Sports and Tourism
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This page includes:
- Hyundai activities in DPRK which include tourism
- ROK tourism which has implications for DPRK
- Aspects of N-S relations (such as the October 2001 military talks) which relate principally to tourism
- Sports events (eg World Cup; Asian Games; Olympics)
Speaking of which......
The Game of their lives
[world cup 1966]
Fascinating information about the 1996 DPRK World Cup team and the British film about it to be released in April 2002
Be warned that this takes some time to load
This video is now available in the Victoria University Library, (callmark Vis 4199).
South Korea has spirit of 1966
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DECEMBER 2010
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Chernobyl: now open to tourists• Ukraine announces official tours of 1986 nuclear disaster site
• 2015 completion date of new sarcophagus for leaking reactor
Share2026 Peter Walker guardian.co.uk, Monday 13 December 2010 17.31 GMT Article history
Workers remove radioactive debris from third reactor's roof at Chernobyl nuclear power plant in 1986. Photograph: Reuters
Already been to North Korea? Hiking in Afghanistan a little bit too last year? Fear not. Tourism has a new frontier: the site of the world's biggest civilian nuclear disaster.
From next year the heavily contaminated area around the Chernobyl power plant will be officially open to tourists with an interest in post-apocalyptic vistas, late-period Soviet history, or both.
[Image]
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NK holds tour info session in China
North Korea is currently making a rare road show in China’s northeastern province to lure Chinese tourists to the reclusive (sic) country, according to Yonhap News Agency.
Citing government officials of the Liaoning Province, Yonhap said a North Korean tourism delegation arrived in the province Monday, touring the cities including Dandong, Dalian and Shenyang, to promote the North’s tourism resources.
The rare tourism public relations is headed by Choi Chung-ho, tourism chief of the North Pyongan province of North Korea, it said.
North Korea also held a similar promotional event in September in Dalian.
North Korea’s rare enthusiastic tourism offense is seen to reflect its drive to secure more foreign currency in the aftermath of the termination of the Mount Geumgang tour program run by the South, a major foreign cash source previously.
[Media] [Cliché]
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Yeonpyeong crisis takes toll on tourism
By Lee Hyo-sik
An increasing number of foreign tourists are canceling their trips to South Korea, following last week’s military skirmish between the two Koreas, officials from tour agencies said.
Due to safety concerns, groups of Japanese students who had initially planned to come here for a field trip have decided to go somewhere else.
According to the domestic travel industry Monday, one high school in Japan’s Kumamoto Prefecture recently decided to scrap a field trip planned on Dec. 2-6, following North Korea’s sudden artillery attack on Yeonpyeong Island and the continued military confrontation. Other schools have and will likely follow suit.
[Dilemma]
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NOVEMBER 2010
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DPRK Sends Notice to S. Korea for Talks of Resuming Tour
Pyongyang, November 18 (KCNA) -- The General Guidance Bureau for the Development of Scenic Spots of the DPRK Thursday sent a notice to the Ministry of Unification of south Korea, urging it again to hold the working talks between the authorities of the north and the south for discussing the issue of resuming the tour.
Expressing great regret at the insincere notice sent by the south side in which it groundlessly took issue with the north side's measures for confiscating and freezing real estates of the south side and raised them as prerequisites for opening the talks, after delaying for nearly 50 days the reply to the notice proposing the talks for resuming the tour sent by the latter to the former three times, talking about "examination" and "sending a notice later," the notice said that this attitude of the south side is, in fact, little short of rejecting the talks as commented by media.
It is the stand of the north side to discuss and settle all the matters concerning the measures for confiscating and freezing real estates as required by the south side, the notice held, urging it to stop insisting on its absurd pretexts any longer but come out for the above-said talks as soon as possible.
It suggested those authorities concerned to come out and discuss the matters concerning the opening of the above-said talks while the north-south Red Cross talks will be under way after their opening on November 25.
[Overtures]
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Telephone Notice to Ministry of Unification of south Korea
Pyongyang, November 11 (KCNA) -- The General Guidance Bureau for the Development of Scenic Sports Thursday sent a telephone notice to the Ministry of Unification of south Korea urging it to urgently open the north-south authorities working talks on the resumption of tour.
The notice expressed regret over the fact that the DPRK side proposed to have talks on the resumption of tour two times on October 2 and 14, but the south side has not sent any reply to it up to this date though tens of days have passed since then, talking about "examination" and "the sending of a notice later".
It again proposed to have the above-said talks in Kaesong on November 19 as it is urgently needed for the normalization of the reunion of separated families and relatives.
If those talks are opened, it will create an atmosphere favorable for the inter-Korean Red Cross talks, too, slated to take place on Nov. 25.
[Overtures]
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OCTOBER 2010
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NKorea appeals age case ban from gymnastics worlds
The Associated Press
Wednesday, October 13, 2010; 8:50 AM
LAUSANNE, Switzerland -- North Korea's gymnastics federation has appealed against a ban on its athletes competing at the world championships which open Saturday, imposed because one team member falsified her age.
The International Gymnastics Federation says its appeal tribunal will rule within the required five-day limit after the challenge was filed on Monday.
The FIG's 30-day suspension of North Korea and gymnast Hong Su Jong took effect last week after it noted that Hong entered the worlds in Rotterdam using the third different birth date of her career.
Hong listed her birth year as 1989, though she competed at the 2004 Athens Olympics using 1985.
She won a silver medal on vault at the 2007 worlds using 1986.
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Seoul hesitant on Mt. Geumgang talks
By Kim Se-jeong
South Korea is willing to accept Pyongyang’s request to meet to discuss the resumption of cross-border tours, but it isn’t sure whether the proposed date is appropriate.
[SK NK policy]
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S. Korea to face NK in Asian Games football match
South Korean footballers will compete against North Korean rivals in the 2010 Asian Games, officials here said Thursday.
In a lottery held at a hotel in Guangzhou, China, earlier in the day, South Korea was picked to join Group C along with the communist state, Jordan and Palestine.
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NKorea asks South for talks on restarting tours
By KWANG-TAE KIM
The Associated Press
Saturday, October 2, 2010; 7:55 AM
SEOUL, South Korea -- North Korea asked for talks with South Korea on resuming cross-border tourist trips to a resort inside the North, state media said Saturday, a day after the rivals agreed to hold reunions for families separated by the Korean War.
The two Koreas started the tours to the North's scenic Diamond Mountain resort more than a decade ago as part of reconciliation efforts. South Korea halted them in 2008 following the shooting death of a South Korean tourist by a North Korean soldier near the resort.
North Korea has since demanded that Seoul resume the tours, which provided a much-needed influx of revenue to the impoverished North. South Korea has refused to restart them until its demands for a joint investigation into the shooting are carried out and its tourists' safety guaranteed.
[Overtures] [SK NK policy]
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NKorean gymnast investigated for 3 birth dates
The Associated Press
Saturday, October 2, 2010; 9:41 AM
LAUSANNE, Switzerland -- International gymnastics officials are investigating another case of possible age falsification, this time of a North Korean gymnast who listed three different birth dates.
North Korea and Hong Su Jong will be given a chance to explain the discrepancies at a hearing and in written statements, the International Gymnastics Federation said Saturday.
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SEPTEMBER 2010
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Itinerary - Mass Games Last Chance Tour
From Koryo Tours, Beijing
Oct 23 - Oct 26
4 days, 3 nights in the DPRK
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No Resumption of Tours to Mt. Kumgang, Gov't Pledges
A key South Korean government official on Sunday insisted that fresh reunion of families separated by the Korean War do not mean that South Korea will resume package tours to the North's Mt. Kumgang resort, which were a source of much-needed cash for the North Korean regime.
[SK NK policy]
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NK seeking to resume tourism project
By Kim Se-jeong
North Korea appears to be seeking to resume the tours by South Koreans to Mt. Geumgang, which have been suspended since July 2008 following the fatal shooting of a tourist, through the ongoing Red Cross talks, observers here said Friday.
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Seoul Says No to Discussing Resumption of Mt. Kumgang Tours
Seoul on Thursday declined a proposal from North Korea to discuss a resumption of package tours to Mt. Kumgang on the agenda of Red Cross talks scheduled on Friday in Kaesong. The purpose of the meeting is to discuss fresh reunions of families separated by the Korean War.
[Overtures] [SK NK policy]
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DPRK Advances to Semifinals in U-17 Women's World Cup
Pyongyang, September 17 (KCNA) -- The DPRK women's football team defeated its German rival 1:0 at the quarterfinals of the 2010 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup, qualifying to advance to semifinals.
The DPRK team beat its Chilean rival 3:0 and its Trinidad and Tobago rival 1:0 in the league match of group A, thus placing second to advance to quarterfinals.
A long distance ball strongly kicked by Kim Kum Jong at around the 44th minute in the first half was netted to the dismay of the German goal-keeper.
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British soccer team visits North Korea
Players from Britain's Middlesbrough Ladies football team wait to get on buses after their arrival at Pyongyang airport, in Pyongyang, North Korea, Saturday, Sept. 18, 2010. The team arrived in North Korea for a five-day visit which will include two friendly matches against North Korean teams. (AP Photo/APTN) (AP) Network NewsX Profile
The Associated Press
Saturday, September 18, 2010; 10:20 AM
PYONGYANG, North Korea -- A British women's soccer team with a historic connection to North Korea landed Saturday in Pyongyang on a groundbreaking trip to the communist nation.
Middlesbrough Ladies is the first soccer team from Britain to visit the Asian nation, building on a tie the town has had with North Korea since the 1966 World Cup.
North Korean officials welcomed the group of 14 players and three coaches with big smiles at the airport, footage from TV news agency APTN in Pyongyang showed.
Dressed in red tracksuits, the players practiced their Korean by saying "kimchi!", a traditional Korean dish, as they posed for photos. Players wore T-shirts showing two jerseys representing their countries with the words "Friendship Football" emblazoned on the front.
"Absolutely friendship in football," Middlesbrough Ladies team manager Marrie Wieczorek told APTN. "The link with Middlesbrough and North Korea from the World Cup in '66 is pretty legendary in Middlesbrough."
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2 Koreas advance to semifinals at U-17 Women's World Cup
Korea Friday beat Nigeria 6-5 at the FIFA Under-17 Women's World Cup, lifting the country to the U-17 semifinals for the first time.
In the quarterfinal match at Manny Ramjohn Stadium in Marabella, Trinidad and Tobago, Korea staged a dramatic come-from-behind victory against Nigeria, according to Yonhap News Agency.
Defending champion North Korea, meanwhile, edged Germany 1-0 to advance to the semifinals on the other side of the bracket. North Koreans will take on the winner of Ireland-Japan.
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DPRK Middlesbrough
Friendship Football Tour
18-22 September 2010
In 2000 the UK established diplomatic relations with the DPRK (North Korea). This
year, Koryo Tours and CLSA, with the support of the British Embassy in Pyongyang,
are marking the 10th anniversary by inviting Middlesbrough FC Ladies on a tour of
Pyongyang for the game of their lives, giving the Korean people something magical
to remember.
Middlesbrough and the DPRK (North Korea)
In 1966 the DPRK competed in the World Cup in England and caused the greatest shock
in World Cup history by eliminating the Italian team. They played most of their games in
Middlesbrough and because of their gutsy performance and friendly attitude the locals
adopted the team as their ‘home side’ and treated them like heroes - so much so that
over 2,000 Middlesbrough fans followed the Koreans to their next match on the opposite
side of the country in Liverpool.
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S. Korea to share games with North if chosen to host 2022 World Cup
Han Sung-joo
By Yoon Chul
The 2002 Korea-Japan World Cup was deemed a success, enthralling the people and football supporters alike.
More than one million people gathered at venues such as Seoul Plaza to watch the global sports gala on huge outdoor screens.
World Cup fever became the talk of the town amid the strong passion, and has now prompted people to hope to see the event being held once again in Korea.
Gearing up to realize this dream, Seoul is bidding for the 2022 World Cup. Han Sung-joo, chairman of the bidding committee, is now the standard bearer to that end, and explained why Korea should be the last man standing.
“We held half of the World Cup in 2002,” Han said in an interview with The Korea Times.
“The 2022 Korea World Cup will be devoted to peace in Asia and the rest of the world. To further this end, we hope to hold some games in North Korea,” he said.
“We need to get the agreement of FIFA and North Korea, but as the former is expected to support the move and North Korean leader Kim Jong-il favors the World Cup, our plan could be realized,” said Han who had served as foreign minister and Korean ambassador to the United States. He is now teaching at Korea University.
[Joint-Korean]
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Middlesbrough soccer team to tour North Korea
The Associated Press
Monday, September 13, 2010; 11:04 AM
MIDDLESBROUGH, England -- Middlesbrough Ladies will become the first British soccer team to visit North Korea, strengthening the town's long-standing relationship with the isolated Asian country that dates back 44 years.
Fourteen players and three coaches, led by manager Marrie Wieczorek, will fly in to Pyongyang on Saturday for a four-night stay in the North Korean capital. The team will play two matches and hold coaching clinics for children.
The origins of the links between North Korea and the town in northeast England date to the World Cup in 1966, when Middlesbrough hosted the country's three group games. The players received a warm welcome from the locals, who adopted North Korea as their second team.
Surviving members of the 1966 squad, who returned to Britain to visit Middlesbrough in October 2002, will meet the British women's team during the tour, which was arranged following an invitation by the British Embassy in Pyongyang.
"I know North Korea is shrouded in mystery for many people in the U.K., but I get the impression that the Koreans will be wonderful hosts," said Wieczorek, a former England national player. "The trip is very much about friendship and is evidence of football's power to break down cultural barriers."
North Korea, a country with little contact with the outside world, played in the World Cup in South Africa, losing all three games in a tough group that also included Brazil, Portugal and Ivory Coast.
It was the country's second appearance on soccer's biggest stage. In 1966, the Koreans caused one of the biggest upsets in World Cup history by beating Italy 1-0 to reach the quarterfinals.
The scorer of that winning goal, Pak Do Ik, will be one of the former players receiving Middlesbrough Ladies, who fly out on Thursday to Beijing - via Moscow - before completing the journey to Pyongyang two days later.
"Everyone is so excited about the trip," Wieczorek said. "It's such a fantastic opportunity for all of us to visit a country that we could never have imagined getting to see."
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AUGUST 2010
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FIFA Says North Korean Players Did Not Face Retribution for World Cup Performance
By CHOE SANG-HUN
SEOUL — FIFA, the governing body of soccer, said on Wednesday that it has dismissed allegations that North Korea’s coach and players were punished for losing all three of their games at this year’s World Cup in South Africa.
In a letter, North Korea’s national soccer association “assures FIFA that Mr. Kim Jong-hun, head coach of the national team, and all the other members of the national team are training as usual and that the members of the team will soon take part in the 16th Asian Games,” FIFA said in a statement posted on its Web site.
The statement continued: “The association also indicates that there were no sanctions to the coach and that the reports on this matter were baseless. With all of the information at hand, and having checked all of its sources, FIFA has decided to close the matter.”
[Disinformation] [Softwar] [Media]
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N.Korean Friendly with India to Reveal Football Coach's Fate
Kim Jong-hun The North Korean national football team is preparing for its first international friendly since the World Cup in South Africa, where it suffered a humiliating 0-7 defeat at the hands of Portugal.
The friendly match against India in Delhi on Sept. 14 is expected to show whether team manager Kim Jong-hun has been given a second chance or was really sent to a labor camp, as rumor said.
Some media reports said the coach and players were subjected to a marathon self-criticism session after series of defeats in the tournament and the coach sentenced to hard labor, but others said Kim and the team have resumed training.
[Spin] [Media]
- N. KOREA TAKES CHINESE DIPLOMATS ON MT. KUMGANG TOUR
Chosun Ilbo ( Seoul, 2010/08/05) reported that the DPRK apparently offered a tour to the Mt. Kumgang resort to some 20 PRC embassy staff last month but did not tell Hyundai Asan. An ROK Unification Ministry official said this was "a clear violation" of Hyundai's operating rights. "When our tourism operations ran smoothly, North Korea always informed us when they were bringing guests into Mt. Kumgang," a Hyundai Asan staffer said. "It's objectionable that they offered the tour without notifying us."
