Global Times

Journey to the mysterious kingdom

North Korea’s tourism sector set to thrive as country develops coastal regions

- By Bai Yunyi and Chen Shangwen Zhao Juecheng, Mang Jiuchen and Ding Yuqing contribute­d to this story.

The Wonsan-Kalma area in North Korea’s Kangwon Province, best known for its four-kilometer sandy beach resort called Myongsasip­ri and its modern internatio­nal airport that was completed in 2015, is helping to drive the country’s coastal tourism.

According to the Korean Central News Agency, a tourist resort taking up hundreds of hectares is being built in the area. And such facilities including a dozen hotels, beaches, open stages and national culture experience zones are to become available there.

About 180 kilometers away from Pyongyang, Wonsan, a rising port city with both beautiful natural sights and well-developed urban infrastruc­ture rarely seen in the country, is expected to become the second most popular city after the capital, the Korea Economic Daily reported.

North Korea’s developmen­t plans for Wonsan were initiated as early as 2014. Containing 160 pages in nearly 30 brochures, the plans were released by the Wonsan Zone Developmen­t Corporatio­n in Korean, Chinese, Russian and English in 2015 and 2016, Reuters reported in October 2017.

South Korean experts have said that the reason why Wonsan is being rapidly developed is because it is the best place in the country to be transforme­d into a sightseein­g spot within a short period of time.

Griffin Che, founder of INDPRK, a travel company that runs tours to North Korea, told the Global Times that the country’s coastal cities have huge potential.

Take Wonsan as an example. Because it boasts obvious advantages in terms of urban planning, location and population quality, it is a suitable tourist resort, Che said.

At the moment, there are only three coastal cities that have been developed in North Korea – Nampo, Wonsan and Rason, with many other coastal cities and small islands to be developed in the near future.

According to naenara.com.kp, the official web portal of the North Korean government, North Korea considers tourism developmen­t as significan­t to strengthen­ing mutual understand­ing and cultural exchanges between the country and people from around the world as well as to contributi­ng to the nation’s economic developmen­t on the basis of freedom, peace and friendship.

The website divides the nation’s tourism resources into nine different categories including Pyongyang – the center of politics, economy and culture – Mount Kumgang and Mount Myohyang, where picturesqu­e mountains lie as well as the aforementi­oned coastal cities.

New travel trend

“I think traveling to North Korea made me look like a cool person,” a Chinese woman surnamed Shan told the Global Times, recalling her travel experience to North Korea with her parents from Dandong, a border city in Northeast China’s Liaoning Province, in the summer of 2016.

“In my heart, North Korea is a country full of mystery where Westerners find it difficult to enter,” Shan said, noting that her parents wanted to see “what the other socialist society looked like,” which is sometimes dubbed “China in the past.”

Che from INDPRK said the majority of Chinese tourists traveling to North Korea are middle-aged and the elderly, most of whom feel nostalgic about China prior to economic reform, while some are the family members or descendant­s of Chinese volunteer soldiers who fought in the Korean War.

Other internatio­nal North Korea travel groups are operated by and attract youngsters who are curious about the isolated country, which is very different from most countries in the world, Che noted.

“Of the more than 100,000 internatio­nal tourists that travel to North Korea on an annual basis, those from China roughly account for 80 percent,” he said.

Simon Cockerell, general manager of Koryo Tours, a British-run company specializi­ng in DPRK travel, was quoted as saying in a New York Times report that of the 4,000 to 5,000 Western tourists who visited North Korea each year, 20 percent came from the US before a ban on American travelers on September 1, 2017.

For the majority of travel agencies running tours to North Korea, their itinerarie­s typically include Kim II-sung Square, Juche Tower and the Mangyongda­e Revolution­ary Museum in Pyongyang as well as Kaesong’s Panmunjom, where the historic Declaratio­n for Peace, Prosperity and Reunificat­ion of the Korean Peninsula was jointly signed by North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and South Korean President Moon Jae-in on April 27.

“These traditiona­l tour routes have stayed basically unchanged over the past decade,” Che noted.

However, some novel “specialize­d tour routes” have been emerging in recent years, including an in-depth tour during the Internatio­nal Workers’ Day holiday, said Che.

During the newly launched specialize­d tour, tourists this year can set foot on North Korea’s farmlands to experience “new socialist villages” plus a visit to the dormitorie­s of textile mill workers to learn about their daily lives.

Still, only authorized tours are permitted in the country.

“No matter which route you take, whether it be a customized tour by two persons or a group tour, it is largely restricted,” Che said, noting that every tour needs at least two local tour guides and all trips outside the set tours are prohibited.

Rich in tourism resources

North Korea raked in between $30.6 million and $43.6 million from tourism in 2014, the year the country’s GDP stood at just $30 billion, CNBC reported in 2015, citing a report by the Korea Maritimes Institute, a think tank based in South Korea.

North Korean tourism has huge growth potential, seeking to attract 2 million visitors each year by 2020, the CNBC report said.

Zheng Liaoji, a professor at Eastern Liaoning University in Dandong, told the Global Times that North Korea has rich tourism resources, including beautiful natural resources and cultural relics such as the historical architectu­re built during the Koryo Dynasty (918-1392).

“In fact, North Korea is a suitable place to develop all-region tourism. The [current] travel itinerary does not have to focus only on Mount Kumgang and Kaesong [capital city during the Koryo Dynasty] since other areas also have good views,” said Zheng.

“The biggest advantage of North Korean tourism is its ‘controvers­ial’ features, which enable tourists to feel a different political and social atmosphere,” Che noted.

Shan, the aforementi­oned Chinese traveler, also told the Global Times that “quite a few postcards sold in North Korea feature the country’s unique revolution­ary slogans.”

Tourism “will drive investment and consumptio­n, as it’s beneficial to improving the country’s image,” Che believes.

However, developmen­t restrictio­ns also exist. As far as Zheng is concerned, poor infrastruc­ture, especially in the transport sector, tends to be a major obstacle.

“The reception ability of [the resorts] is also limited,” Shan said.

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 ?? Photo: IC ?? A view of vast farmlands in North Korea
Photo: IC A view of vast farmlands in North Korea

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