National Economic Cooperation Committee. “But we have different ways of managing our economy than China, and I believe we should run our special economic zones in different ways. We are still researching our options, but we will not do it that [Chinese] way.”

China was able to expand its economy at high speed after the central government opened up the economy. It gave local governments enough independence to run business autonomously in their areas and attract foreign investment. But Mr. Ju was obviously unconvinced by the success of China’s model. The opening of the economy could boomerang, becoming a threat to the North’s system, he worried.

On factories and farms, North Koreans were still caught up – or at least gave the outward appearance of being caught up ― in a personality cult centered on the nation’s founding family. At cooperative farms and factories, the senior managers’ introductory briefings were always about the lessons taught by Kim Il Sung, North Korea’s first president, and Kim Jong-il, who succeeded him but did not assume the title of national president. These managers’ presentations began with the number of visits by the Kims to the site. There were always paeans to the communist regime’s “military first” policy and slogans to that effect were emblazoned everywhere, making it clear that the military and politics take priority over the economy.

North Korean officials were also reluctant to lay out all pertinent information to investors and journalists.

Kim Yong-il, 45, the manager of the port at Nampo on the country’s west coast, refused to cite specific numbers about the port’s freight-handling capacity. He said only that it could deal with “large amounts” of cargo.

Mr. Rim, the trade ministry chief counselor, said North Korean politics were extremely stable, which guaranteed the security of foreign investments. He gave no data or examples to support that claim of stability, however, and completely ignored the question of North Korea’s nuclear programs and how they might or might not affect stability.

Reacting to the journalists’ remarks that South Korean firms were reluctant to invest in the North because it has been difficult to make profits there, Mr. Ju, the chairman of the National Economic Cooperation Committee, said, “Why is money the priority? Inter-Korean business must be about something more than just monetary calculations.”

He was also visibly upset about Seoul’s policy on economic cooperation. “We made extremely sensitive military restricted areas at Mount Kumgang and Kaesong available to the South,” Mr. Ju said. “But the South has just given us a lot of excuses and failed to cooperate.”

He continued, “To nurture the Kaesong Industrial Complex into a world-class production facility, electronic and advanced technology industries are crucial. But labor-intensive industries are the majority in Kaesong. In this information era of the 21st century, the South has failed to bring in computers for administrative use in Kaesong.”

He also vented some spleen about the United States, asking the journalists why Seoul was so careful not to irritate Washington. He cited the U.S. restrictions on the re-export without prior approval of so-called “dual-use” goods, those with civilian and military applications, to countries it has blacklisted, including North Korea. Other international accords, such as the Wassenaar Agreement, also prevent South Korea from providing the North merchandise and commodities that have “strategic” applications.

But Mr. Ju sounded firm about continuing operations at Kaesong. “It is the nucleus of inter-Korean economic cooperation, and we must make it a success first. Then we can move on to other projects.”

He also dismissed the U.S. concerns that workers in Kaesong were laboring under harsh working conditions, but seemed to sidestep the basic question. “It is a matter that we should deal with,” Mr. Ju said. “Since we manage businesses differently, we are trying to come up with the best resolution to make direct [wage] payments to the workers.”

South Korean economists and businessmen who listened to similar presentations and looked at some of the North’s accounts were troubled by Pyongyang’s rigidity in opening up the economy. That, they said, coupled with the simmering nuclear weapons problem, is the most serious obstacle to attracting foreign investments. Unless U.S. diplomatic ties with North Korea are established, investing in facilities in North Korea and selling “made in North Korea” products on global markets would be difficult and risky, they agreed.

“If a foreign investor wants to visit a factory in the North that he has put money into, he has to obtain an invitation every time, and his schedule and movements in the North are strictly controlled,” said Kwon Yeong-wuk, the trade promotion director at the Korea International Trade Association of Seoul. “Under such circumstances, the North should not expect much in the way of foreign investments.” He said Pyongyang had a “my way or the highway” approach to the economy: If you’re here, follow our rules. The rigidity, he reiterated, is a serious obstacle to investors.

Other experts and businessmen in South Korea said Pyongyang’s attitude toward inter-Korean business in particular makes it hard to earn profit. They complain about the stress North Korean officials put on the concept that business between the two Koreas should be based on the maxim “blood is thicker than water” and not on market principles. An official at North Korea’s National Reconciliation Council argued that South Korean conglomerates should make large investments there based on that concept.

A South Korean businessman who has been looking for business opportunities in the North said he has run into a series of dead ends. “South Korean firms are doing businesses in the global market,” he said. “The largest market is the United States, and not many people would want to give that up to do business with the North.” He added that North Korea’s cheap but skilled manpower is an attractive point, but that poor infrastructure, extremely low purchasing power and the difficulty of obtaining raw materials make China and Vietnam much more attractive investment locales. Kim Yeon-chul, an academic at Korea University in Seoul, agreed with that assessment. “Large companies in South Korea have already automated their production facilities, so labor costs are not important in deciding on investments,” he said. “North Korea must improve other conditions instead of stressing the merits of its manpower or blaming outside causes.”

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