Great Confiscation Updates: North Korea Bans All Foreigners
[Update: The Daily NK thinks the ban is “not news.”]
So how worried is North Korea about the potential for more unrest and rioting? As of yesterday, it will ban all foreigners from entering the country until at least February to make sure there won’t be any foreign witnesses to any demonstrations or massacres.
North Korea reportedly plans to ban foreigners from the country from Sunday until early February, apparently to allow unrest caused by this month’s shock currency reform to die down.
Ju Sang-song, the minister of People’s Security, is in China, according to the North’s Korean Central News Agency, though it gave no reason for his visit. The trip by the North’s top internal security official may aim to seek cooperation from Beijing in preventing a mass exodus of North Korean middle class citizens angry over the devaluation of their savings. [Chosun Ilbo]
Wow. They must be fairly concerned; after all, the North tends not to let in foreigners unless they’re bringing hard currency. Meanwhile, in Chongjin, there’s another report of a public execution:
The Seoul-based aid group Good Friends said in a newsletter Tuesday that authorities publicly executed a citizen in the northeastern city of Chongjin on Dec. 6 after he incinerated a pile of old bills at home over concern he could be investigated over how he amassed the money. [AP]
In times like these, it’s noteworthy that , or at least were, when people had money. What I can’t figure out is why the regime is allowing this, especially now. Maybe someone can explain to me how the North Korean government expects to control these things, but it seems exceptionally dangerous for this regime to allow people to have a way of communicating between different cities and regions if unrest breaks out. Frankly, I see this as a good thing that won’t last.
Dec. 7 harbinger to this story: the DPRK requested that the PRC halt to all tourism from China and get its remaining tourists out in three days. Obviously the Chinese were not thrilled by this, and may not be surprised by the latest measures. In spite of a few awkward attempts to win over Chinese public opinion (appropriating a classical Chinese opera theme for a new film, etc.), North Korea is consistently losing defenders inside of China. Since many readers of this blog appear to view China as the logical launching pad for the Great North Korean Revolt, I’ll leave you to draw the inferences.
Coming on the heels of that unforgettable Wen Jiabao-Kim Jong Il embrace and pledges of expanded cooperation on tourism, the expulsion of Chinese tourists (and now it seems most other kinds of tourists) indicates North Korean intransigence toward China specifically. Once again the North Koreans have managed to have succeeded in pushing China and the United States ever closer together in angry mystification at what the hell is going on in the halls of power in Pyongyang.