Los Angeles Times

Warning on N. Korea

- By Catharine Hamm Travel and food journalist Anthony Bourdain recently Sources: U.S. State Department; Associated Press

Just in case you were thinking of visiting North Korea, the State Department on May 16 issued a new travel warning that “strongly urges U.S. citizens to avoid all travel to North Korea due to the serious risk of arrest and long-term detention under North Korea’s system of law enforcemen­t.” The warning was last updated in November.

“At least 14 Americans have been detained … in the past 10 years,” the warning notes; some were independen­t travelers and others on an escorted trip.

Tour operators, State notes, have been unsuccessf­ul in freeing their clients.

If you ignore the warning, expect that your privacy won’t be honored, the State Department says.

The warning also enumerates some of the ways you can run afoul of authoritie­s, including “having unauthoriz­ed interactio­n with the local population” and “taking unauthoriz­ed photos.” Info: www.lat.ms/nkor eawarning

Kidnapping­s in Sulu

The State Department has reissued a warning on the Philippine­s, noting that U.S. citizens should not go, unless necessary, to the Sulu Archipelag­o. It cited violence and kidnapping­s in this update of an October warning.

The archipelag­o has a tumultuous history. In the 1400s the islanders were converted to Islam and were ruled by a sultan. Life revolves around the sea, from which fish, coral and other products are harvested. But there has also been illegal activity, including smuggling and piracy.

The warning also singles out western Mindinao, where, the State Department notes, “terrorist, insurgent, and criminal gangs regularly conduct kidnapping­s for ransom.”

Info: www.lat.ms/phil ippineswar­ning

Dining with POTUS

shared a meal with a special guest in Vietnam: President Obama.

Obama and Bourdain, host of CNN’s “Parts Unknown,” ate at Bun cha Huong Lien in Hanoi. Bourdain said he picked up the check, which came to $6. No word on whether he left a tip.

The event will be televised as part of the show in September.

Czech power f lex

Here’s an electrifyi­ng attraction: a Czech Republic power plant.

By this summer, 1 million people will have visited the Dlouhe Strane Hydro Plant, which opened in 1996 and which the country counts as one of its seven wonders.

If seeing two turbines in an undergroun­d facility isn’t your idea of fun, you can return from your trek to the Jeseniky mountains in the northeaste­rn part of the country by bike. The 10-mile trip is downhill.

To get to the plant, you can take a tour or you can hike up, where you’ll be rewarded with views of a 37acre artificial lake. The tour costs about $9.50.

To learn more, email info@k3-sport.cz.

Bugs soil Taj Mahal

Bugs are doing their business on the walls of India’s Taj Mahal, and removing the insect waste could damage the mosaics and other stonework.

The pests have turned a nearby polluted river into a love nest, breeding untold numbers of mosquito-like insects that leave black and green waste on the walls. It’s removed daily, but the process is disfigurin­g the structure. Air pollution is discolorin­g the outside marble as well.

The monument, in Agra, dates to the 1600s. As many as 4 million people visit it each year.

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