North Korea plans to launch major tourism site next year: What to see in the country?

NKOREA-POLITICS
This picture taken on July 16, 2024 and released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) via KNS on July 18 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (C) attending a conference held at the Wonsan Kalma coast tourist area, which is currently under construction in North Korea's Gangwon Province. Photo: AFP

Seoul: North Korean leader Kim Jong Un visited a major tourism site being constructed on the country's eastern coast and discussed steps to open the zone by next year, state media reported Thursday. However, the government still blocks visits by most foreign tourists. The Wonsan-Kalma zone is one of Kim's most talked-about tourism projects. For years North Korea has been building luxury hotels and recreational facilities there to create a key attraction for international visitors. However, the project reportedly suffered setbacks due to shortages of construction materials due to toughened UN sanctions and COVID-19 restrictions. Kim toured the Wonsan-Kalma zone with top deputies on Tuesday and discussed preparations for its opening by May 2025 as decided by a ruling party meeting in January, according to the official Korean Central News Agency.

A coastal wonderland to be known to the world as the best tourist resort (North Korea) would be successfully built, Kim was quoted as saying by KCNA. It cited Kim as saying construction has entered its final stages. North Korea has been slowly easing its harsh pandemic-era curbs and entry restrictions as part of its efforts to revive its economy. But it still hasn't reopened its borders to foreign tourists, except for a relatively small number of Russians who visited earlier this year as ties boomed between the two countries. A return of Chinese travellers would likely provide a much bigger source of revenue as they represented about 90 per cent of international tourists visiting North Korea before the pandemic.

In 2019, a record 300,000 foreign tourists visited North Korea, earning the country between USD 90 million and USD 150 million, experts say. The UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation said Wednesday its director-general visited North Korea from July 13 to 16, in the first trip by a UN principal since 2019. It said Director-General Qu Dongyu's trip was meant to strengthen its partnership with North Korea and address food security and nutrition challenges in the country. It wasn't immediately clear when North Korea would allow the return of international staff of UN agencies. North Korea's stringent pandemic curbs included the departure of diplomats and foreign nationals.  

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