Arab Times

Can Pyongyang sanctions work?

‘Life goes on’

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PYONGYANG, North Korea, Feb 21, (AP): As the US Congress passed a new set of sanctions on North Korea this week, South Korea shut down the last symbol of inter-Korean economic cooperatio­n and the United Nations Security Council discussed its own measures to punish the North for what it claimed was its first H-bomb test and subsequent rocket launch, people in Pyongyang were literally dancing in the streets.

Few countries have endured sanctions as deep and longstandi­ng as the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. But somehow life goes on.

“Sanctions and pressure will never work on the DPRK, which has been exposed to all kinds of sanctions and blockade for decades,” its state-run Korean Central News Agency wrote in an editorial last week. “Despite the enemies’ ever-increasing threats and sanctions, the foundation of the Juche self-supporting economy of the DPRK has been further consolidat­ed and its nuclear deterrence for defending the sovereignt­y has also been bolstered on a daily basis.” Juche is the North’s policy of self-reliance.

Despite the bluster, previous sanctions against the North over its nuclear program have taken a toll.

Power outages, partly due to the impact of sanctions and partly because of the way the North allocates its scarce resources, are taken for granted. Hospitals, schools and homes are often almost as cold inside as the winter is outside.

Pollack

Kryptonite

To most internatio­nal investors, banks and even aid organizati­ons, North Korea is like kryptonite. It’s illegal in many cases for them to get involved, and even if they’re willing to accept the risks of dealing with an unpredicta­ble autocracy, their images could be damaged by being associated with the North.

And yet, North Koreans seem almost blase about sanctions, even as more appear to be headed their way. That may be because at least some of them still manage to get what they want.

Sanctions intended to deprive North Korea of luxury goods, for example, have been around for years. Even so, for anyone with the money — and there’s good reason to believe their numbers are growing — it’s easy to find a bottle of $600 Remy Martin cognac in Pyongyang, to buy an ornately wrapped gift bag filled with the best brand-name cosmetics from Japan, or to stock up on Pampers diapers and Heinz ketchup.

It’s not uncommon to see a young couple in a cafe in Pyongyang who would not look out of fashion in Seoul. Children dressed in brightly colored knitted hats and jackets are evidence that many parents have at least enough wherewitha­l to fulfill their desire to dote.

While far less upscale, the shelves at the handful of department stores in Pyongyang are wellstocke­d these days, though the selection of goods available at any given moment can vary widely. Many have grocery floors with fruit and vegetable corners, baked goods and fresh meat. Street stalls selling everything from apples to shrimp chips and cookies from Vietnam are commonplac­e.

Ignore

Life is tougher in the countrysid­e, and even in the capital the gap between the haves and the havenots is hard to ignore. Just a few blocks from those upscale shops with the cognac and the Miss Dior perfume, throngs of city residents stand in long lines to catch the cross-town trolleys or take advantage of the holiday discounts on fish and other foods. Public baths are popular because, when they are open, they are a sure-fire place to find hot water.

And while there has been dancing in the streets, it wasn’t exactly spontaneou­s.

It was part of the mass mobilizati­ons for one of the country’s biggest annual events, the birthday of leader Kim Jong Un’s late father, Kim Jong Il. The Day of the Shining Star, it is called, and it’s been virtually the only thing that the state-run media has been broadcasti­ng for days.

How does North Korea keep running even as much of the world tries to punish it?

Jonathan Pollack, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Brookings Institutio­n think tank, stressed in a recent op-ed that North Korea retains access to the internatio­nal economy through its links to China, which has allowed it to get the funds it needs to develop its nuclear, missile and space programs and to sustain the “core elites that underpin the Kim family’s claims to absolute power.”

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