The Phnom Penh Post

NK firms defying China deadline

- Ryan McMorrow

SOME North Korean businesses in China had closed their doors yesterday but others remained open, despite Beijing’s deadline to shut down under UN sanctions intended to strip the regime of cash.

Fed up with North Korea’s nuclear and missile provocatio­ns, Beijing has backed a series of UN sanctions against its Cold War-era ally, which relies on China for 90 percent of its foreign trade.

But the halting progress in shutting down the businesses demonstrat­ed the uneven enforcemen­t of a commerce ministry directive for them to close by January 9.

A North Korean hotel in the northeaste­rn city of Shenyang stopped taking reservatio­ns yesterday. In Beijing a restaurant posted a handwritte­n note on its door reading “off for today”.

But elsewhere in China’s frigid northeast, the hub of North Korean economic activities in the country, some restaurant­s, travel agencies and seafood stalls planned to stay open.

“Tourism is about connecting people, it’s a human right,” said North Korean Kim Yongil at the office of North Korean Internatio­nal Travel Agency in the Chinese border city of Dandong, noting they had received no notice to close.

“Stopping people from freely visiting North Korea is a human rights issue. You are evil,” Kim said in an apparent reference to Westerners.

In a basement stall opposite China’s customs administra­tion, North Korean Meng Qingshu had no plans to stop selling dried walleye pollack for $10 a bag and sea cucumber for more than $100 a bag.

“We sell salty North Korean seafood,” she said. “It’s from the wild.”

Seafood imports from the North have been under sanctions since August, and Meng did not explain how the fish was imported.

The UN resolution shutting North Korean joint ventures and cooperativ­e entities does not set a firm date to close, but it laid out a 120-day timetable from its passage in September.

Despite its own deadline, China appears to be taking a slower approach, experts say.

“The ninth is a key day, the last day for businesses to split up, and they should close,” said Lu Chao, director of the Border Study Institute at the Liaoning Academy of Social Sciences, a government think tank.

Foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang said China upholds its UN obligation­s and will “seriously punish” those who violate sanctions.

Hotel cash cow

The 14-floor Chilbosan hotel in the heart of Shenyang, capital of the northeaste­rn province of Liaoning, has been a key source of revenue for Pyongyang.

But a woman who answered the phone at the front desk yesterday said they were not taking new reservatio­ns for its 154 rooms.

“We are closed for the time being . . . since today,” she told AFP, adding that she did not know why.

A day earlier, North Koreans with flag pins on their chests had been tucking into breakfast buffets. Guests could watch the North’s state-owned television station in their rooms.

“Shenyang’s Chilbosan hotel is North Korea’s largest investment in China or abroad,” Lu said. “They invested $25$30 million.”

Pyongyang operates the hotel in a joint venture with Dandong Hongxiang Industrial Machinery, a company that the US says once accounted for a fifth of trade between China and the North.

The US sanctioned the company and filed criminal charges against its Dandong-based owner Ma Xiaohong in 2016, accusing her of ties to the North’s weapons program.

In Dandong, Hongxiang’s 16th -floor office in Fortune Tower, with a view across the Yalu River to the North’s city of Sinuiju, was deserted yesterday.

Near the border bridge, a Hongxiang affiliate ran the grand Pyongyang Restaurant as a joint venture with the North Korean People’s Insurance Associatio­n.

Business records show the Insurance Associatio­n transferre­d its shares to another company registered to an apartment address in November, but its establishm­ents were closed “temporaril­y”.

“We’ve closed for repairs,” said a man inside the restaurant’s lavish interior. Next door, Hongxiang’s travel agency booking tours to the North was also closed.

Big impact

Elsewhere in Dandong, the North Korean Koryo Restaurant serving national fare closed recently and its lettering was removed. A police officer stood inside.

But down the street, North Korean waitresses still served North Korean beer and live seafood at the Songtao Garden.

Songtao was operated as a joint venture with a North Korean state-owned company until November, when the North’s company transferre­d all its shares to its partner, the Dandong Junze Investment Company.

The North’s roughly 100 eateries in China brought in annual revenue of about $10 million, said Chung YoungJune, a scholar at the Institute for Sinology at Seoul’s Yonsei University.

“They’ve been providing [the North’s leader] Kim Jong-un with private money,” Chung said. Closing the restaurant­s will have a big “negative effect on the North Korean leadership”.

 ?? CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP ?? A Chinese tourist takes photograph­s towards North Korea while visiting the Broken Bridge in the border city of Dandong, in China’s northeast Liaoning province yesterday.
CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP A Chinese tourist takes photograph­s towards North Korea while visiting the Broken Bridge in the border city of Dandong, in China’s northeast Liaoning province yesterday.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia