The Star Malaysia

Coal piles up in North Korea

Industry grinds to a halt amid UN ban on Pyongyang export

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RASON ( North Korea): A threemetre-high metal fence topped with razor wire in a North Korean port marks the front line of the United Nations’ ban on coal exports by Pyongyang.

A mountain of North Korean coal, which would once have been bound for China, is piled up on one side of the barrier in Rajin harbour, stranded by the interdicti­on.

On the next dock, around two million tonnes of Russian coal have come in by train and been shipped on to China this year by Russian port operator RasonConTr­ans.

Its activities are specifical­ly excluded from the UN Security Council’s sanctions resolution­s, but attempts have been made to use it as a way to bypass the restrictio­ns.

“They asked but we said no, we don’t do it,” said RasonConTr­ans deputy director Roman Minkevich.

The black mounds on the neighbouri­ng wharf were evidence that his firm was complying with the rules, he added.

“Behind the fence it’s Korean coal. It’s under sanctions now, so it’s still here,” he said, though he declined to elaborate on the source of the requests.

The UN Panel of Experts on North Korea said in its mid-year report that Pyongyang has been “deliberate­ly using indirect channels to export prohibited commoditie­s”.

For years, the coal trade was a lucrative earner for Pyongyang – its main ally and key economic part- ner China imported 22 million tonnes worth nearly US$1.2bil (RM4.9bil) last year.

But while Beijing says North Korean imports have come to a halt, RasonConTr­ans’ business is booming.

Since starting operations in 2015 its volumes have doubled each year and Minkevich is targeting three million tonnes next year, with a goal of five million in future.

It has between three and six ship movements a month at its pier – No. 3 in the port, which can take vessels up to 180m long – loading 50,000 tonnes of coal on each, most of them heading for Shanghai.

Over a hill at the back of Rajin town stands a sprawling disused oil refinery, originally built to process crude from the Soviet Union, in the days when Communist brotherhoo­d provided Pyongyang with cheap or free materials.

Locals blame sanctions for the closure but it has been inactive for years, its throttled chimneys stand- ing sentinel over an unfulfille­d economic dream.

Despite the looser economic rules applying in the area, the town is bedecked with propaganda slogans seen throughout the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, as the country is officially known.

Using North Korean labour – the women are particular­ly skilled crane operators, Minkevich notes, due to their care in performing repetitive tasks – costs at Rajin are 30-40% cheaper than at Russian ports.

 ?? — AFP ?? Silent structures: A Russian worker walking past cranes at the RasonConTr­ans coal port at Rajin harbour in the Rason Special Economic Zone.
— AFP Silent structures: A Russian worker walking past cranes at the RasonConTr­ans coal port at Rajin harbour in the Rason Special Economic Zone.

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