The Asian Age

Kim’s survival art: Trading in spare parts

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Moscow, June 6: On a shelf in a cramped office on the outskirts of Moscow, businessma­n Igor Michurin has a framed photograph of himself shaking hands with one of his important customers — a North Korean embassy official whom Michurin calls Lee.

It's a relationsh­ip which offers unusual insights into the negotiatin­g techniques of Pyongyang officials, and the ways North Korea has gone about commerce in the face of internatio­nal economic sanctions — from trading in spare parts or wine and cigarettes, to offering labour for hire.

The Russian, whose two companies had revenue of nearly 42 million roubles ($ 671,000) according to 2016 records, was blackliste­d a year ago by the US Treasury Department because he often did business with a North Korean company that, according to the United Nations Security Council, helped Pyongyang’s weapons programme.

Michurin does not deny doing business with North Korea, but says he believes he did not break any laws.

The story is rooted in an old alliance. North Korea was founded by the Soviet Union, which supplied much of its original defense equipment. In the years since Pyongyang's nuclear weapons tests sparked sanctions, Moscow often resisted the measures. U. S. President Donald Trump said in January that Russia was helping North Korea evade sanctions; Moscow says it is now actively cracking down on potential violations.

Around 2011, when Michurin got involved with Lee, U. N. monitors saw how Pyongyang would adapt bits and pieces of old, offtheshel­f, civilian equipment, and obsolete or unwanted parts to use in missiles. These parts reached North Korea from all over the world, including from past Soviet allies.

That's the kind of item Michurin started out selling to the North Koreans.

One of his companies, Ardis- Bearings, specialize­s in trading ball bearings - the steel balls that fit between the moving parts of a machine to help it run smoothly. Bearings can be used for military and civilian purposes, so are known as a "dual- use" technology. U. N. member states are expressly forbidden from exporting certain types to North Korea.

Those were not the types Michurin sold Lee, he said. Instead, he provided "regular mass- produced stuff, surplus stock, old bearings."

Michurin said the Russian foreign ministry had questioned him last year about his sales to North Korea, and at the time ministry officials had told him they were responding to a message from the United States. Neither the foreign ministry nor the U. S. Treasury Department answered questions for this story.

Tall, with grey hair, and casually dressed in jeans, Michurin is a 39- year- old native of Belarus who set up his own business seven years ago after working in small Moscow firms in the industrial bearings trade. He quickly found interest from Asian customers.

“As soon as I place an ad on the internet to say I have some bearings for sale, some Asians will always turn up,” he said in the office in Moscow South where he ran the business until earlier this year. “They're always buying different bearings, they apparently have a demand for them.”

At the end of 2011, soon after the funeral of Kim Jong Un's father, Kim Jong Il, Michurin said Lee invited him to the N o r t h K o r e a n e m b a s s y. They walked together up a red carpet toward a portrait of the deceased leader, where they offered flowers.

“A spark ignited between us,” Michurin said. He returned several times, attending concerts of national songs and dances, eating in a North Korean restaurant in the embassy compound, and negotiatin­g in embassy meeting rooms.

“We treated each other as friends,” Michurin said. “He was here in Moscow with his family, his wife and his child, we used to meet up, we spent time socializin­g as families.”

In 2013, Lee p e r s u a d e d Michurin to make a $ 1,000 c o n t r i bu - tion to a N o r t h Ko r e a n charitable fund: the Kim Il Sung- Kim

Jong Il Foundation. The foundation's website is not available in Russia, but a video on YouTube says it was set up after Kim Jong Il's death, preserves the Kumsusan Palace of the Sun and raises money for “education, public health and environmen­tal protection.”

In return, Michurin got a certificat­e. “Great president Kim Il Sung and great leader Kim Jong Il will remain forever in the hearts of humankind,” it

said. — Reuters

North Korea has gone about commerce in the face of internatio­nal economic sanctions — from trading in spare parts or wine and cigarettes, to offering labour for hire

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