[China NK] [SK NK policy] [Dilemma]
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Officials paint rosy picture of cross-strait tourism
2010/08/13 21:35:53
Taipei, Aug. 13 (CNA) A visiting Chinese tourism official said Friday that the annual number of Chinese tourists to Taiwan is expected to hit 3 million soon and urged the two sides to mak
[Straits]
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FIFA Opens Investigation Over Reports North Korea Abused Players
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: August 11, 2010
SINGAPORE — The president of FIFA, Sepp Blatter, said Wednesday that soccer’s world governing body had opened an inquiry into allegations that North Korea might have mistreated players and coaches after the team lost all three of its World Cup matches.
Blatter said FIFA had sent a letter to the North Korean football federation Tuesday, seeking information about the allegations of mistreatment and the recent election of a new federation president.
“It’s a kind of investigation to tell us about the election of a new president, and if it is true, the allegations made by the media that the coach and some players have been condemned or punished,” he said. “The first step is the federation, and we’ll see what the answer will be.”
Radio Free Asia reported last month that North Korean officials had summoned the national team to a meeting to criticize it for its losses at the World Cup. The report said players had then been ordered to reprimand coach Kim Jong Hun.
The head of the Asian Football Confederation, Mohammad bin Hammam, said Wednesday that he had spoken with four players last month, but that they had not reported mistreatment.
[Disinformation]
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JULY 2010
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China, Russia, North Korea tourist route to operate
15:48, July 06, 2010
A cross-border tourist route between China, Russia and North Korea will be put into operation before China's National Day on Oct. 1, according to the Hunchun Municipal Tourism Bureau.
The route has currently taken shape and stretches from Hunchun, Jilin province, Vladivostok and Khasansky in Russia, to Tumangang and Rason in North Korea.
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Ping-Pong Diplomacy For China, Soccer For North Korea?
July 5, 2010 - 5:24 amShare
Ray TsuchiyamaBio | Email
Ray Tsuchiyama heads Strategic Sales and Operations, and was the head of the Asia office for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Based on my two Forbes blog posts on China and soccer, I was invited to contribute to a New York Times editor’s forum on this same topic, along with several distinguished experts. Some of the comments raised the intriguing subject of the unexpected World Cup entry by North Korea's soccer team (the squad nickname is Chollima – a mythical winged horse).
With a handful of players with international league experience (Cha Jong-Hyok plays for Swiss FC Wil in Europe, and three others are on Japanese J-League and Russian teams), the team fell short in the group stage of the World Cup finals but played some brilliant soccer along the way — and just may have created an opportunity for history.
Indeed, soccer is a leading sport in North Korea: The national league’s leading teams include Pyongyang City, Amrokgang, and Sobaeksu; however, without a sports page on the main newspaper Rodong Sinmun and no Internet, North Koreans must discuss rankings at the dinner table or on factory tea-breaks. Six North Korean team members are in FC April 25, the official North Korean Army team. (April 25th is Military Foundation Day, a national holiday marking the day in 1932 on which North Koreans started guerrilla war against the Japanese – a name difficult to explain if they played in a friendly match against a Japanese team).
The global media has focused a lot of attention on striker Jong Tae-Se, a fascinating blend of Korean identity, youth, and soccer talent. Jong was born and raised in Nagoya, Japan. His father was a South Korean citizen living in Japan; his mother is pro-North Korea. On Japanese TV I watched this well-mannered, polite and loving son as he sipped tea with his mother, who had him educated in a pro-North Korean school and a North Korea-affiliated university with a Tokyo campus.
[Nationalism]
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Jong Tae-se to join German soccer team
North Korean World Cup soccer team’s star, Jong Tae-se, will join Germany’s Bochum, Yonhap news agency said citing the Japanese media.
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N. Korea's World Cup squad returns home from South Africa: reports
By Sam Kim
SEOUL, June 30 (Yonhap) -- Crestfallen after three straight losses in their first World Cup appearance in 44 years, North Korea's players have returned home, brightening up at the sight of their families welcoming them with flowers and warm words, news reports said Wednesday.
The North's official Korean Central News Agency and a pro-Pyongyang newspaper in Tokyo said that the players, including striker Jong Tae-se, arrived in the North Korean capital on Tuesday and were greeted by a group of families and football officials.
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JUNE 2010
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North Korea
North Korea is the most mysterious of all the teams to compete in the 2010 World Cup. As in soccer, so it is in geopolitics. Before the tournament started, no one outside North Korea knew what to expect of the team. There is little reliable intelligence on what goes on inside the country whether it’s soccer or anything else. The secretive communist state keeps its doors closed tight and maintains total control of news media. Paid actors, not real North Korean fans, have made up the team's audience in South Africa. The one reliable way to gauge the North is to expect the unexpected: last time the DPRK participated in the World Cup -- in 1966 -- it surprised everyone by blasting through to the quarterfinals.
The first match in 2010, against Brazil, exemplified North Korea's geopolitical strategy and tactics. Few would have guessed that North Korea was capable of competing with Brazil, the team that has won the most World Cup championships. But for decades the same combination of uncompromising loyalty to the group and the element of surprise have enabled Pyongyang to maintain power despite being surrounded by the likes of greater powers -- the United States, Russia, Japan, China and South Korea.
This is not to exaggerate North Korea's strengths -- its economy is a shambles, and despite its military's size, its capabilities are limited. Fear of defeat by foreign competition is why the North rarely ventures abroad, earning the nickname the "Hermit Kingdom." Pyongyang knows that public humiliation could weaken the group morale that is essential for the regime to survive. But as with its array of missile tests, it is at least able to use the team's participation on the global stage as domestic propaganda.
[media]
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Let's Hope the N.Korean Team Perform Better in Their Last Match
North Korea is now said to be in shock from the 7-0 rout of its national football team by Portugal in the World Cup. It is not easy for North Koreans, who have lived in a bubble of propaganda throughout their lives, to accept the reality of the live TV broadcast of the match on Monday. That the North Korean announcer and commentator were speechless when the score surpassed 4-0 indicates how shocking the defeat was.
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North Korea coach expects warm welcome back home
By MARK WALSH
The Associated Press
Thursday, June 24, 2010; 12:58 PM
NELSPRUIT, South Africa -- Kim Jong Hun's North Korean players have fallen far short of emulating their illustrious countrymen who reached the 1966 World Cup quarterfinals.
Still, the coach expects a warm welcome at home.
After opening with a gritty 2-1 loss to five-time champion Brazil, the North Koreans gave up six second-half goals in a 7-0 thrashing by Portugal, prompting suggestions the squad would face scorn when it returns to Pyongyang.
Ahead of their last match at South Africa 2010 against Ivory Coast on Friday, coach Kim had no such concerns.
"We were not able to go on to the next round, so both my staff and my players didn't meet the expectations of my countrymen," Kim said. "However, even though we didn't play too well, our people will welcome us with open arms."
Ivory Coast needs to score plenty of goals to have any chance of reaching the second round. But Kim predicts his players will be leaving the tournament with their heads high.
"We did concede a lot of goals (against Portugal), but nevertheless we are going to fight hard in our next game, and it's a way to avenge ourselves," Kim said. "We will try to restore our honor and do our best in the game."
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N.Korea Opens Mt. Kumgang to Int'l Tourists
North Korea has decided to open the Mt. Kumgang resort to tourists from Western countries after South Korea suspended lucrative tours to the resort over the shooting of a tourist there in 2008. The first tour group is expected on June 29.
Koryo Tours, a travel agency in Beijing specializing in North Korea, is selling package tours to Mt. Kumgang, it emerged Wednesday.
The agency, which is headed by Brit Nicholas Bonner, arranges tours for Western visitors in collaboration with the Korea International Travel Company in the North.
According to its website, Koryo sold an eight-day summer holiday package tour to Pyongyang, Wonsan and Mt. Kumgang from June 29 to July 6. Bookings have already closed.
How many foreigners are participating in the group tour is not known. Tourists go to the Byolkumgang area on the northeastern outskirts of Mt. Kumgang on July 2, the fourth day, where they stay overnight at a hotel near Lake Sijung. Byolkumgang was not included in South Korean operator Hyundai Asan's package tour to Mt. Kumgang.
But Koryo includes the Oekumgang area, which was developed by Hyundai Asan, in an 11-day package tour program from Aug. 7 to 17.
An Asan executive said, "Since North Korea is a co-operator of package tours to Mt. Kumgang, you can't call this a violation of the contract." But he added the company is trying to find out what's going on from staff still staying there.
Hyundai Asan's properties in the Mt. Kumgang resort area were frozen by the North. Only 14 staff are still there to take care of the facilities.
[SK NK policy]
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Kim Jong-il Blamed for N.Korea's Foolish World Cup Tactics
After the complete rout of North Korea by Portugal on Monday in their second match of the World Cup against Portugal, some observers have seized on the opportunity to blame North Korean leader Kim Jong-il personally.
[Media] [Personalisation] [Kim Jong Il]
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Fans cheer on N.Korea at Bongeun Temple
The World Cup has become an opportunity for fans of both countries to show support for both teams
» South Korean football fans cheer on the North Korea national football team with a huge Unification flag under which is written “We are One,” at Bongeun Temple in Seoul’s Samseong neighborhood, June 21.
The results of the match were one-sided in the end, but the collective cheering gave fans reason for joy.
The area in front of Bongeun Temple in Seoul’s Samseong neighborhood was filled with people cheering on the North Korean national football team by saying, “Oh, Peace Korea!” on Monday night. The cheer was created by South Koreans, since “peace” sounds like pilseung, certain victory. They let cheered the North Korean players’ every move and flew a flag with a picture of a united Korean peninsula printed upon it.
“I am so sorry to see North Korea was defeated by Portugal, but North Korea did very well in the first half,” said Kim Min-kyoo, 28, who is in his senior year at Presbyterian College and Theological Seminary. Kim smiled for a moment before saying, “As you can see many, South Koreans are cheering on North Korea, which sends an important message in terms of inter-Korean relations.”
Although North Korea ended the match against Portugal with a 0-7 loss, around 1000 people did not leave the temple and stayed to cheer on North Korea.
[Joint Korean]
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North Koreans not discouraged about World Cup loss
The Associated Press
Tuesday, June 22, 2010; 10:19 AM
PYONGYANG, North Korea -- Soccer players in North Korea have shrugged off their country's 7-0 loss to Portugal at the World Cup.
Players with the local Kigwancha team watched the match live on state television Monday night, but didn't seem discouraged by the lopsided loss. The 7-0 rout was the most one-sided World Cup match since Germany beat Saudi Arabia 8-0 at the 2002 tournament in South Korea and Japan.
The loss ended the North Koreans' hopes of advancing to the round of 16.
"As a fellow football player I am disappointed and embarrassed at the team having lost so many goals," Kigwancha winger Son Chung Il said Tuesday during training at a local stadium, according to video footage from TV news agency APTN in Pyongyang.
Son, however, said he was not discouraged.
"We'll concentrate our efforts to develop our skills and, if we have another chance to play Portugal in future, we'll try to beat them," he said.
Coach Kim Sang Chol wasn't upset by the loss, either.
"The Korean team is in the World Cup for the first time after 44 years away," he said. "In spite of losing the game, our team has made a good impression to football fans at home."
This is North Korea's first trip to the World Cup since 1966, when it stunned Italy 1-0 to become the first Asian nation to reach the quarterfinals. North Korea then took a 3-0 lead on Portugal before the Portuguese rallied for a 5-3 victory.
North Korean state television aired live coverage of Monday's entire match during prime time, a first for a North Korean football game taking place abroad.
North Korea will play its final World Cup game Friday against the Ivory Coast.
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Hermit Country Catches World Cup Fever
The streets of Pyongyang are empty by 9 p.m. these days because everyone heads home early to watch pirate World Cup broadcasts on state-run broadcaster KCNA. The Choson Sinbo, a North Korean mouthpiece in Japan, said "subways and buses run almost empty" when World Cup matches are broadcast.
Jo Chung-song, a manager at a clothing factory in Pyongyang, told the paper, "We recently started wrapping up our production lines at 8 p.m., unlike other times when they run until late, because workers wanted to leave before the World Cup matches are broadcast."
The North Korean media started churning out special reports when the team put up an unexpectedly good fight against top-ranked Brazil in the first match. KCNA had a report on Thursday entitled "Rising Expectations" covering nationwide support for the team, and the Choson Sinbo even sent a reporter to South Africa.
North Korean leader Kim Jong-il is said to have a passion for soccer. Moon Ki-nam, the former North Korean team manager who defected to South Korea in 2003, said, "Kim Jong-il has played football since he was a kid and loves the sport. The national football team was envied by other athletes because it was always well-equipped." Moon is presently an advisor to the Ulsan University soccer team.
One South Korean intelligence official said, "Kim Jong-il has been spotted less frequently out in the field since the World Cup started, probably because he watches major World Cup matches until dawn via satellite."
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N.Korea Broadcasts 7-0 Rout by Portugal
Live North Korea broadcast live the country's devastating rout at the hands of Portugal in the World Cup on Monday. A commentator from [North] Korean Central TV expressed disappointment when Portugal scored its first goal 29 minutes into the first half, saying, "We should have been more aware of the forwards coming from the second line." But he was hopeful of the equalizer that never came, adding, "If we play our own style of game, we will be able to score."
It was not to be. Portugal fairly pounded the North Korean goal in the second half to finish 7-0, leaving the North Korean commentator speechless. It was the first time North Korea ever broadcasted a World Cup match live.
A South Korean government official said, "It seems that the North decided to make this very unusual decision to broadcast a World Cup game live as many people began taking interest after North Korea's brave performance against the world No. 1 Brazil on June 16."
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World Cup 2010: Why North Korea are in a league of their own
They are the lowest-ranked team in the World Cup, but the squad are well-drilled – most of them are from the Korean People's army
Jonathan Watts guardian.co.uk, Sunday 20 June 2010 21.00 BST Article history
Striker Jong Tae-Se cries as the North Korean national anthem is played. Photograph: Carl Recine/Action Images
It was 17 hours after North Korea bravely lost to the mighty Brazil last week before the people back home were allowed to watch the match on the country's only TV channel. While footage showed residents in the capital, Pyongyang, cheering Ji Yun-nam's late goal, North Korea's official news agency offered a predictably strait-laced description of the game: "From the outset of the match the two teams fought a seesaw battle," it reported. "The DPRK [Democratic People's Republic of Korea] footballers created good shooting chances, not losing their confidence even after losing two goals."
North Korea is the lowest-ranked team to qualify for this year's tournament, and emotions in the stadium were running high even before the match, with the team's best player, Jong Tae-Se, breaking down in tears during the national anthem. This is, apparently, a bit of a habit for Jong who, despite being born in Japan and playing club football there, has demonstrated his devotion to the grandfatherland by spurning far more lucrative opportunities to represent World Cup rivals Japan or South Korea.
[Media]
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N.Korea to Earn $10 Million for World Cup
North Korea will receive at least US$10 million from FIFA for fielding its national team in the World Cup. The figure amounts to three month's wages for the over 43,000 North Koreans working in the joint Kaesong Industrial Complex.
FIFA gives the 32 teams playing in the World Cup $1 million each for preparation costs. After playing three matches in the first round, each team is given an additional $8 million no matter if it advances to the next round or not. From this year, every club that has a player in the World Cup receives $1,600 per day, per player. The paid period begins two weeks before the opening of the tournament and ends a day after the final match of each contending team.
[Double standards]
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Kim Jong-il 'Instructs Footballers by Invisible Phone'
North Korean leader Kim Jong-il "gives regular tactical advice during matches using mobile phones that are not visible to the naked eye," the team's manager Kim Jong-hun told ESPN Thursday. The coach dutifully told the sports channel that Kim Jong-il developed the James-Bond technology himself.
In 2004, the North Korean leader claimed to have invented the hamburger, which would make the invisible cell phone his latest invention, ABC quipped.
[Media]
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N.Korean Footballers Charm Fans in S.Africa
The 23-member North Korean soccer squad is charming South Africans with their humble yet personable demeanor at the World Cup. Breaking stereotypes that North Korean athletes are like robots, the players pose for pictures and mingle with locals. "Behind their serious demeanor in the game, the camera-shy athletes have proved playful and personable at rest, ready with smiles and waves," AP reported Sunday.
Unlike other teams, the North Koreans train at a public health club in Pretoria, and exchange greeting with South Africans, take photos with them and sign T-shirts. A member who shook hands with a North Korean player at the club said, "It's great... it's not an opportunity you get every day."
On June 12, the North Koreans took time off from their training to visit the Johannesburg Zoo. "They were very excited. They said they don't get to spend a lot of time at the zoo and that they don't have a lot of zoos in their country," said Letta Madlala, spokeswoman for the Johannesburg Zoo. "They're very friendly, very relaxed."
