Gulf News

RUSSIAN DIPLOMATS LEAVE NORTH KOREA IN HAND-PUSHED RAIL CART

EMBASSY STAFF FIND UNIQUE WAY TO GET HOME

- BY ERIN CUNNINGHAM AND MIRIAM BERGER

By train, bus, and railroad handcart — that’s how Russian diplomats working in North Korea eventually made it home after a gruelling 34hour journey this week.

The employees of Russia’s embassy in Pyongyang left the country amid worsening conditions brought on by the government’s harsh coronaviru­s measures, including bans on everything from hard currency to foreign cargo.

According to Russia’s foreign ministry, which posted about the trip on Facebook Thursday, the departing group included eight embassy employees and their families. In two photograph­s accompanyi­ng the post, the embassy’s third secretary Vladislav Sorokin is shown pushing his young children and the family’s luggage down railway tracks on a handcart, which they used to reach the Russian border with North Korea.

Surreal journey

The Russian foreign ministry also published video footage of the surreal journey, which evoked cinematic depictions of bygone eras more than a border crossing in 2021.

“The most important part of the route was a pedestrian crossing to the Russian side. They needed to prepare a cart in advance, put it on rails, place the luggage, seat the children and set off,” the foreign ministry said, according to The Moscow Times.

North Korea, in a bid to shield its people and poor health system from the pandemic, has halted all train and air transport to neighbouri­ng countries and even prohibited imports from China, where the virus

was first discovered more than one year ago.

Its government claims that not a single person has contracted the virus since the outbreak began, a claim Korea watchers say is unlikely.

Regardless, there are few ways into and out of the country and even fewer foreigners who want to stay. A year ago, 13 Russian embassy employees were flown out of North Korea as the lockdown began. It was unclear why the diplomats who departed this week stayed in Pyongyang.

Even when North Korea’s trains are running properly, the infrastruc­ture is rickety. Ahn Byung-min, a South Korean railway expert, told The Washington Post in 2018 that he had not seen improvemen­ts in North Korea’s railroads over more than 40 visits since 2000. “I’d say it’s got worse,” he said. Some of his travel in the country reminded him of the runaway mine cart in the film Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, he said.

The United States and United Nations have put stringent sanctions on North Korea in response to its nuclear weapons programmes and human rights abuses. Critics, however, say that the sanctions have contribute­d to a dire humanitari­an situation inside the country while not leading to political change.

Earlier this month a group of Democratic lawmakers sent a letter to US president Joe Biden urging his administra­tion to conduct an analysis of US sanctions and reassess those limiting a country’s access to coronaviru­s vaccines and other Covid-19 related resources.

 ??  ??
 ?? AP ?? Image taken from a video
■ released by Russian foreign ministry’s Press Service.
AP Image taken from a video ■ released by Russian foreign ministry’s Press Service.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates