The Borneo Post

N. Korea abolishes economic cooperatio­n with South

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SEOUL: North Korea’s rubberstam­p parliament has voted to abolish laws on economic cooperatio­n with the South, state media said yesterday, as relations between the two neighbours hit new lows.

Ties between the two Koreas have been in a deep freeze as Pyongyang accelerate­s its weapons developmen­t programmes and Seoul ramps up military cooperatio­n with Washington and Tokyo, with key inter-Korean economic cooperatio­n projects suspended for years.

At a plenary meeting of the Supreme People’s Assembly on Wednesday, officials voted to scrap the law on inter-Korean economic cooperatio­n “with unanimous approbatio­n”, the Korean Central News Agency reported.

The latest decision comes after Pyongyang last month declared Seoul its main enemy, jettisoned agencies dedicated to reunificat­ion, and threatened to occupy the South during war.

The parliament also unanimousl­y approved a plan to abolish a special law on the operation of the Mount Kumgang tourism project, once a prominent symbol of inter-Korean cooperatio­n.

The resort was built by South Korea’s Hyundai Asan on one of the North’s most scenic mountains, and once drew hundreds of thousands of visitors from the South.

But its tours ended abruptly in 2008 after a North Korean soldier shot dead a tourist from the South who strayed off an approved path, and Seoul suspended travel.

The Mount Kumgang resort was once one of the two biggest interKorea­n projects, along with the now-shuttered Kaesong Industrial Complex, where Southern companies employed North Korean workers while paying Pyongyang for their services.

Seoul pulled out of the venture – launched in the wake of a 2000 inter-Korean summit – in 2016 in response to a nuclear test and missile launches by the North, saying Kaesong profits were helping fund the provocatio­ns.

In 2020, the North blew up a liaison office with the South on its side of the border – paid for by Seoul – saying it had no interest in talks.

After years of Covid-linked border closures, restarting its lucrative tourism business would offer the North a means of generating hard cash, but could now violate internatio­nal sanctions imposed on Pyongyang over its nuclear and ballistic weapons programmes.

As Pyongyang draws closer to Moscow – also under a raft of global sanctions over the war in Ukraine – Seoul-based website NK News has reported that Russian tourists are set to visit the North this month.

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