But AP reported that the athletes are isolated from the outside once they return to their quarters. Star forward Jong Tae-se and midfielder An Yong-hak, who both grew up in Japan, are the only players who get to use the Internet, while the others are prohibited from contact with the outside world.
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'Missing' N.Koreans Turn Up at World Cup
FIFA, the organizer of the World Cup, has denied rumors that four North Korean players defected from their team.
FIFA spokesman Nicholas Maingot told reporters Friday that the organization checked with the North Korean liaison officer, who he said denied the rumor completely.
North Korea's football team take part in a training session at Makhulong Stadium in Tembisa on June 16, 2010. /AFP The rumor apparently began after the four players -- Pak Sung-hyok, An Chol-hyok, Kim Kyong-il and Kim Myong-won -- were listed as "absent" for North Korea's match against Brazil on Tuesday.
North Korea scheduled a news conference Friday, then cancelled it at the last minute.
[Media] [Refugee encouragement]
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FIFA Wary of Upsetting N.Korea at World Cup
Two teams are getting the most media attention in the 2010 World Cup in South Africa. One is Argentina, which is managed by Diego Maradonna and features Lionel Messi, the FIFA World Player of the Year, and the other is the secretive North Korean team.
The North Korean team is getting a lot of media attention for things other than sporting prowess. Everything about the team is veiled in secrecy, from its closed-door practice sessions and training stadium in a shanty town to its unique weight training program. With the North returning to the World Cup stage for the first time in 44 years, even FIFA officials are at a loss for words whenever the subject of North Korea comes up.
The team does give interviews though. FIFA requires teams to hold one open practice session before the World Cup starts and to allow journalist to cover practice sessions and hold press conferences. Only one closed-door practice is allowed ahead of a match. North Korea abides by basic FIFA regulations, but shifts its schedule frequently and changes its mind at the last minute to hold closed-door practice sessions.
The North Korean team's press conferences are also quite interesting. One thing journalists must avoid saying during those events is "North Korea." Reporters are told sternly to refer to the communist country as "Chosun" or the "Democratic People's Republic of Korea" or just the "People's Republic." When a South Korean journalist accidentally said "North Korea" during a recent press conference, coach Kim Jong-hun pointed out testily, "There's no such country called North Korea. Only the Democratic People's Republic of Korea."
FIFA exercises tremendous influence with its financial clout and sports diplomacy, but it has been very accommodating to North Korea, since an unexpected move by the North could throw a spanner into the event. FIFA seems to be very protective of its lucrative broadcasting rights, but it is lenient when it comes to North Korea. The North has aired several taped broadcasts of major games illegally, but it seems FIFA is not taking any action.
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Plucky N.Koreans Impress Football Fans
The North Korean football attracted worldwide attention after its brave performance against Brazil, when it lost 1-2 on Wednesday in Group G in the World Cup. Despite the loss, it held Brazil scoreless in the first half with a tight defense, and even when down by two goals it made a lasting impression on the world's football fans with a last-minute goal.
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North Korea and Brazil Help Bridge the World's Divides
By ROB HUGHES
Published: June 16, 2010
JOHANNESBURG — In some ways, the World Cup crossed most of its ideological divides at Ellis Park Stadium on Tuesday night.
Brazil, the No. 1 soccer nation of the past 50 years, played North Korea, whose team has taken part at this level only twice in that time span.
Brazil, whose stars are the best and the wealthiest globetrotters in the sport, was facing soccer nobodies from a secretive land that rarely allows its citizens to travel into the free world.
It was the No. 1 team in the rankings of the world governing body, FIFA, against No. 105.
What nonsense the Koreans made of this artificial rating. What pride they exhibited. And how they made Brazil sweat to close out a 2-1 victory in a stadium that once represented a divide in South Africa.
Ellis Park used to be a stronghold of the white Afrikaans game, rugby union. South Africa has moved on. So should everyone, away from the notion that the isolation of half of the Korean Peninsula makes its citizens and players somehow inferior.
Journalists were tersely reminded this week by the team’s coach, Kim Jong -hun, that his country must be called the Democratic Republic of Korea. FIFA lists the team as the People’s Republic. To much of the world, it is simply North Korea.
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N.Korean Footballers Got Special Attention from Heir Apparent
The North Korean team performed well in its World Cup opener against the world's strongest team Brazil in Group G in South Africa on Wednesday. Brazil struggled to get through North Korea's defense but won 2-1.
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Match between DPRK and Brazil
Pyongyang, June 16 (KCNA) -- The league match of the 2010 World Cup between the DPRK and Brazil took place at dawn (Pyongyang time) on Wednesday.
From the outset of the match the two teams fought a seesaw battle. The DPRK footballers created good shooting chances, not losing their confidence even after losing two goals.
At about the 88th minute of the match Jong Tae Se headed the ball before passing it to Ji Yun Nam who powerfully kicked it into the rival's goalmouth, scoring a goal.
The DPRK team will meet its Portuguese rival on June 21.
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Brazil Gains Cold Win Against North Korea
By JERÉ LONGMAN
Published: June 15, 2010
JOHANNESBURG — On a frigid night with the temperature just above freezing, Brazil finally melted North Korea’s defense for a 2-1 victory on Tuesday, but the five-time champions never fully thawed out in their World Cup opener.
In a scoreless first half, Brazil seemed alternately nervous, indolent and impatient against North Korea’s compact and organized defense that frequently strung five players across the back line.
“I believe this first match is always very trying,” Dunga, Brazil’s coach, said. “There is a lot of nervousness, a lot of anxiety. I’m not entirely happy, but this is very common.”
Finally, in the 55th minute, right back Maicon scored from an acute angle. Midfielder Elano followed in the 72nd minute to provide a win that was dominant, but more businesslike than inspired.
North Korea scored in the 89th minute, gaining some consolation in its first appearance in the World Cup since stunning Italy in 1966 and maintaining hope that it can still advance from a group that also includes Portugal and the Ivory Coast.
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N.Koreans 'Cheer S.Korean Team in World Cup'
The North Korean-controlled press had unusual praise for South Korean footballers Park Ji-sung and Ki Sung-yueng on Tuesday. The Chosun Sinbo, a Pyongyang mouthpiece published in Japan, said North Korean Central TV on Monday night aired about an hour of footage from the South Korea vs. Greece match.
According to the paper, the commentator, Prof. Lee Tong-kyu of the North's Research Institute of Sports Science, spoke highly of Park and Ki.
North Korean Central TV has been broadcasting recorded World Cup matches illegally since Saturday night, having failed to acquire the broadcasting rights. North Koreans rejoiced over South Korea's 2-0 win. "The match where compatriots played has drawn great attention," the paper said. "People in Pyongyang, without an exception, cheered for the South Korean team
[Joint Korean]
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Brazil Holds Off N.Korea in 'Group of Death' Match
It took nearly 60 minutes for Brazil to score its first goal, but the five-time World Cup champions defeated North Korea 2-1 in their opening match of Group G stage play.
North Korea was supposed to be the weak link in Group G -- deemed the "Group of Death" because of the tough company. But playing in its first World Cup since 1966, "The Chollima" gave the Brazilians all they could handle on Tuesday.
Brazil struggled in the first half against the defense of the tournament's lowest-ranked club as the North Koreans forced the heavy favorites to rely on long-range shots. The teams were tied 0-0 at the midpoint of the match at Ellis Park in Johannesburg.
Maicon opened up the scoring in the 55th minute with a stunning shot from a seemingly impossible angle. His shot curled into the net from an acute angle to beat the poorly positioned keeper, Ri Myong-guk, for a spectacular 1-goal advantage.
Brazil doubled its lead in the 72nd minute when a streaking Elano received a beautiful through-pass from forward Robinho and deflected it past the North Korean goalkeeper.
North Korea later answered by scoring its first World Cup goal in 44 years. Ji Yun-nam netted a shot in the 89th minute from six meters out but his side was not able to earn an equalizer in additional time.
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World Cup 2010: Brazil find finishing touch to edge out North Korea
Sean Ingle at Ellis Park guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 15 June 2010 21.55 BST Article history
Elano scores Brazil's second goal against North Korea in their World Cup match at Ellis Park. Photograph: Tom Jenkins
On a night when the sub-zero chill seeped into every sinew, North Korea's footballers warmed the senses of most neutrals at Ellis Park by refusing to buckle to Brazil's evident superiority and class. They matched them blow for blow in the first half and, having gone two goals down, had the pluck to survive a second-half battering before earning just reward for a valiant display with a late consolation.
Even the Brazil manager Dunga, usually the most taciturn and uncompromising of coaches, felt moved to praise, saying: "They passed really well and defended extremely well – it was really hard to play against adversaries that were so tough and defensive."
North Korea signalled their intentions by lining up with five at the back, with Ri Jun-il sweeping and An Yong-hak as chief protector in a three-man central midfield. The system, as closed and stifling as the country itself (sic), had led to 10 clean sheets in qualification, but Brazil were expected to provide a much stiffer test of its credentials
[Media]
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N.K. Jong Tae-se under spotlight
2010-06-16 16:06
North Korea's striker Jong Tae-se is drawing international spotlight for his act like Beckham and playing like Rooney.
North Korean striker Jong Tae-se shed tears ahead of the match with Brazil. (Yonhap)
Ahead of the big match between North Korea and Brazil in the World Cup on Wednesday in South Africa, the AP ran a long story about Jong's life, which it said "is not average North Korean."
The wire described him as playing like rooney but behaving more like Beckham. "He loves his cars, his rap music and his clothes, and changes hairstyles more often than you can say ``Kim Jong-il,'' it said.
Jong was born and raised in Japan. "The 26-year-old forward has never lived in communist North Korea, and says he has no plans to. He loves to shop, snowboard and dreams of marrying Korea's Posh Spice - none of which would be possible in the impoverished North, one of the most isolated countries in the world, " the AP said.
But he wears the North Korean jersey with pride, and is moved to tears when he hears the country's anthem. The boy from Nagoya could become North Korea's biggest international soccer star since Pak Doo-ik scored the goal that knocked Italy out of the World Cup in 1966.
[Media]
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Brazil beats N. Korea 2-1 in group G opener
Brazil beat North Korea 2-1 on Tuesday in their Group G opener at the South African World Cup finals in Johannesburg but not without a tooth-and-nail challenge from the underdog team.
Brazil, five-time World Cup champions, struggled in the first half to break down the North Korean defense, but Maicon Sisenando, commonly known as Maicon, pulled through in the second half, netting a tight-angled goal in the 55th minute.
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North Korea set their World Cup target: happiness for the Dear Leader
The emissaries of the Dear Leader to World Cup 2010 sat grim-faced through a meeting with the capitalist media
(193)Tweet this (59)Comments (161)
Marina Hyde in Johannesburg guardian.co.uk, Monday 14 June 2010 17.44 BST Article history
North Korea's Jong Tae-se proves rather more comfortable addressing the press than his coach or, surprisingly, the team's media officer. Photograph: Frank Augstein/AP
There is something about a North Korean World Cup press conference that recalls a possibly apocryphal story featuring the creepy Guinness Book of Records editor Norris McWhirter. According to this tale, Norris was visiting a school in his capacity as leader and co-founder of the Freedom Association, the charmless libertarian pressure group whose policies included mounting legal challenges against peace campaigners and allowing 1980s cricketers "freedom to trade" in apartheid South Africa. After delivering a fairly eye-wateringly right-wing lecture to his young audience, Norris broke the silence that greeted its conclusion by asking if anyone had any questions. "Yeah," drawled one kid. "What's the biggest fish?"
And so with the North Koreans, where once you've sat through the footballing platitudes, the temptation is to meet the cursory "any questions?" with the response: "Yes. Be honest, you did sink that ship, didn't you?"
[Media] [Bizarre]
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North Korea, the Darlings of 1966
By JEFF Z. KLEIN
Tuesday’s Brazil-North Korea match may shape up as a one-sided affair, the world’s most beloved soccer nation clobbering the soccer nation most shrouded in mystery. But before you make any assumptions about Tuesday’s outcome, consider this: In 1966 North Korea beat Italy, eliminating them from that year’s World Cup tournament.
That 1-0 victory for North Korea stands alongside the United States’ 1-0 win over England in 1950 as one of the two biggest upsets in World Cup history. And there is something else about that famous result from 1966, something that runs counter to many commonly held perceptions of North Koreans as a people. The men who won that match were funny, dignified and, above all, just like the sportsmen of any other nation — as we learn from a remarkable 2002 BBC documentary called “The Game of Their Lives.”
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N.Korea Shows Pirate Broadcasts of World Cup
North Korea's Central TV illegally aired the opener of the 2010 World Cup in South Africa on Saturday evening despite having failed to buy the broadcasting rights. The broadcast showed about an hour and 20 minutes of footage of Friday's opener between South Africa and Mexico.
As if mindful of accusations of piracy, the channel erased inscriptions at the top and bottom of the screen showing the source of the program. An announcer and a commentator voiced over the original broadcasters after muting the original noise soundtrack, with the result that stadium noise was almost completely lost.
[North] Korean Central TV airs the opening match of the 2010 World Cup in South Africa on Saturday evening. /[North] Korean Central TV-Yonhap SBS TV in Seoul, which holds the exclusive rights for the Korean Peninsula, says this was an "act of piracy." "The North's broadcast of the World Cup matches was illegal because our negotiations with North Koreans were suspended," an SBS spokesman said. "We'll decide how to respond once we find out where the North got the footage."
[SK NK policy]
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N. Korea’s heir promises gifts to football players
The widely believed heir designate of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il visited the North Korean World Cup soccer team twice in April and May in an unofficial "site inspection," and allegedly promised to shower them with gifts, in case they play well in the games, a local daily said.
With the pledge, Jong-un also coached them how to play. "In both defense and offense, every player should work in an organic fashion," the Open Radio for North Korea Friday cited the heir, Kim Jong-il's third son, Jong-un, as saying, quoting an internal source in North Korea, according to the Chosun Ilbo newspaper.
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For North Korean Refugees, Little to Cheer About in the World Cup
By SAM DOLNICK
Published: June 11, 2010
With the World Cup on, little pockets of immigrant New York will be stopping for hours at a time to watch their homelands compete. They will gather in groups large and small, in ethnic restaurants and sports bars, in Little Brazil in Midtown and Little Ghana in the Bronx.
But there is one team that will not be cheered by New York revelers, one team without local fans planning raffles or mixing special drinks. The team represents an international pariah, a closed-off dictatorship and the lowest-ranked country in the tournament this year: North Korea.
In the United States, there are 99 North Korean refugees, the State Department said.
[[Media] [Refugee encouragement] [Refugee reception]
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Park Ji-sung says NKorea may shock at World Cup
By DENNIS PASSA
The Associated Press
Friday, June 11, 2010; 9:56 AM
PORT ELIZABETH, South Africa -- South Korea star midfielder Park Ji-sung thinks North Korea could surprise some teams at the World Cup.
North Korea may be one of the longshots, but Manchester United's Park said the team has the advantage of adding a little mystery to the tournament.
"Since North Korea has players that are not well known, that could be a difficult factor" for other teams, Park said.
"For me personally, it will be interesting to look at the three matches."
North Korea has a challenging draw. It opens Tuesday against Brazil in Johannesburg, then plays Ivory Coast and Portugal.
North Korea's only previous appearance was 1966 when it made a surprising run to the quarterfinals, even taking a 3-0 lead in that game against Portugal before finally falling.
South Korea opens against Greece on Saturday.
It is the first time that the two Koreas are playing in the same World Cup, although this is the South's eighth trip to the tournament.
"North Korea is in a very difficult group as we know," Park said. "It's been a long time since North Korea managed to join the World Cup, and I am very glad that North and South Korea are here."
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NKorea's An wants revenge for '66 loss to Portugal
By JEAN H. LEE
The Associated Press
Thursday, June 10, 2010; 3:53 PM
TEMBISA, South Africa -- North Korea's An Yong Hak knows exactly what he wants from his team's upcoming World Cup match with Portugal.
"Revenge. We'll try to get revenge for 1966," the lanky midfielder said with a grin, speaking to reporters before a training session Thursday at Makhulong Stadium in the township of Tembisa. "We'll do our best."
The North Koreans have been waiting four decades to avenge the loss that ended their fairytale run at the World Cup in England.
Back then, North Korea defied expectations by beating defending champions Italy 1-0 to become the first team from Asia to advance to the quarterfinals. There were three quick goals but then the Portuguese, led by Eusebio, regained their bearings and came back to win 5-3.
