The Borneo Post

Gateway to N. Korea pins hopes on summit

-

We are just doing some small business, we don’t understand the politics but we have been majorly impacted.

DANDONG, CHINA: After a sanctions- driven hiatus, dozens of North Korean women are again cutting cloth, pedalling sewing machines and manning production lines at a garment factory in a Chinese city buoyed by hopes of peace across the border.

The workshop had been silent for months, whipsawed by United Nations sanctions that sent North Korean workers home, but machines have sprung back to life in the trade gateway of Dandong as tensions ease on the Korean peninsula.

Beijing, an old ally of Pyongyang, has officially shown no signs of lifting the punishing UN measures, but President Xi Jinping’s embrace of his younger North Korean counterpar­t, Kim Jong Un, has provided breathing room to businesses and traders in the border city.

Many businessme­n are now looking ahead to the fortune they hope to make should US President Donald Trump’s summit with Kim on Tuesday in Singapore lead to the lifting of sanctions.

The city of 2.4 million bet its economy on commerce with the North, emerging as the main artery for bilateral trade trucked back and forth across the Yalu River separating the two Cold War- era allies.

But the economy has been in the doldrums since the UN punished Pyongyang for its nuclear and missile tests last year, squeezing trade in coal, seafood, textiles and other commoditie­s, while forcing a portion of its cheap North Korean workforce to return home.

“We are just doing some small business, we don’t understand the politics but we have been majorly impacted,” a manager of the garment factory surnamed Tian told AFP.

Today things are looking up: curious Chinese tourists are returning, housing prices are jumping, and some traders have learned how to work around sanctions.

“Most of my buyers are businessme­n from southern China. They think they will do business with the North,” said Yue Yue, a realtor selling apartments overlookin­g the Yalu.

“We have sold a year’s worth of apartments in one month’s time,” she said.

North Koreans, with their telltale lapel pins bearing images of past leaders, have returned to Dandong.

At the city’s lone border crossing, dozens milled about with bags bulging as they waited for a bus home.

Chinese tourist Liu led a group of seven friends the other way, back to China.

“We wanted to see what North Korea is like, how far it has developed,” said the man in his sixties, after two days of sightseein­g in Sinuiju across the border.

The group from northern China booked their tour after Kim visited Beijing in March. The entertainm­ent provided by their hotel included a screening of “The Flower Girl”, written by Kim’s grandfathe­r, Kim Il Sung.

North Korean eateries are also back in business.

The marble Pyongyang Restaurant near the border crossing put on a show of ballads and dance numbers performed by North Korean women in traditiona­l gowns on a recent night.

It reopened at the end of March, waitresses said, around the same time that Kim passed through town in his armoured train on the way to his first meeting with Xi.

The restaurant was owned by businesswo­man Ma Xiaohong and the Korea National Insurance Corporatio­n, both sanctioned by the US, until the North transferre­d its shares to a local guest house last year.

An employee at the guest house told AFP they served as a proxy holder. Its owner, Piao Zhehao, was unreachabl­e across the border.

Inside, Chinese and North Korean diners recently discussed business as they picked at specialty dishes from the North.

UN sanctions required the North’s joint ventures abroad to close and China shuttered many of its businesses in January.

A North Korean businessma­n surnamed Kim said last month’s destructio­n of his country’s nuclear test site “demonstrat­es to the world our love of peace.”

“We are all hoping for a good outcome to the talks, no matter if we can do business or not, we are for peace,” he said.

In Dandong, dozens of companies closed as trade shrivelled, with bilateral trade down 59 per cent in the first four months of the year.

Two border traders estimated 400 or 500 of their competitor­s have closed up shop. — AFP

Garment factory manager

 ??  ?? Graphic on North Korea’s high-level diplomatic encounters since February. — AFP photo
Graphic on North Korea’s high-level diplomatic encounters since February. — AFP photo
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia