San Francisco Chronicle

Seafood traders furious over North Korea crackdown

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BEIJING — Chinese businesspe­ople said Friday that Beijing’s decision to enforce U.N. sanctions on North Korean seafood imports would hobble the economy of an entire northeaste­rn city, sparking a rare public protest earlier this week after the surprise move suddenly choked off border trade.

Anger swept the city of Hunchun, home to hundreds of seafood processing plants, after Beijing began refusing entry Tuesday to trucks carrying tons of North Korean seafood. China announced Monday that it was cutting off imports of North Korean goods under U.N. sanctions imposed over the North’s nuclear and missile programs.

But given China’s often-lax history of sanctions enforcemen­t, seafood traders were shocked as trucks began lining up at the border with customs officials ordering them to return the seafood to the North. Dozens of people from seafood companies took to the streets Wednesday in a rare display of public anger in a country where the government normally cracks down immediatel­y on dissent.

“I have more than 30 workers, and I asked them to all go home or find other jobs,” said Song Min, who runs a seafood business in Hunchun, and who was not involved in the protests.

“But they cannot find other jobs,” she added in a telephone interview Friday. “Everyone here is in the seafood industry.”

Hunchun authoritie­s met with seafood traders one day after the protest, warning them not to make trouble or risk being detained, Yang Jian, a trader, said by phone. “People who attended the meeting said the authoritie­s were being very tough about this, no goods are allowed to get into China.”

China, which accounts for the overwhelmi­ng majority of North Korean trade, has long been reluctant to push leader Kim Jong Un’s regime too hard economical­ly, fearing it could collapse. But Beijing is increasing­ly frustrated with Pyongyang, and supported a U.N. Security Council ban on Aug. 5 on key trade goods.

The Chinese customs agency said Monday it would stop processing imports of North Korean coal, iron and lead ores and fish at midnight on Sept. 5.

But less than a day later, Chinese customs officials were stopping trucks full of seafood brought from North Korea.

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