Qualifying for the World Cup for the first time since that loss, North Korea is keen for a different outcome when the two teams meet again on June 21.
First, though, there's Brazil to contend with at Ellis Park in Johannesburg on June 15.
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North won’t get World Cup television feed from South
June 10, 2010
Negotiations over North Korean access to television feeds of the upcoming World Cup have broken down, the South Korean government said yesterday.
The North had demanded the South provide the feeds without charge, as the Roh Moo-hyun administration did during the 2006 Germany World Cup. The South had agreed to provide the feed, but only if North Korea paid a fee to SBS.
“Negotiations between SBS, which has the exclusive broadcasting rights to the Korean peninsula, and the Korean Central Television [of North Korea] came to no resolution,” a government official said on condition of anonymity. “As the opening [of the World Cup] is imminent, it has become virtually impossible for North Korea to receive the game feeds from us.”
Heightened tension between the two Koreas in the wake of the Cheonan’s sinking, an act the South blames on the North, impeded the discussions. The official added that he had no information about how North Korea would respond to the news.
North Korea qualified for the World Cup for the first time in 44 years. It also marks the first time the two Koreas are playing together at the World Cup.
By Lee Young-jong [joe@joongang.co.kr]
[SK NK policy]
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Nigeria defeats N. Korea in World Cup sparring session
North Korea lost a 3-1 defeat to Nigeria in a World Cup warm-up in South Africa, Sunday, a friendly overshadowed by a stampede which caused injuries to at least 15 people.
The Nigerians pulled ahead 15 minutes into the game held at Makhulong Stadium in Tembisa, near Johannesburg, with Everton striker Yakubu Aiyegbeni delivering his team's first goal of the match.
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The 10 best World Cup characters
Crazed managers, extraordinary players, high-gloss Wags and flirtatious commentators. Tom Lamont chooses the biggest personalities from the World Cup circus
(8)Tweet this (11)Comments (9) Tom Lamont The Observer, Sunday 6 June 2010
Jong Tae-Se
Following a government edict that World Cup broadcasts in North Korea are to be favourably edited for the home side, (somebody, please, YouTube this) Jong will be one of the few North Koreans who will actually see how the tournament unfolds. He'll do so from the pitch, as national captain and the team's best player – so prolific as a striker at club level that he's become known as "the Asian Wayne Rooney". Anticipate livelier post-match interviews than those from his English counterpart as Jong is required to sprinkle the usual "pleased for the lads" chat with gratuitous praise for a brutal military dictator.
[Media] [Cliché]
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N.Korean Footballers Train Out of Sight in S.Africa
The North Korean national football team, which made it to the World Cup for the first time in 44 years, currently trains in the slum township of Tembisa in the East Rand region of Gauteng province of South Africa, about 30 minutes by car from Johannesburg.
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FIFA: NKorea striker can only be keeper
By CHRIS LEHOURITES
The Associated Press
Friday, June 4, 2010; 2:22 AM
JOHANNESBURG -- A striker for North Korea's national team can't be used as a field player at the World Cup because he was listed as a goalkeeper on the official 23-man squad, FIFA said Thursday.
Kim Myong Won, a forward for club team Amrokgang, was listed as a goalkeeper in the final squad submitted to FIFA by North Korea coach Kim Jong Hun. The deadline for the 23-man rosters was Tuesday.
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China's struggling soccer program won't field a team in the 2010 World Cup
By Keith B. Richburg
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, June 3, 2010
BEIJING -- When teams from 32 nations gather for the World Cup in South Africa this month, one country will be most conspicuous by its absence: China.
China may be the world's most populous country and its new sporting powerhouse -- winning the most gold medals at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. But its prowess at soccer is lamentable. China is ranked 84th in soccer's world standings, just ahead of Mozambique.
Chinese are huge soccer fans, and hundreds of millions are expected to tune in to the World Cup, with all the matches broadcast live here on free television. Sports bars will be packed. But the Chinese won't have their own team to root for.
To add to the insult, even China's neighbor, hermetic North Korea, has earned a trip to the World Cup this year. "We will cheer for North Korea because they are our neighbors," said Wang Qi, whose company is selling tickets for Chinese fans to travel to South Africa. "They can't even feed themselves, but they work harder than Chinese athletes."
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DPRK Women's Football Team Qualified for World Cup
Pyongyang, May 31 (KCNA) -- The DPRK women's football team finished runner-up in the AFC Women's Asian Cup 2010, thus qualifying for the 2011 Women's World Cup to be held in Germany.
The May 30 finals between the DPRK and Australian teams ended with a penalty kick following 1-1 draw.
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North Korea Trying for Unexpected in World Cup Again
By JERÉ LONGMAN
Published: June 1, 2010
JOHANNESBURG — North Korea’s soccer team arrived Tuesday at the World Cup, where it will be supported by cheerleaders recruited from China, led by a forward born in Japan and prohibited at home from receiving free television coverage provided by fellow competitor and political rival South Korea.
As the lowest-ranked of the 32 nations in the field, North Korea faces an imposing challenge to become one of two teams advancing from the so-called Group of Death, which also includes Brazil, a five-time champion; Portugal, a 2006 semifinalist; and the Ivory Coast, an African power led by one of the world’s best forwards, Didier Drogba.
Yet no country enters the tournament, which runs from June 11 to July 11, with a bigger reputation for doing the unexpected. North Korea’s last appearance in the World Cup — in 1966 — resulted in one of soccer’s greatest feats, a shocking 1-0 victory over Italy, whose humbled players were reportedly pelted with rotten fruit upon returning home in disgrace.
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Mainland to allow all residents to visit Taiwan
More mainland Chinese tourists visit Taiwan after the mainland side loosened the restrictions on traveling to the island May 31. (CNA)Publication Date:06/01/2010
Source: Taiwan Today
Restrictions prohibiting residents living in certain parts of mainland China from visiting Taiwan will be lifted July 18, according to mainland Chinese tourism officials.
The announcement, which should result in more mainland tourists visiting the island, was welcomed by officials from Taiwan’s Tourism Bureau under the Ministry of Transportation and Communications May 31.
“We hope the new policy will be implemented as soon as possible,” said Wayne Hsi-lin Liu, chief secretary of the bureau.
Liu added that in anticipation of an added influx of tourists, the government is drawing up plans to modify current rules so that in the future a maximum of 1.5 million mainland Chinese visitors will be allowed to visit Taiwan per year.
Current mainland regulations stipulate that residents in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, the Tibetan Autonomous Region, Gansu Province, Qinghai Province, the Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, and the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region are still banned from visiting Taiwan.
[Straits] [Separatism]
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‘Soldier of fortune’ is North’s big gun
Jong leads hope for World Cup victory
May 31, 2010
Jong Tae-se
TOKYO - North Korea’s World Cup campaign is reinforced by a soldier of fortune, J-League striker Jong Tae-se, who was born and bred in Japan but could have played for the North’s political foes South Korea.
He holds South Korean nationality like his parents, descendants of immigrants from colonial Korea. But he managed to obtain a North Korean passport after growing up at patriotic pro-Pyongyang schools in Japan.
“The South Korean people may feel regret,” he told Japanese media about his absence from their team. “At the same time, they have a deep-rooted wish for national reunification.
“They seem to compare me to [Manchester United winger] Park Ji-Sung in the South,” added Jong, nicknamed Asia’s Wayne Rooney or “the people’s Rooney” for his combative style.
However complicated his background may be, his target in South Africa is clear - to help North Korea shock the big guns again as they did in their only previous World Cup in 1966. In one of the biggest upsets of all time, North Korea shamed Italy 1-0 before going down 5-3 to Portugal in the quarterfinals 44 years ago in England.
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MAY 2010
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The cup’s changing line-up of mankind
By Simon Kuper
Published: May 28 2010 20:43 | Last updated: May 28 2010 20:43
You wouldn’t have thought many people would have watched Togo vs South Korea at the World Cup of 2006. These were unglamorous teams, meeting in the first round. Nonetheless, the game’s average live global TV audience was 109m viewers. That was more than saw last year’s Super Bowl of American football, or Champions League final, or probably any non-sporting TV programme. And the 109m doesn’t include hordes who watched outside their homes, in bars or on big screens
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Taiwan confident of its competitiveness in China tourist market
2010/05/27 18:09:46
Taipei, May 27 (CNA) Japan's recent decision to ease travel restrictions for Chinese nationals will not affect Taiwan's progress in the Chinese tourist market, the Tourism Bureau said Thursday, The Chinese market is "big enough to go around," the bureau said, in the wake of Japan's announcement last week that it planned to streamline its visa process for Chinese visitors.
To this end, Japan will increase the number of its consulates in China that process visa applications, from three to seven, with effect from July 1. In addition, it will give approval for 290 travel agencies to apply for visas on behalf of Chinese visitors, which will be a huge jump from the 48 agencies currently authorized to do so.
Issuing an invitation for Chinese visitors to "come in droves, " Japan Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada said the number of China households eligible to apply for tourist visas to Japan will increase 10 fold to 16 million per year.
[Straits]
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A tie for the North, clues for the South
Friendly match was chance to assess Greece’s Cup play
May 27, 2010
North Korea’s Jong Tae-se, second from left, celebrates with teammates while Greece’s Alexandros Tziolis looks on during the friendly match between the North and Greece on May 25. [AP/YONHAP]
National team manager Huh Jung-moo came away with valuable pointers about Korea’s World Cup Group B opponents yesterday.
Huh and national team coach Park Tae-ha attended the friendly match between Greece and North Korea in Altach, Austria. It was the first time Huh has seen the Greeks in person since they won the 2004 Euro Cup, and the scouting trip was all the more valuable because Greece’s opponents have a physique similar to the South Korean players.
“The Greek national team members were called in on May 18, they’re still in the preparation stage so it’s hard to give an accurate assessment,” said a cautious Huh. “However, there are certain elements of their game that won’t change even if their conditioning improves. That’s what I came to see.”
The game was closer than many expected. Greece, ranked 13th in the world, and North Korea, ranked at 105, tied at two goals apiece
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North Korea holds Greece to 2-2 draw in friendly
The Associated Press
Tuesday, May 25, 2010; 9:32 PM
ALTACH, Austria -- Jong Tae Se scored a goal in each half Tuesday as North Korea twice rallied to hold Greece to a 2-2 draw in a World Cup warmup game.
Costas Katsouranis gave Greece the lead in the second minute, tapping the ball home after receiving a headed pass from Sotiris Kyrgiakos.
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Japan Seeks ‘Droves’ of Chinese Tourists to Give Economy Boost
May 18, 2010, 4:37 AM EDT
Sachiko Sakamaki
May 18 (Bloomberg) -- Japan will relax Chinese visa requirements starting in July to increase tourism and boost the nation’s economy, Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada said.
“Please come in droves,” Okada said today at a press conference in Tokyo. “Once they come to Japan, we hope many of them become Japan fans.” The number of households eligible to visit will increase 10 times to 16 million a year, he said.
The move may help Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama’s administration to reach its target of increasing the number of foreign visitors almost four-fold to 25 million by 2020. Hatoyama has declared overseas tourism as one of Japan’s growth engines as its aging population shrinks.
[Softpower] [Image] [Ageing society]
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S. Korea asks China to ban Mount Kumgang tours
SEOUL, May 18 (Yonhap) -- Seoul has requested that Beijing exclude North Korea's Mount Kumgang resort from its list of group tour destinations allowed for its people while it seeks understanding on a dispute over the North's recent illegal freeze of South Korean assets there, the Ministry of Culture and Tourism here said Tuesday.
Late last month, the North froze most South Korean assets at the resort on the east coast, including five South Korean government-run facilities, citing Seoul's refusal to resume cross-border tours.
On May 11, South Korean Culture Minister Yoo In-chon sent China's national travel agency a letter saying that the North's asset freeze is a violation of an inter-Korean contract, and asked China's help in making the North withdraw the unlawful step, the ministry said.
"The letter was designed to seek China's cooperation and prevent group tours by Chinese people to the resort, especially where South Korean assets have been seized," a ministry official said.
The Mount Kumgang tour -- hailed as a symbol of reconciliation between the two Koreas -- began in late 1998, and nearly 2 million South Koreans visited the zone before the program was suspended.
South Koreans have invested an estimated US$374 million in developing the border resort, according to the government.
[SK NK policy] [Sanctions] [China NK]
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World Cup 2010 Special: Ten Things To Expect From North Korea In South Africa
It's a first World Cup for 44 years...
By John Duerden
May 18, 2010 3:48:00 AM
Not much is known about North Korea though that is going to change over the next few weeks in football terms at least. Over the years Asia Editor John Duerden has had the chance to meet some of the players and watch the team in action a number of times and gives the lowdown on what to expect from the World Cup outsiders.
7. Never-say-die spirit
Teamwork is the theme that runs through the North Korean side. The forwards sacrifice their attacking instincts and put the team first. This is a side with no egos and one that has been together for years with a collective spirit that is likely to be unmatched elsewhere.
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Mass Games 2010 Dates Confirmed!
Koryo Tours has been officially informed by the Korea International Travel Company that Arirang Mass Gymnastics (Mass Games) will be performed from August 2nd throughout to October 10th, 2010. Mass Games can basically be described as a synchronized socialist-realist spectacular, featuring over 100,000 participants in a 90 minute display of gymnastics, dance, acrobatics, and dramatic performance, accompanied by music and other effects, all wrapped in a highly politicized package. Literally no other place on Earth has anything comparable and it has to be seen with your own two eyes to truly appreciate the scale on display
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The Tuman Triangle Tour 2010
At long last we are proud to bring you news of our brand new tour, on a route that no other company offers and that Koryo Tours has spent great effort pioneering. From June 30th to July 10th this year we are offering a 3 country, 3 cultures, 3 time zone tour in an are you may well have never heard of before - we're calling it the "Tuman Triangle" and if you're interested in learning more then please hit the following links to download our brochure and itinerary for this remarkable journey:
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N.Korean football star says team is ready for 2010 FIFA World Cup
Jong Tae-se says N.Korea is aiming for a top 2 finish with Brazil in Group G or the “Group of Death”
» North Korean national football team striker Jong Tae-se, 26, stretches on the field, April 26.
What does the World Cup mean to Jong Tae-se, the 26-year-old striker with Kawasaki Frontale? The words that sprang from his lips without a moment’s hesitation were “stairway to heaven.” It was nearly deflating for a journalist who was expecting an answer with a mixture of words like “home country” and “the people.” To this fashionable young man in his clinging white T-shirt, jeans and short, upswept hair, the World Cup is a festival he wants to enjoy to the fullest.
Fiery mental strength is another weapon Jong points to with the North Korean team. “What we have to present as a strength is concentration that could be called top class in the world. And our love for our teammates and our teamwork are awesome. With our concentration and teamwork, we won’t lose even to Brazil. Park Du-ik, the one who led us to the quarterfinal miracle at the England World Cup forty-four years ago, always tells us that we have nothing to fear if we arm ourselves with mental strength. Of course, we are rather behind tactically and technically, but...”
Fiery mental strength is another weapon Jong points to with the North Korean team. “What we have to present as a strength is concentration that could be called top class in the world. And our love for our teammates and our teamwork are awesome. With our concentration and teamwork, we won’t lose even to Brazil. Park Du-ik, the one who led us to the quarterfinal miracle at the England World Cup forty-four years ago, always tells us that we have nothing to fear if we arm ourselves with mental strength. Of course, we are rather behind tactically and technically, but...”
When asked who he saw reaching the final sixteen from the Group B to which South Korea belongs, Jong selected South Korea and Argentina without a moment’s hesitation. “Whenever we play South Korea, we each give our all to win, but afterwards we shake hands and feel a sense of closeness as members of the same people, and we feel a growing desire for unification. During the 2002 World Cup, I was attending Tokyo’s Korea University, and we would gather in the auditorium to cheer South Korea on.”
[Joint Korean]
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Zimbabweans to protest N. Korean soccer team visit
By CHENGETAI ZVAUYA
The Associated Press
Thursday, April 29, 2010; 12:07 PM
HARARE, Zimbabwe -- A Zimbabwean opposition group said Thursday it will protest against North Korean soccer players when they come to train here ahead of the World Cup because of North Korea's role in the massacres of tens of thousands of Zimbabweans in the 1980s.
Up to 40,000 civilians were massacred by an army brigade trained by North Korean instructors in western Zimbabwe's Matabeleland province during a five-year uprising.
"We have not forgiven them for that. We are totally opposed to the North Koreans coming to any part of Zimbabwe. We don't want them here. We are going to follow them (to Harare) and demonstrate against them," Methuseli Moyo, spokesman for the Zimbabwe African People's Union party, or ZAPU, told The Associated Press by phone.
North Korea's World Cup soccer team initially was to train in Bulawayo, in Matabeleland province. Zimbabwe Tourism Minister Walter Mzembi said the team now plans to train at a stadium in Harare, the capital, next month ahead of the tournament in neighboring South Africa. Mzembi denied the change of venue was politically motivated and said sporting facilities in Bulawayo were not adequate.
ZAPU, which is based in western Zimbabwe, said the whole affair has reopened wounds for families of victims massacred by troops loyal to President Robert Mugabe - a longtime ally of North Korea.
Troops were trained and commanded by North Koreans to crush the uprising after Zimbabwe won independence from colonial-era rule in 1980
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APRIL 2010
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Korean Is First Woman to Scale 14 Highest Peaks
By CHOE SANG-HUN
Published: April 27, 2010
SEOUL, South Korea — Climbing on all fours after 13 grueling hours, a diminutive South Korean woman, Oh Eun-sun, reached the summit of one of the Himalayan giants on Tuesday to lay claim to being the first woman to scale the world’s 14 highest mountains.
Oh Eun-sun climbed her first Himalayan mountain in 1997.
In keeping with her country’s intense pride in its athletes, she pulled out a South Korean flag, raised her arms and shouted: "Hurray! Hurray!"
“I would like to share this joy with the South Korean people,” Oh, who is 5 feet 1 inch, said after reaching the summit of Annapurna in central Nepal.
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N.Korea moves to close Mt. Kumgang tourism project
Experts say the move will restrict S.Korea’s role in the six-party talks
North Korea laid an effective death sentence Friday on the Mt. Kumgang tourism project with South Korea. Its decision to seize five pieces of real estate belonging to the South Korean government and Korea Tourism Organization (KTO) and to freeze real estate and expel administrative personnel from private companies such as Hyundai Asan, is nothing short of an announcement that the country will no longer engage in the Mt. Kumgang project with South Korea. Now all that remains is for North Korea to take measures to confiscate the real estate of Hyundai Asan and other South Korean private companies. The project, a leading symbol of inter-Korean reconciliation and cooperation since the first tourist boat was launched on Nov. 18, 1998, now finds itself at the edge of a precipice.?
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DPRK to Freeze S. Korean Assets in Mt. Kumgang
Pyongyang, April 23 (KCNA) -- A spokesman for the General Guidance Bureau for the Development of Scenic Spots of the DPRK issued the following statement Friday:
The DPRK recently took such a bold measure of freezing five useless real estates of the south side in the Mt. Kumgang Tourist Zone as the first-phase measure to cope with the grave situation where there was no hope of resuming the tour due to the south Korean authorities' vicious moves to escalate the confrontation with the DPRK and their insincere attitude.
This was a quite natural exercise of its sovereignty and an entirely legitimate application of sanctions in full line with not only the inter-Korean relations but international practice and norms.
We have so far made every sincere effort for the resumption of tour and shown broad magnanimity till the last moment the tour was put on the verge of collapse.
The number of new businessmen hoping to deal with the tour of Mt. Kumgang is on the steady increase.
It is self-evident that the DPRK, land of famous scenic spots, can not remain idle at this golden tourist season due to the puppet group.
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North Korea Seizes 5 Assets at Mt. Geumgang Resort
By Kang Hyun-kyung
Staff Reporter
North Korea threatened to seize five South Korean state assets at the Mt. Geumgang resort, Friday, and freeze private property in addition to expelling all employees there back to the South, beginning next Tuesday.
If the North carries out its threat, the inter-Korean tourism project faces the risk of closing, 12 years after it began in 1998.
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Hyundai Chief Urges Resumption of Mt. Kumgang Tours
The head of the Hyundai Group has pleaded for package tours to North Korea's Mt. Kumgang resort to be resumed, despite North Korea's threats to scrap the project after the South halted tours in the wake of the fatal shooting of a South Korean tourist there.
"The Mt. Kumgang tourism project is a venture of reconciliation between the South and the North and must be continued," Hyundai Group chairwoman Hyun Jeong-eun told staff at an event Monday. "If there is progress between the two governments, I'm confident that the blocked road will open and a gateway of greater hope will be unlocked."
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Chinese Tour Groups Set Off for N.Korea
The first tour groups from across China started off on their way to North Korea on Monday. China has organized group tours of North Korea since 1988, but they were available only to provinces bordering the North such as Liaoning and Jilin.
But on Monday, a group of 395 Chinese tourists left for North Korea by air or train from Beijing, Shenyang and Dandong, the China National Tourism Administration said. They will gather in Pyongyang before starting an eight-day tour of tourist spots in the capital like the Kim Il-sung statue and Mansudae, as well as Kaesong, Panmunjeom, Mt. Myohyang and Nampo.
Mt. Kumgang is not included in their itinerary, despite threats by the North to find another partner for visits to the scenic resorts. South Korea declined to resume tours there in the wake of the fatal shooting of a tourist in 2008 unless the safety of travelers is guaranteed.
[China NK]
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Will China Take Over Mt. Kumgang Tours?
North Korea looks determined to hand lucrative package tours to the scenic Mt. Kumgang tours to China after an erratic campaign to resume them ended in failure. But South Korea views the prospect as little more than a threat because forecasts say that if the tours were handled from China, they would not generate enough of the cash North Korea desperately needs.
[China NK]
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S. Korea Wholly to Blame for Derailing Mt. Kumgang Tour
Pyongyang, April 11 (KCNA) -- The measure taken on April 8 by the General Guidance Bureau for the Development of Scenic Spots of the DPRK as regards the issue of tour of Mt. Kumgang is the inevitable consequence entailed by the moves of the south Korean authorities to escalate the confrontation with fellow countrymen.
Minju Joson Sunday observes this in a signed commentary.
The commentary goes on:
The south Korean authorities should have reflected and apologized for their criminal acts. But they let the "Ministry of Unification" talk nonsense that "the responsibility for the deplorable situation entirely rests with the north side," terming the just measure of the DPRK's side "violation" of the "contract between businessmen" and "agreement between authorities." This is like a thief crying "Stop the thief!"
The commentary cites facts to prove that the conservative group has run the whole gamut of cynical ploys to scuttle the tour of Mt. Kumgang ever since Hyundai Group concluded a contract on the above-said tourism with the DPRK side.
The conservative group overturned the agreement reached between the Korea Asia-Pacific Peace Committee and Hyundai Group last summer to resume the suspended tour as early as possible, the commentary notes, and goes on:
Great irony is that the conservative group is now raising a hue and cry over the "violation of the agreement between authorities".
This group dares charge the other side with "the violation of the agreement between authorities" though it brought the tour to a suspension by perpetrating such act of treachery as totally denying the inter-Korean joint declarations supported even by the UN and other international organizations and blocked its resumption. It is the height of arrogance.
It is the ulterior intention of the south Korean puppet group to justify the criminal action taken by it to derail the tour and lay the blame for it at the north side's door by misleading public opinion.
If the south Korean authorities persist in the above-said rash acts, they will have to pay a dear price for them.
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Chinese Agencies Sell Tour Programs to NK's Mt Geumgang
Chinese travel agencies are selling tour programs to North Korea's Mount Kumgang amid Pyongyang's announcement that it will find a new partner in retaliation for Seoul's reluctance to resume cross-border tours, Yonhap News reported in Beijing Sunday.
Two Chinese agencies in the city of Tongcheng and the southern province of Guangdong are taking reservations for tour programs that include the scenic mountain and other sights, including Pyongyang, the ancient city of Kaesong and the border with South Korea, Yonhap quoted tourism sources in the Chinese capital saying.
[China NK]
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Seoul Rejects NK Demand for Asset Freeze at Mt. Geumgang
By Jung Sung-ki
Staff Reporter
The Ministry of Unification rejected Sunday, North Korea's demand that South Korean officials should visit a South Korea-backed mountain resort in the communist state Tuesday, to discuss its plan to freeze South Korean assets at the resort.
Last week, the North announced that it would scrap the Mt. Geumgang resort project with South Korea and seek a new partner unless the South complies with a survey of the assets.
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Chinese Agencies Sell Tour Programs to NK's Mt Geumgang
Chinese travel agencies are selling tour programs to North Korea's Mount Kumgang amid Pyongyang's announcement that it will find a new partner in retaliation for Seoul's reluctance to resume cross-border tours, Yonhap News reported in Beijing Sunday.
Two Chinese agencies in the city of Tongcheng and the southern province of Guangdong are taking reservations for tour programs that include the scenic mountain and other sights, including Pyongyang, the ancient city of Kaesong and the border with South Korea, Yonhap quoted tourism sources in the Chinese capital saying.
[China NK]
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Editorial] Lee administration should make a final decision on the Mt. Kumgang tourism project
North Korea, which has been pressuring South Korea to restart the Mt. Kumgang tourism project, enacted new measures two days ago. Our government is virtually ignoring these measures. It appears that the tourism project, which has been suspended for 21 months, is entering a stage of deterioration.
North Korea claimed that there is no longer any room to discuss the issue of tourism in today’s climate, in which ideological conflict has gone beyond the point of danger. This is a stronger statement than they have issued previously. It does not, however, mean that North Korea will immediately liquidate the entire project. North Korea’s measures are also limited to a freeze on some of the South Korean facilities including the family reunion center and restarting tourism under new management. The fact that the measures were taken under the name of the General Guidance Bureau for the Development of Scenic Spots, a working-level group, and not Hyundai’s contract partner in North Korea, the Asia-Pacific Peace Committee, shows North Korea’s intention to avoid a collapse of the agreement. Of course, it could in the future lead to North Korea undertaking firm response measures such as a complete reevaluation of the Kaesong Industrial Zone, as it has previously pledged. The project now stands at a crossroads
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South condemns North bid to scrap Mount Kumgang tourism
April 10, 2010
A dozen years after it began as a symbol of warming inter-Korean relations, the North wants to freeze South Korean tourism at Mount Kumgang.
South Korea yesterday condemned the North’s decision late Thursday to suspend South Korean facilities and expel South Korean officials from the resort. The North also said it would seek a new business partner to run the tour programs.
[Media][Inversion]
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N.Korea Seizes S.Korean Property in Mt. Kumgang
North Korea has frozen the property owned by the South Korean government and the Korea Tourism Organization in the Mt. Kumgang resort area as part of a campaign to pressure the South into resuming lucrative package tours to the resort. It also scrapped the contract with tour operator Hyundai Asan and warned it will "reconsider" the joint Kaesong Industrial Complex.
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Mass Games Photos Errata
Koryo Tours helped photographer Werner Kranwetvogel get unprecedented access to the Mass Games- absolutely sublime images- on his last trip Werner had access to the ground level but on return to Germany found his lens had a fault...and back he came to Pyongyang...but his images are testament to his drive. see pictures here
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Koryo Tours Newsletter - April 2010
Spring has sprung! And for the season we have 7 WONDERFUL ITEMS FOR YOU! Two new areas of the country we are allowed to visit (they printed tourist postcards of Hamhung in 1980 but no one came) ...our first step to becoming film moguls and ....and what's more, American citizens are allowed in year round...
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Seoul Warns N.Korea Over Mt.Kumgang Property
Seoul on Wednesday warned North Korea against expropriating real estate held by South Koreans at the Mt. Kumgang resort. In a statement, the Unification Ministry said that no inter-Korean cooperation projects can proceed normally unless the property rights of South Korean businesses there are protected. "All responsibility rests with North Korea," the statement added.
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South Korea to offer North matches in World Cup bid
By Patrick Johnston
Reuters
Wednesday, March 31, 2010; 9:53 AM
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - If South Korea win the bid to host the 2022 World Cup, they plan to offer North Korea the right to host a few games to help ease tension between the two neighbors, bid chairman Han Sung-joo said on Wednesday.
"It (hosting the World Cup) will contribute greatly to not only the football game itself but to the international situation in and around the Korean peninsula," Han told Reuters by telephone on Wednesday.
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MARCH 2010
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Nation’s Pride in a Single Pitch
By Brad Lefton
Published: March 27, 2010
URASOE, Okinawa — A year later, the play lives on in Japan and South Korea, where the World Baseball Classic has taken on a megalife in its fledgling four-year existence that far surpasses the impact the tournament has had in the United States.
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N.Korea Starts 'Survey' of S.Korean Property at Mt.Kumgang
A delegation of South Korean firms which own property in the Mt. Kumgang area return from their visit to the North through a checkpoint in Goseong-gun, Gwangwon Province on Thursday. The sash reads "We urge the resumption of tours" to the Mt. Kumgang resort. North Korea on Thursday started what it claims is a survey of South Korean property at Mt.Kumgang as part of increasingly frantic attempts to resume lucrative tours to the resort amid international sanctions and the fallout from a botched currency reform.
[Inversion]
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Resume Mt. Kumgang tourism without delay
[Editorial]
North Korea summoned officials from North Korean businesses yesterday and notified them of its plan and schedule for investigating real estate South Korea has possessed within the Mt. Kumgang tourism zone. This is part of an effort to apply pressure on South Korea, with the message that if it does not resume tourism efforts, North Korea will void the current contract and bring in a new program operator. The Mt. Kumgang tourism project, which began in 1998 as the first project of inter-Korean economic cooperation since the Korean War, is facing a major crisis.
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North threatens ‘extreme’ actions if tours stay shut
Pyongyang sets April 1 deadline for move on program for Mt. Kumgang
March 26, 2010
Some business representatives who could not travel to Mount Kumgang wait on a chartered bus yesterday at the Customs, Immigration and Quarantine Office in Goseong, Gangwon. Meanwhile, Hyundai Asan officials and some investors who own real estate in the North Korean resort area traveled there in response to the North’s call for investigations into South Korean owners of real estate holdings. The South’s Unification Ministry denied entry to 12 businessmen who do not own property in the Mount Kumgang area. [YONHAP]
North Korea said yesterday it would take “extreme measures” unless the stalled Mount Kumgang tour program resumes by April 1.
Choi Yo-sik, an official representing interests of South Korean companies at the resort, said Lee Kyong-jin, an official from the North’s Myong-seungji General Development Guidance Bureau, informed the companies of the threatened actions.
The bureau handles Mount Kumgang tourism in Pyongyang.
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UNWTO: China may surpass France as top tourist destination by 2015
UNWTO secretary general Taleb Rifai / Image via welt.de
Mar 23, 2010
China will surpass France as the largest tourist destination by 2015, according to a senior official with the United Nations World Tourism Organization.
The number of incoming tourists has been growing fast, and the country has great potential to be the No. 1 tourist destination by then, said Taleb Rifai, secretary general of the UNWTO.
China is the world's fourth-most popular tourist destination at present. In the last ten years, the number of foreign tourists has increased from 8 million to 48 million. The number is expected to grow due to the large size of China, Rifai added.
France sees 80 million incoming tourists a year, while the U.S. and Spain, which tied for second place, see 60 million a year.
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Accommodating The Muslim Traveler
Islam and Halal Cuisine is a growing market
By Andrew J. Wood | Mar 22, 2010
Islam is the fastest-growing religion with an estimated global Muslim population of two billion. In many European countries, Muslims are poised to become the most significant minority population. And that population isn’t the same as it was 20 or 30 years ago. Today, Muslims are as cosmopolitan as anyone else and traveling in greater and greater numbers (particularly in Asia).
[Halal]
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N.Korea Demands Free World Cup Training in Swaziland
The North Korean national soccer team asked for some W280 million from Swaziland to set up a training camp for its World Cup football team there but has been turned down. The 2010 World Cup is held in neighbouring South Africa.
The Swazi Observer on March 17 said Swazi Minister of Sports, Culture and Youth Affairs Hlobsile Ndlovu decided to decline a request from one of the World Cup finalists that wanted to train there for eight days in late April and early May. Ndlovu did not specify what country, but the daily identified North Korea.
The North promised to provide local football players and coaches with a clinic, play a practice match with the Swazi national team, and give an interview to the local press. In return, the North demanded transport, accommodation and meals for its national team. It is not clear whether the 1.9 million lilangeni it demanded was a separate demand for cash.
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S. Korean Authority Accused of Blocking Resumption of Tour
Pyongyang, March 19 (KCNA) -- The General Scenic Spots Development Guidance Bureau of the DPRK issued a detailed report Friday condemning the conservative group of south Korea for having suspended the tour of Mt. Kumgang and the Kaesong area.
Accusing the south Korean puppet clique of making outcry, asserting the "incident of a tourist in Mt. Kumgang" which occurred in July 2008 was "an excessive retaliation" and "a bullet was fired at the defenseless tourist," the report says this was as preposterous and brazen-faced sophism as patting a stray dog on the back.
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Medical tourism groups from China to visit next month
2010/03/20 19:50:24
Taipei, March 20 (CNA) Two high-end medical tourism groups from China will come to Taiwan in April and are expected to bring in substantial revenue, the semi-official Taiwan External Trade Development Council (TAITRA) said Saturday.
TAITRA Deputy Secretary-General Walter Yeh said that with the average cost for a physical check-up ranging from NT$50,000 (US$1,577) to NT$150,000 (US$4,730), the 64 people from those groups are expected to spend a lot of money during their five- to seven-day visits.
[medical tourism] [Straits]
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N.Korea Ramps Up Threats Over Mt.Kumgang Tours
North Korea on Thursday threatened to confiscate South Korean property in the Mt. Kumgang area in an increasingly frantic campaign to bully and cajole the South into resuming lucrative package tours to the resort.
[Media]
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Hyundai Asan CEO Resigns Over N.Korea Package Tours
Hyundai Asan president Cho Kun-shik on Thursday tendered his resignation for failing to restart package tours to North Korea.
In an e-mail to Asan executives and staff, Cho said, "I worked very hard for the resumption of package tours and to normalize business, but I failed. I think it's important for me, as the company's CEO, to take clear responsibility for the sake of the company."
"About 70 percent of staff have had to leave the company due to the suspension of the tours," he added. "I wanted to bring them all back to the company and feel deep regret that I cannot do that but have to leave myself."
A former vice unification minister, Cho took up the post with Hyundai Asan in August 2008, a month after the package tours to Mt. Kumgang were suspended. Since then, he held talks with both South and North Korean governments to get the tours restarted, but to no avail.
Asan is expected to hold a shareholders' meeting next Wednesday to approve Cho's resignation and choose his successor.
[SK NK policy]
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NK Issues Ultimatum on Tour Program
By Lee Tae-hoon
Staff Reporter
North Korea has issued an ultimatum to South Korea, threatening to terminate its contracts on joint tour programs with a South Korean firm, a pro-Pyongyang journal said.
The ultimatum came out Sunday after the North threatened on March 4 to nullify its contracts with Hyundai Asan in the South for tours to Mt. Geumgang and Gaeseong, both in the North, unless the South’s Lee Myungbak administration quickly resumes the tourism programs suspended two years ago after the shooting death of a South Korean tourist.
“It was the last opportunity and warning against the South Korean government,” Unification News, a weekly journal, reported in its March 13 issue, posted Sunday on the Web site “Uriminzokkiri.”
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WTTC forecasts subdued growth for 2010
By eTN Staff Writer | Mar 11, 2010
Travel and tourism is one of the world’s most important sectors and has been one of the leading growth sectors since the World Travel & Tourism Council (WTTC) first started measuring travel and tourism’s economic impact 20 years ago.
“But, as was the case with other sectors, it was hit hard by the credit and housing market collapses last year that triggered the deepest recession since the Great Depression,” said Jean-Claude Baumgarten, WTTC’s president and CEO, launching the council’s annual research results at ITB Berlin today.
World GDP fell by 2.1 percent in real terms with developed economies – a major source of demand for travel and tourism – the most severely affected.
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Chinese tour groups prepare to visit N. Korea
10:45, March 10, 2010
Chinese travel enthusiasts can now plan a trip to North Korea, which is opening as a tourism destination for Chinese nationals from April 12. Several Beijing-based travel agencies have already planned travel routes to take tourists there.
Zhao Hui, who is responsible for tours to South and North Korea at China Comfort Travel Agency, said that the first tour group organized by tourism bureaus of the two countries, and composed of 400 tourists, will depart on April 12 and 13.
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FEBRUARY 2010
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Taipei, Beijing to open reciprocal tourism offices
•Publication Date:02/11/2010
•Source: China Times
Taipei and Beijing are expected to establish tourism offices in each other’s territory around March or April, according to sources familiar with the matter.
During talks between Taiwan’s Straits Exchange Foundation and the mainland’s Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Strait in Beijing June 2008, the two sides agreed to exchange representative offices. If realized, the move is seen as a first step toward establishing permanent offices across the strait.
[Straits]
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North Korea’s Wayne Rooney
By Andrew Keh
Jong Tae-Se is a promising striker for one of the top clubs in Japan, the country where he was born and has lived his entire life.
He is known to possess a soft spot for South Korean television shows, and in a karaoke bar, he can recite lyrics to South Korean pop songs by heart.
And when he publishes the minutiae of his personal life online — as people his age are wont to do — he does so on a personal blog whose title, translated into English, reads, “I am North Korea’s Striker.”
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No joint march for Koreas in Olympic ceremony
The Associated Press
Thursday, February 11, 2010; 12:33 AM
VANCOUVER, British Columbia -- Athletes from North and South Korea will not be marching together in the opening ceremony of the Vancouver Olympics.
The International Olympic Committee confirmed Wednesday that the two sides failed to reach agreement on a unified march.
[SK NK relations]
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Inter-Korean Talks Ends Fruitless
By Kim Sue-young
Staff Reporter
South and North Korea held working-level talks on the resumption of inter-Korean tour programs Monday, but failed to reach any agreement.
South Korea urged the North to accommodate three preconditions for restarting the tours, including guaranteeing the safety of South Korean tourists travelling there.
On the other hand, North Korea claimed that it had already met the requirements and therefore, the joint tour programs should be resumed as soon as possible
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4,000 Buddhists to Visit NK in March
By Lee Hyo-won
Staff Reporter
Amid discussions over the possible resumption of cross-border trips to North Korea's Mt. Geumgang, thousands of South Korean Buddhists are expected to visit a temple located in the scenic park next month, an organizer of the planned trip said.
[Religion]
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Meeting on Mt. Kumgang tourism set
February 04, 2010
The two Koreas will meet next Monday to discuss resumption of suspended tourism to the Mount Kumgang resort north of the border. It’s not clear, however, just who will represent each side. The Unification Ministry in Seoul announced yesterday the North sent a dispatch agreeing to the South’s earlier proposal to hold talks on Mount Kumgang on Feb. 8. On Jan. 14, the North first suggested that the two sides meet for the discussions on Jan. 26 at Mount Kumgang.
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Travel boss issues warning on need for sustainable tourism practices
Nepal is set to witness a fivefold growth in adventure tourism over the next three years, according to UK-based Peter Burrell (picture left), MD of Exodus Travel. He told delegates attending the PATA Adventure Travel and Responsible Tourism Conference in Kathmandu that more consumers now choosing adventure, ethical and environmental holidays. But this increased demand will place additional pressures on destinations to adopt sustainable tourism practices.
[Green]
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Hospital Accreditation Seeks to Globalize Korea’s Medical Industry
Rep. Shim Jae-chul
By Lee Tae-hoon
Staff Reporter
Shim Jae-chul, an English teacher-turned legislator, has proposed a bill that calls for setting up a single international accreditation system for Korean hospitals.
"Korea needs an accreditation system that patients at home and abroad can trust, which can be used to find the most suitable hospital for their illness," Shim told The Korea Times Thursday, the same day he submitted the bill to the National Assembly.
[Medical tourism]
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Taiwan’s tourism industry set for boom year
The Tourism Bureau is expecting at least 25 percent more mainland tourists to visit Taiwan this year. (CNA)Publication Date:02/01/2010
Source: Commercial Times
More tourists are expected to visit Taiwan in 2010, according to the Tourism Bureau under the Ministry of Transportation and Communications.
Thanks to a warming economy and the successful promotion campaign of “Tour Taiwan Years 2008-2009,” the bureau has approved investment plans of 37 hotels of various sizes that will offer more than 10,000 rooms, with construction set to begin this year. These investment projects reflect the sector’s expectation that a growing number of visitors will set foot on the island.
According to official statistics, more than 4.4 million tourists visited Taiwan in 2009. The bureau has set a goal of 4.5 million arrivals for 2010, with the hope of bringing that number further up to 4.8 million. Hong Kong, Macau and countries in Southeast Asia will be the primary sources of tourists, bureau officials said.
While 7 percent fewer Japanese travelled to Taiwan in 2009, the number of Japanese tourists declined by only 1.7 percent last year. There is still ample room for development in this regard, and the bureau is hoping to attract some 1.1 million Japanese tourists in 2010, officials said.
Mainland China is another emerging market that the bureau is steadily cultivating, with more than 600,000 arrivals recorded last year, officials pointed out. The Tourism Bureau expects to see between 750,000 and 800,000 mainlanders visit Taiwan this year.
[Straits]
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JANUARY 2010
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After banner year for tourism in 2009, Taiwan hopes for more
2010.01.29 19:49:56
Taipei, Jan. 29 (CNA) Taiwan was one of the few countries in the Asia-Pacific region to experience growth in its tourism market in 2009, fueling hopes for an even better 2010, a senior tourism official said Friday.
Coming off a year in which Taiwan had nearly 4.4 million visitor arrivals, the Tourism Bureau is hoping to attract 4.8 million visitors who will spend an estimated NT$240 billion in Taiwan in 2010, Tourism Bureau Deputy Director-General Hsieh Wei-chun said at a news conference.
The Asia-Pacific region's tourism market contracted 2 percent last year, with only Taiwan, South Korea, Malaysia and Sri Lanka bucking the trend, Hsieh said.
Taiwan's visitor arrivals rose 14.3 percent in 2009 to 4.395 million. The growth rate, which was the highest in the region, mainly resulted from a dramatic 195.3 percent rise in visits by Chinese nationals, according to Hsieh.
[Straits] [Politics]
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South offers timetable for North tourism talks
January 26, 2010
South Korea’s unification minister sent a message yesterday to his North Korean counterpart proposing a new date and venue for negotiations on resuming stalled tourism programs that allowed locals to visit the reclusive communist country, an apparent attempt to gain more control over the tenuous relations between the two nations.
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Asia in Massive Renovation Projects to Draw More Tourists
The number of tourists visiting Asia has been increasing rapidly, from 44 million in 1990 to 120 million in 2001 and 200 million in 2008. While the world's top tourist destination France saw its number of tourists rise by just 5.7 percent between 2003 and 2008, countries in Asia reported massive increases during the same period, including Macau (129 percent), Hong Kong (89 percent), and Singapore (65 percent).
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Safety First, Says Seoul Ahead of Talks on N.Korea Tours
Seoul will insist that North Korea abides by global standards for the safety of South Koreans working in or visiting the North, a senior government official said Thursday. He said South Korea will take the demand into cross-border talks about resuming package tours to Mt. Kumgang and Kaesong in the North.
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N.Korea Pushes for Tourism Talks
North Korea on Thursday proposed inter-Korean talks at Mt. Kumgang on Jan. 26-27 to resume package tours to the mountain resort and the city of Kaesong.
The proposal came in a message to the Unification Ministry through the truce village of Panmunjom. North Korea's Asia-Pacific Peace Committee, which handles the tours, said in the message, "It is regrettable that Mt. Kumgang and Kaesong tours have been suspended for a year and six months."
[Overtures]
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Cash-short North Korea opens up to U.S. tourists
Reuters
Wednesday, January 13, 2010; 1:51 AM
SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea appears ready to welcome visitors from the United States year-round, increasing the trickle of tourists from its sworn enemy who provide the reclusive state with hard cash.
North Korea, which had restricted U.S. tourists to visits that coincided with its mass games that usually run from August to October, will institute the change this year, Koryo Tours, a major group based in China that organizes visits to the isolated country said on Wednesday.
Destitute North Korea has lost out on tens of millions of dollars a year it used to earn through tourism with South Korea due to political wrangling with its rival over the North's military threats to the region and nuclear weapons program.
[Bizarre] [Overtures] [Inversion]
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North Korea Wins Qatar Football Tourney
By Kang Seung-woo
Staff Reporter
North Korea started 2010 on a positive note as it won the International Friendship Tournament in Doha, Qatar, Sunday morning (KST).
The North Koreans saw their two-game winning streak end in a 1-0 loss to Iran after conceding a winner to Mehrzad Madanchi in the first half, but thanks to a scoreless draw between Qatar and Mali earlier in the day, they were crowned champions.
North Korea finished the four-team tournament with six points from two wins, as FC Rostov striker Hong Yong-jo scored a lone goal in each of the two matches with Mali and Qatar.
Mali and Qatar had four points with identical 1-1-1 records, while Iran, headed by Afshin Ghotbi, finished at the bottom of the pile with three points.
Ghotbi worked as a video analyst for the South Korean team in the past two World Cups.
Winning the title, North Korea, which has qualified for the 2010 World Cup finals, earned $250,000.
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Seoul Eyes 8.5 Mil. Foreign Tourists
By Do Je-hae
Staff Reporter
Korea is seeking to attract 8.5 million foreign tourists this year, the start of a three-year "Visit Korea" campaign.
Culture Minister Yu In-chon said the promotion will generate global interest in Korea and motivate more visitors to come back again.
A record high of over 7 million overseas tourists, mostly Chinese and Japanese nationals, travelled to Korea last year, despite the global economic downturn and flu scare.
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DECEMBER 2009
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Korea, China, Japan to Issue Joint Tourism Pass
Korea, China and Japan will develop a joint travel pass that can be used in all three countries. Culture, Sports and Tourism Minister Yu In-chon said the travel pass will strengthen cooperation among the countries in boosting tourism.
"The pass will serve multiple purposes, such as paying transportation fares, admission fees for tourist attractions, and hotel costs," Yu said.
The minister said the governments of the three countries have agreed the idea so it will be introduced as soon as technical problems are worked out. "We can sharpen our competitiveness by forming a single unified tourism zone," Yu added.
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Presidential pardon for former Samsung Group Chairman Lee Kun-hee raises ire
Critics say exchange for support in attempt to win bid for the Winter Olympic Games is insufficient in covering damage done to Lee administration’s principles of legalism
A special presidential pardon has been announced for former Samsung Group chairman Lee Kun-hee.
The Justice Ministry announced on Tuesday that it will be instating a special pardon for Lee Kun-hee, an International Olympic Committee member, on Jan 31. This is the first time under the constitutional order that a presidential pardon has been issued to a businessman as a single individual, and the first time a pardon has been issued at the end of the year, rather than on a national holiday or Memorial Day.
Lee Kun-hee is set to receive his pardon just four months after being sentenced to three years in prison, five years of probation and a 110 billion Won fine for malpractice and tax evasion. This is the second time Lee has been pardoned. In October of 1997, he was pardoned after being sentenced to two years in prison and three years of probation for involvement in the Roh Tae-woo slush fund scandal.
Announcing President Lee Myung-bak’s decision to grant a presidential pardon to the former Samsung Chairman, Justice Minister Lee Kwi-nam said the move was intended to improve chances for South Korea’s bid to host the 2018 Winter Olympic Games in Pyeongchang City.
[Corruption] [Olympics]
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Government pardons former Samsung chairman
December 29, 2009
In a move to help bring Korea its first ever Winter Olympics in 2018, the Lee Myung-bak administration granted yesterday a special pardon to former Samsung Chairman Lee Kun-hee, accepting the business and sports communities’ request to reinstate the tycoon whose membership at the International Olympic Committee has been suspended.
Noting that sports diplomacy is crucial in Pyeongchang’s bidding for the Winter Games, the Blue House said yesterday that Lee was granted the special pardon.
Pyeongchang, Gangwon province, has already lost to Canada's Vancouver and Russia's Sochi in two previous attempts. It is now bidding once again to host the Winter Olympics in 2018.
[Corruption] [Olympics]
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Taiwan's mainland visitor numbers soar
Publication Date?11/26/2009
Source? China Times
Chinese mainland visitors numbered over 760,000 in the first ten months of the year, ranking
them second among tourists to Taiwan, according to the Ministry of Transportation and
Communications Nov. 25.
This ranking is up two notches from last year and represents an increase of 497.6 percent.
More than 820,000 Japanese tourists visited Taiwan during the same period, making Japan the
number one source of Taiwan’s foreign visitors, even though the number constitutes an 8
percent drop compared to last year. Tourists from Macau and Hong Kong, totaling 597,000,
were number three. The United States garnered fourth with 298,000 visitors, followed by
Korea with 139,000.
[Straits]
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World Cup Draw Sets the Stage for Drama
By ROB HUGHES
Published: December 4, 2009
The soccer World Cup of 2010, the first ever to be held in Africa, will kick off on June 11 in Johannesburg between South Africa and Mexico.
And then there is North Korea, the team from perhaps the most mysterious, secretive country on Earth. It may be inexperienced, but its dogmatically (Sic) defensive squad should not be underestimated by its opponents.
[Media] [Spin]
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NOVEMBER 2009
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NZ Prime Minister slams UK 'tax on travel'
New Zealand PM and Tourism Minister John Key supports PATA's view that the UK government's Air Passenger Duty is a blatant and unwarranted tax on travel and is ill conceived, untimely and unwelcome.
[Green]
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Mt. Kumgang and Inter-Korean Relations
Background
In the late 1980s, with the end of Cold War, South Korean President Roh Tae Woo began seeking diplomatic ties with China, the USSR, and East European communist countries -- North Korea’s allies. Although these new bilateral relationships had the potential to further isolate North Korea, Roh’s “Nordpolitik” policy, initiated in 1988, also included a thaw in inter-Korean affairs: promoting economic relations with the North.
One year later, Chung Ju Yung, founder of giant Hyundai Group and a refugee himself from the North, was granted permission to visit Pyongyang to discuss economic cooperation, including Mt. Kumgang tourism.[1] With over 12,000 sparkling peaks, Mt. Kumgang or ‘Diamond Mountain’ is considered the most beautiful mountain on the Korean Peninsula.[2] North of the 38th Parallel, Mt. Kumkang became inaccessible to South Koreans after the peninsula was divided into two nations. Chung anticipated a pent-up desire in the South to visit Mt. Kumgang.
[Kumgangsan]
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Mt. Kumgang Tourism Timeline: Significant Events and Meetings
All meetings and talks place at Mt. Kumgang, unless otherwise noted.
1989 January 13 Chung Ju-young, founder of Hyundai , travels to North Korea via China and
signs the Agreement on Kumgang Mountain Tourism
[Kumgangsan]
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Koryo Tours fundraising update
Clients often ask how they can make a donation to benefit people in DPRK and we are pleased to announce our association with a western charity who work with two North Korean social organisations, one in the education sector and one serving people with disabilities, both areas that would benefit greatly from financial and material assistance.
With your help and donations, in 2009 we managed to complete 2 selected projects (details below). This is absolutely incredible and with some donations still coming in (and more always welcome) we will be able to embark on even more worthwhile projects next year to help even more people in the DPRK. Keep checking back for more details.
[Aid]
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NK Awards Football Team for Reaching World Cup
North Korea has awarded prizes to its national football players and coaches for reaching next year's World Cup finals, their first entry in more than four decades.
Yang Hyong-sop, vice president of the Presidium of the Supreme People's Assembly, awarded merit citations and medals in a ceremony Monday, according to the Korean Central Broadcasting Station, the communist country's official radio channel.
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All Eyes on Koreas at 2010 World Cup
By Dave Durbach
Korea Times Correspondent
JOHANNESBURG ? Streets will fall silent, sick-days will be called, classrooms will be empty, excuses will be made.
For two months next year, the hearts and minds of the world will be preoccupied with one thing - the beautiful game. For the first time in history, the most watched sporting event in the world will be held on African soil.
And what's more, it will also be a first for the Korean peninsula, with both North and South Korea taking part.
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OCTOBER 2009
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President makes unprecedented appearance at opening of travel fair
2009.10.30 18:04:36
Taipei, Oct. 30 (CNA) President Ma Ying-jeou on Friday became Taiwan's first head of state to appear at the opening of the Taipei International Travel Fair (ITF) in the show's 23-year history, voicing optimism over the prospects of the country's tourism industry.
Ma said that despite the swine flu outbreak, Typhoon Morakot, and the economic slump, total international visitor arrivals in the first nine months of 2009 were up 11 percent and international tourist arrivals were up 28 percent from the same period a year earlier.
The president attributed the growth to the relaxation of restrictions on visits to Taiwan by Chinese nationals in July 2008, citing the 885,000 visits made by Chinese citizens to Taiwan between July 2008 and the end of September this year.
[Straits]
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Syria's crusade for tourism
Our Middle East editor reports on an ambitious campaign to double visitor numbers to the country by 2012
It is more than 900 years since the Crusaders captured Krak des Chevaliers overlooking the valleys of central Syria – lugging blocks of limestone up the steep hillside to build a fortress that still looks pretty impregnable – so lunch under the Gothic arches of its great hall is a treat that packs a powerful historical and culinary punch.
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Taiwan could set up tourism office on mainland
Publication Date:10/22/2009
Source: Economic Daily News
Taipei and Beijing could set up tourism offices in each other’s capitals by as soon as February 2010, according to Lai Seh-jen, director-general of the Tourism Bureau under the Ministry of Transportation and Communications.
Lai made her remarks at a press conference Oct. 21 to mark the opening of the 2009 Taipei International Travel Fair, noting that opening up the offices would mark a big step forward in cross-strait tourism exchange.
[Straits]
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Humanitarian appeal from Koryo Tours
Clients often ask how they can make a donation to benefit people in DPRK and we are pleased to announce our association with a western charity who work with two North Korean social organisations, one in the education sector and one serving people with disabilities, both areas that would benefit greatly from financial and material assistance. We have selected two projects that we feel are both worthwhile and achievable and intend to raise the funds for total completion of these projects by the end of this year 2009.
The projects will be facilitated by Koryo Tours with the assistance of Maranatha Trust, an Australian entity with foreign representatives in DPRK, in coordination with two local organisations. The local organisations have a solid track record and are well known to international donors.
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Korea to Host 2011 UN Tourism Assembly
By Do Je-hae
Staff Reporter
Korea will host the 2011 general meeting of the United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO), the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism said Wednesday.
The decision was unanimously made at a meeting of 154 members of the UNWTO in Astana, Kazakhstan. A UNTWO assembly is attended by culture ministers of the member nations and is held every other year.
The world’s largest event on tourism will raise some 15 billion-won ($13 million) worth of economic benefits.
“We consider this as a chance for Korea to prove itself as a country with top tourism policies,” said Vice Culture Minister Shin Jae-min in a statement.
Officials see the assembly as a good opportunity to promote the 2010~2012 Visit Korea campaign.
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Airline's claim that flying to Asia via Helsinki is green vanishes into Finnair
Finland's national carrier blitzes Europe with plain stupid marketing strategy that amounts to eco-vandalism
The national airline of Finland has a new marketing strategy. Finnair wants us to fly to Asia via Helsinki. It's a sensible business plan, I guess. There aren't so many Finns wanting to fly to Asia, so they encourage others to fly to Finland and join them on the long haul.
The company is currently blitzing Europe cities such as London with posters claiming that flying Finnair to Asia is both quicker and "eco-smart".
So is this greenwash?
[Green] [IM]
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S.Korean government attempts to blocks commercial money to North Korea regarding Mt. Kumgang tourism
As S. Korean government considers giving grain or sugar instead of money, experts call attention to likelihood of change in payment being perceived as increased pressure
Under the justification of preventing suspicions that the costs of the Mt. Kumgang tourism project are being used by North Korea for nuclear development, the South Korean government is reportedly pushing a plan to transform the current method of payment in which North Korea spends the money it receives from the tourism at its own discretion, into one in which there is more transparency about how the money has been used. In particular, the South Korean government does not plan to allow tourism to resume prior to establishing transparency over how the payments are used.
[Sanctions] [SK NK policy]
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Taipei, Beijing to open reciprocal tourism offices
Tourism Bureau Director-General Lai Seh-jen toasts Department of Tourism Promotion and International Liaison Deputy-Director Fan Guishan during a function in Taipei last June. (CNA)Publication Date:10/09/2009
Source: Commercial Times
The first step toward establishing permanent offices across the Taiwan Strait will be taken after Taiwan and mainland China establish tourism offices in each other’s capitals, according to sources familiar with the matter.
[Straits]
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Big guns in Tokyo promote Korea 2010-2012
Hallyu star Bae Yong-joon joined Korea Tourism Organization president Lee Charm in declaring "2010-2012 Visit Korea Year" at Tokyo Dome yesterday in a rare overseas promotion for the Korean tourism industry. The event, organized by Visit Korea Committee, drew an estimated 45,000 Japanese, many of whom had come to get a glimpse of Bae or "Yonsama," as he is popularly known in Japan. The promotion also got a boost from the participation of Miyuki Hatoyama, wife of Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama.
[Hallyu]
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N.Korea Package Tours 'Nothing to Do' with Nuclear Issue
Seoul regards the North Korean nuclear issue and the resumption of package tours to the North's scenic Mt. Kumgang resort as separate issues, Vice Unification Minister Hong Yang-ho said Tuesday. He was speaking to a pool of reporters covering the reunions of separated families at the resort. "Mt. Kumgang tours are a routine affair between the two Koreas. If even this matter was linked to the nuclear issue, then there would be nothing at all the two sides can do."
He said North Korea needs to satisfy three conditions before the package tours can resume -- Pyongyang must apologize for the fatal shooting of a South Korean tourist in 2008, provide a safety guarantee for tourists, and promise that such an incident would not recur.
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SEPTEMBER 2009
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China Starts Work on Massive Resort at Mt. Baekdu
China has embarked on a project to construct a major resort complex on Mt. Baekdu, which is revered by Koreans as the site where their nation was born. A total of 200 million yuan (around W3.7 trillion) is being invested in the resort complex, the highest amount ever for a tourism site in China.
The Liaoning Daily on Thursday said ground would be broken on Friday to develop a 30 sq. km area in Baishan, Fusong County near the mountain into a tourism and leisure zone.
The project will involve four private businesses -- Wanda Group of Dalian, Asia Standard International Group, the Inner Mongolia Yili Energy Company and Yifeng Group of Liaoning.
China has been working to register Mt. Baekdu on the UNESCO World Heritage list since 2006 as part of its Northeast Asia Project, which many in Korea believe seeks to coopt early Korean history, and has been pursuing development of a major tourism site there. In August last year, Changbaishan Airport, using the Chinese name for the mountain, opened for business.
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Paying off U.S. politicians - have travel companies thrown in the towel?
By Christopher Elliott | Sep 16, 2009
Don’t look now, but the lobbyists appear to be giving up on Washington — at least when it comes to travel.
Airlines have spent only $11 million lobbying Congress in 2009. Barring a miraculous year-end recovery, they won’t match the record $31 million for 2008.
[Corruption]
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Mass Games min break
15-17 October
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Inha Hospital Launches Foreigner-Only Services
Inha University Hospital on Tuesday opened a center exclusively for foreign patients, with coordinators speaking foreign languages such as English, Japanese, Chinese and Russian.
Once the Incheon Bridge is completed, it will take only 25 minutes to reach the center from Incheon International Airport.
[Medical tourism]
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EU warns on proposed US travel fees
By DESMOND BUTLER
The Associated Press
Friday, September 4, 2009; 6:31 PM
WASHINGTON -- The European Union is strongly criticizing a congressional proposal to charge a $10 fee to some visitors to the United States and suggesting it may carry a price for U.S. travelers.
If it passes, the EU says, some U.S. travelers to Europe could face retaliation.
The fee now under consideration in Congress would finance a new U.S. program to promote travel, a burden that the EU believes Americans should bear.
"Only in `Alice in Wonderland' could a penalty be seen as promoting the activity on which it is imposed," the European Commission's Ambassador to Washington, John Bruton, said in a statement Friday.
Early, this year, however, the United States began requiring people traveling to the United States under the visa waiver program to register online at least 72 hours before travel and renew their registration every two years. If the new proposal is passed by Congress and signed into law by the president, it would require all visitors to pay the fee when they register.
Bruton said the EU will have to reconsider whether the U.S. registration system with the new fee would amount to a visa. The EU might then have to consider visas for U.S. travelers.
[IM]
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Korea awarded for tourism marketing
The Korea Tourism Organization's global marketing campaign in 2008 has received an award by the Pacific Asia Travel Association.
PATA is a tourism cooperation body created by private groups and governments, the largest of its kind in the Asia-Pacific region. Korea received a Gold Award, given to the top achievers in 24 different fields, including training and education, tourism marketing and advertisements. Winners are picked from 1,000 member organizations in 78 countries.
Korea was awarded for its campaign using a television advertisement and 14 different print advertisements to promote its tourism worldwide. It also began an interactive campaign linking on and offline promotion events, as well as promoting the closeness of Korea to China, which hosted the Beijing Olympics, with a catchphrase "90 Minutes Away From Beijing."
The award ceremony will be Sept. 25 during the PATA council meeting and Travel Mart period in Hangzhou, China.
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Mass games mini-break take 2
the most unforgettable trip you will ever take - guaranteed!
Following on from the success of our first ever mini-break, we are pleased to be able to offer you a re-run of the most affordable trip we have ever run to North Korea. This is an amazing opportunity to experience the Arirang Mass Games as well as the highlights of the capital city of Pyongyang, see what all the fuss is about this August on a journey we guarantee you will never forget. Koryo Tours has been running trips to North Korea for over 16 years now and is the only expert in the field.
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AUGUST 2009
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Cuba is the Caribbean's forbidden fruit
Aug 21, 2009 U.S. Legislation is pending in Congress that would lift the ban on U.S. citizens traveling to Cuba. Travel industry officials estimate that as many as 1 million Americans might visit the island each year.
The question is whether Cuba is ready for a huge jump in foreign visitors.
The island nation has much to offer.
The lack of development under communist rule has left parts of the country resembling a land from a time warp to the 1950s — a welcome change of pace for many foreign tourists.
[Sanctions] [Inversion] [Agency]
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North to open borders for tourism
Seoul seeks government-level talks to realize agreements with Hyundai
August 18, 2009
Hyundai Group chairwoman Hyun Jeong-eun smiles upon her arrival at the CIQ (Customs, Immigration and Quarantine) office, just south of the demilitarized zone separating the two Koreas, in Paju after she crossed the border. [YONHAP]
North Korea yesterday agreed to resume suspended tourism programs with Hyundai Asan, lift travel restrictions to a vital industrial park, and provide for the reunion of separated Korean families.
The North Korean statement came hours after a Sunday luncheon meeting between Hyundai Group Chairwoman Hyun Jeong-eun and North Korean leader Kim Jong-il in Pyongyang.
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Korea Expected to Attract 50,000 Foreign Patients This Year
A growing number of foreigners are visiting Korea to receive various medical treatments.
According to the Ministry for Health, Welfare and Family Affairs some 20,000 foreigners were in the country for medical procedures last year with the figure expected to reach nearly 50,000 this year. In the January-to-April period the figure reached 9,000, a 32 percent increase from 2008.
Reasons behind the rise in foreign patients include Korea's affordable medical costs, advanced medical services, and the recent revision in related laws allowing hospitals and clinics to target foreigners in promotion campaigns.
[Medical tourism]
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Why Air France deserves its loss
R.O.A.R.: Ryanair to charge for toilet use?
By David Tarsh | Aug 14, 2009
It’s often small things that reveal the most about someone’s character and in business character is crucial. The point is beautifully made by an ancient Chinese proverb, which says, “Man without smiling face should not open shop.”
A bad experience I just had on Air France, while relatively small in itself, speaks volumes about the airline.
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Japan Wants To Build Medical Tourism Market
Posted by: Kenji Hall on July 27
Japan’s government has come up with a not-so-new idea for creating jobs in its healthcare sector: competing for medical tourists against Singapore, Thailand, the Philippines and India. For months, a panel of experts has been meeting at the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) behind closed doors to discuss the merits of luring wealthy patients from Asia and Russia to Japan for top-notch medical treatment. When I first heard of the proposal a couple of months ago, the ministry official who told me about it asked that I not write about it yet.
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Tourism and fishing industries suffering from cross-border tensions
(China Daily)
Updated: 2009-08-05 08:27
The nuclear test carried out in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) in May set the world on edge, so it is little wonder the tourism industries in China's border cities have been one of the worst affected by the following tension.
The mysterious nature of the DPRK has lured an increasing number of Chinese sightseers but its grand folk dancing and music shows have done little to ease potential visitors' fears this year. "The revenues from four-day tours and business trips to the DPRK have plunged at least 50 percent compared to last year," said Li Peng, general manager of the Dandong branch of the State-owned China International Travel Service (CITS).
He said about 30,000 tourists have traveled with his company to the DPRK from Dandong in the past two years, with a four-day visit costing around 2,400 yuan ($350) per person.
[NK China] [Sanctions]
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Gov't Announces Measures to Revitalize Tourism
Tourists visiting Korea may soon be able to ride in double-decker buses and fly on small planes to visit the country's many remote islands. This is all part of the tourism ministry's new initiative to revitalize Korea's tourism industry.
The government says it plans to loosen some of the current regulations for private investors to simplify the start-up process and improve public transportation for the benefit of tourists.
Other measures include creating more hostels and camping sites across the country so that backpackers can travel on a budget. Along with these moves, individuals who hold permanent residency status in the G10 nations will soon be able to enter Korea without visas.
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JULY 2009
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Tourism chief heads for China for talks on upgrading service
2009.07.17 12:29:33
Taipei, July 17 (CNA) Tourism Bureau Director-General Janice Lai left for Beijing Friday for meetings with Chinese officials to discuss problems arising from the opening of Taiwan to Chinese tourists and how to upgrade the quality of cross-Taiwan Strait travel.
[Straits]
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Direct flights planned between Pyongyang and Shanghai
By Michael Rank
Direct flights are planned between Pyongyang and Shanghai, as well as charter flights from Chinese cities to the North Korean capital, a Chinese website reports.
It gives few details, but says the plans follow two visits by Shanghai tourism officials to Pyongyang in June.
At present the only direct flights are from Beijing and Shenyang. The report says there are hopes of attracting more tourists from the Shanghai region and mentions the possibility of charter flights from nearby Hangzhou.
It quotes the Shanghai officials who visited Pyongyang as finding the city “quiet” and “clean”. A separate report notes that because of “tension on the Korean peninsula” Shanghai residents haven’t been terribly interested in visiting North Korea, but this is now expected to change.
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A dim light is shed on the prospect of reopening the Mount Geumgang project
While worsening inter-Korean relations and UN sanctions shackle the project, more than 50 percent of the public wants S. Korea to negotiate its resumption
At 5:15 a.m. on July 11 of last year, the sound of two gunshots rattled the morning of the Geumgang (Kumgang) Mountains. A South Korean tourist, Ms. Park, age 53, was killed by gunshots fired off by a North Korean soldier on patrol and the Mount Geumgang project was suspended.
No Promise of Restart
Throughout this past year, the Mount Geumgang project has been put into a situation where its resumption has not been guaranteed. Since the project’s suspension, inter-Korean relations have been on the downhill. Even the Kaesong (Gaeseong) Industrial Complex, which along with the Mount Geumgang project had been one of the major pillars of inter-Korean relations, has been on the retreat due to travel restrictions and the detention of a Hyundai Asan employee.
[Kumgangsan]
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JUNE 2009
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First medical tourism group from China visits Taiwan
2009.06.22 14:21:02
Taipei, June 22 (CNA) The first Chinese tourists to visit Taiwan for medical purposes checked into four medical centers around the country Monday for physical examinations.
[Medical tourism] [Straits]
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More foreigners visit hospitals
The number of foreign nationals visiting local hospitals increased last month after a revised bill that allows the direct marketing of medical services to foreign patients took effect May 1, a government survey showed yesterday.
According to the sample survey by the Ministry for Health, Welfare and Family Affairs, a total of 1,061 foreign patients visited local medical institutions last month, up 41.3 percent compared with 751 patients in the same period of last year.
[Medical tourism]
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DPRK Acquires Qualification for World Cup
Pyongyang, June 18 (KCNA) -- The 2010 FIFA World Cup Asian Qualifiers came to a close on June 17.
That day there was the second match between the DPRK and Saudi Arabian soccer teams, which ended goalless.
After all, the DPRK placed second in Group B to be qualified for the World Cup to be held in South Africa.
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N. Korea's football team receives heroes' welcome at home
SEOUL, June 21 (Yonhap) -- North Korea's football team received a heroes' welcome after securing a spot in the World Cup finals for the first time since 1966, state media said Sunday.
The North Korean football squad returned home over the weekend after qualifying for the 2010 tournament in South Africa with a 0-0 draw against Saudi Arabia on Wednesday. North Korea's only previous World Cup finals appearance was in England 43 years ago.
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Good news - restriction lifted!
We have just been informed by our Korean partners that the ban on UK citizens travelling to the DPRK has been lifted and they are now once more accepting visa applications from Brits.
All tours will be running as expected with no restrictions on any nationalities, and all US tours in the summer are expected to also go ahead.
If you have any questions please don't hesitate to get in touch.
best wishes,
Koryo Tours
Source: Email from Koryo Tours in Beijing 17 June 2009
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DPRK bars UK tourists in retaliation for British travel ban
Announcement from Koryo Tours, Beijing
On Thursday June 11th we received the following notification from our Korean travel partners:
"In connection with the recent measures taken by UK government not to allow DPRK citizens to enter the UK we also will not receive any UK citizens as tourists to the DPRK for the time being." Korea International Travel Company
This is most likely a reaction to the recent UN sanctions that have been drafted against the DPRK that are to be signed on Friday.
For any UK citizens who have booked a tour with us or are thinking of travelling with us please get in touch and we can advise. We expect that UK citizens travelling on our two group tours to Pyongyang next week will not be affected as the visas have already been issued.
We have not been given any indication of how long this travel restriction will last and as yet the only people affected are UK citizens - all other nationalities remain unaffected but as always we will keep you updated as and when we receive new information.
Yours sincerely,
Koryo Tours
Source: By email from Beijing, 11 June 2009
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Playing Politics With the East Asian Olympics, 1964-2016
Introduction - William W. Kelly
"The aims of the Olympic Movement are to promote the development of those fine physical and moral qualities which are the basis of amateur sport and to bring together the athletes of the world in a great quadrennial festival of sports thereby creating international respect and goodwill and thus helping to construct a better and more peaceful world." Baron de Coubertin, 1894
Those who only pay attention to the Olympics on the occasions of the Summer and Winter Games may understandably bear two impressions of these global games and the organization, the International Olympic Committee (IOC), that has sponsored them since the first modern Games in Athens in 1896. First, they may presume that the intrusion of politics into the Olympics is a recent, unwelcomed erosion of the high-minded ideals that Olympic visionary Baron de Coubertin expressed in 1894. The pitched political battles leading up to the Beijing Games, in this view, accelerated this recent depreciation of Olympic philosophy.
A second impression reinforced by the 2008 Games may well be that East Asia has but recently been drawn into the Olympic Movement, which was a European recreation of the ancient Games and remained Eurocentric (and then American-dominated) through the 20th century. Tuning into last year's events, many assumed that East Asia's experience with the Olympic Movement has been brief and episodic, with only the 1964 Games in Tokyo and the 1988 Games in Seoul as prelude to Beijing 2008.
Neither is accurate.
[Olympics]
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The 1964 Tokyo Olympics as Political Games
Christian Tagsold
The 2008 Olympics in Beijing were the third Summer Games to be held in Asia, and even before the Olympic flame was extinguished in the Closing Ceremonies, its legacy was being debated. The impressive ceremonies, the beautiful facilities, and the well-organized events captured the imagination of a world viewing audience. This has led some commentators to forecast that the Games will bring China greater international acceptance as a rising superpower with a human face. However, the crackdown in Tibet, the protests against the Olympic Torch Relay, and other controversies that received widespread media attention brought human rights issues to the forefront and left many doubts about China’s progress.
[Olympics]
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The Beijing Olympics as a Turning Point? China’s First Olympics in East Asian Perspective
Susan Brownell
It is commonly stated that the 1964 and 1988 Olympics were “turning points” for the integration of Japan and South Korea, respectively, into the global community. It was anticipated that the Beijing Olympics would be a “turning point” for China. Now that the Beijing Games are over, we can ask whether anything “turned,” and if so, in which direction? This essay deals with a central paradox of the Olympic Games – they reinforce nationalism and internationalism at the same time. A one-sided focus on nationalism, such as characterized much of the media coverage of the Beijing Olympics, can lead to the erroneous conclusion that the Olympic Games exacerbate rather than moderate political conflicts. Wishful thinking that the Beijing Games would be a turning point for human rights and democracy led to the conclusion by China watchers in the West that the Beijing Games were not the turning point that was hoped for. However, reflection on what actually “turned” in Japan and South Korea helps us to see what we should actually be looking for in the case of China. This retrospective suggests that the interplay between nationalism and internationalism was similar in all three Olympic Games, and offers a more optimistic prospect for China’s peaceful integration into the international community.
[Olympics] [China rising]
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Asia Pride, China Fear, Tokyo Anxiety: Japan Looks Back at 2008 Beijing and Forward to 2012 London and 2016 Tokyo
William W. Kelly
The logo of Tokyo’s bid for the 2016 Olympics is the musubi, a traditional Japanese decorative knot. The design uses the five Olympic colors as the strands that fold over to form a simple and colorful knot. Japanese have long used the musubi to tie up gifts on auspicious and formal occasions and to signify the ties that bind people together. Thus, a Bid Committee press release explains that the musubi logo "represents Tokyo 2016's mission to unite people young and old with sport and healthy living, unite green with 2016, unite the city and the Games, and unite old and new Japan." This is common rhetorical fare for a Games applicant, although in addition to such public relations sloganeering of domestic benefit, many have noticed the aesthetic resemblance of the musubi to the designs of the candidate city logos for Beijing 2008 and London 2012. Unlike the eventual Games logos (the much-admired “Dancing Beijing” calligraphic figure and London’s already-reviled, jagged “2007” logo), Beijing and London used entirely distinct logos when they were candidate cities, both based on flowing ribbon motifs. However unintentional the design similarities, they do remind us just how necessarily attuned an applicant and then candidate city must be to ongoing Games cycles. For Tokyo’s 2016 effort, this has required a triangulation between the long and fraught Sino-Japanese relationship and the competition between London and Tokyo as global financial centers.
[Olympics]
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Soccer result could affect Iranian election
By Najmeh Bozorgmehr in Tehran
Published: June 5 2009 17:26 | Last updated: June 5 2009 17:26
Football fans the world over love to tell anyone who will listen that their sport is “not just a game” – it means so much more than that.
But the clash between North Korea and Iran in Pyongyang on Saturday could be one of those occasions when the cliché actually proves true. A World Cup qualifier between the two remaining members of George W. Bush’s infamous axis of evil – one fresh from a nuclear test, the other accused by some of wanting to conduct its own – sparks all sorts of international intrigue.
Coming just six days before the football-mad Iranians vote in presidential elections it could also have domestic repercussions.
Some argue that failure to qualify – Iran needs to win its remaining three fixtures over the next 11 days to be guaranteed a place at next year’s World Cup finals in South Africa – could damage the re-election hopes of Mahmoud Ahmadi-Nejad, the president.
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N. Korea, Iran Draw in World Cup Qualifier
The prospect for North Korea to reach the 2010 World Cup is still unclear as the reclusive country fought to a goalless draw with Iran in their World Cup qualifier in Pyongyang Saturday.
With the draw, the North must either win its final game away to Saudi Arabia on June 17 or hope other results go its way, The Associated Press reported.
Iran stands a little change of reaching the World Cup finals as it stays in fourth with seven points from six games.
In Asian region, the top two teams from the five-team group is supposed to qualify directly for South Africa 2010 and the third-placed team to go into a further playoff.
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North Korea faces grudge match with Iran
By Christian Oliver in Seoul
Published: June 5 2009 17:29 | Last updated: June 5 2009 17:29
International observers have no idea whether North Koreans stage major protests over food shortages, power cuts or human rights abuses. But it’s clear that they riot over World Cup qualifying crunches with Iran.
Saturday’s grudge match against Iran piles more pressure on a North Korean side that is showing signs of cracking under the weight of national expectations. Until three months ago, the “stallions who cover a thousand leagues in a day” had been galloping into the World Cup finals for the first time since 1966.
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Tourism Bureau seeks to attract Muslim visitors
* Publication Date:06/01/2009
* Source: China Times
The six-star Emirates Palace Hotel and the seven-star all-suite Burj Al Arab in Dubai attest to the great spending power of Muslims from the Middle East. The Tourism Bureau under the Ministry of Transportation and Communications is set to target tourists from this region in next half of this year, with the hope that it can attract at least 2,000 Muslim tourists per year to come to Taiwan for sightseeing tours.
The agency estimated the tourism market for Muslim visitors to be worth as much as NT$1.4 billion (US$40 million) annually.
Wayne Liu, director of the bureau’s international division, said that Islamic law has clear prescriptions for preparing foods, which can only be consumed if processed in accordance with the provisions of Sharia law. Even the ingredients in a soup stock must be certified by a Muslim mosque as conforming to Halal food standards, he added.
In Taiwan there are currently only 40 Halal-certified restaurants, with most of them confined to the Taipei, Taoyuan, Taichung and Kaohsiung metropolitan areas. When the bureau invited tour guides from Muslim areas to come to Taiwan for an exploratory tour, it became awkwardly apparent that there are no Halal restaurants in the Hualien and Taitung regions.
“Before we can attract more Muslim visitors, the most urgent problem to solve is that we need to have more Halal food restaurants,” Liu pointed out.
The Tourism Bureau has also started to improve accommodation facilities. It is helping hotels to set up prayer rooms, to install bidets, and to provide signs pointing in the direction of Mecca, for the convenience of Muslim visitors.
[Islam] [Halal]
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MAY 2009
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Cavaliers Sell a Stake to Chinese Investors
By DAVID BARBOZA and MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT
Published: May 25, 2009
SHANGHAI — The deal that may give a group of Chinese investors a minority stake in the Cleveland Cavaliers and its arena signals the first significant investment in a major American sports franchise by investors from China.
The Cavaliers, who are led by LeBron James, the N.B.A.’s most valuable player this season and perhaps its biggest star, said they agreed over the weekend to sell a 15 percent stake in the franchise and its Quicken Loans Arena to the group, which is led by Kenny Huang, a Chinese-born investor who has also brokered marketing deals with the Yankees and the Houston Rockets, and a Hong Kong conglomerate. [FDI] [China rising]
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U.S. artist gets new life after liver transplant in Taiwan
2009.05.24 20:20:41
A file photo of Chen Chao-long (front)
Taipei, May 24 (CNA) A noted American painter returned to the United States Sunday after undergoing a successful liver transplant at Chang Gung Memorial Hospital's Kaohsiung Medical Center in southern Taiwan.
It marked the first time that a Taiwanese medical team has performed a liver transplant for an American, according to Chen Chao-long, superintendent of the hospital's Kaohsiung branch who headed the medical team that performed the transplant.
According to Chen, Dreizin's son suggested to his mother to undergo a liver transplant in Taiwan after he discovered through an extensive Internet search that Chen's surgical team has the world's highest survival rate, even higher than counterparts in many advanced countries, including the United States, Japan and major European Union countries.
Another incentive was the relatively low cost of liver transplants in Taiwan, Chen said.
In Dreizin's case, Chen said, the total cost was NT$2 million (US$61,350), far lower than the roughly US$300,000 needed in the United States.
Stressing that Taiwan's organ transplant skill has long been acknowledged in the global medical community, Chen said he believes that Dreizin's case is just a beginning.
"We believe that more people from advanced countries will choose to receive liver transplants in Taiwan given its lower cost, " Chen said, adding that the procedure could be a major asset in Taiwan's bid to develop medical tourism.
[Medical]
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12th Cycle WAG International Judges' Course Held
Pyongyang, May 21 (KCNA) -- The 12th Cycle WAG International Judges' Course was held recently at the Table-Tennis Gymnasium in Chongchun Street, Pyongyang.
The course was attended by coaches and judges of women's heavy gymnastics from different sports teams.
The course, divided into theoretical and practical ones, dealt with the technical rules and marking regulations renewed by the International Gymnastics Federation (FIG) and others.
The course was presided over by Donattela Sachi, the first vice-chairwoman of the FIG WAG TC.
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FIFA Futsal Refereeing Course Held in DPRK
Pyongyang, May 20 (KCNA) -- A FIFA Futsal Refereeing Course was held of late at the Handball Gymnasium in Chongchun Street, Pyongyang.
The course was attended by FIFA international and national referees.
The explanation of the game rules, foul movements, newly changed game rules and other issues were dealt with in the course.
The course was given by Mousavi Seyed Sadrodin, a futsal refereeing lecturer of FIFA.
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DPRK pride in the Ryugyong Hotel growing
Posted Date : 2009-05-13 (NK Brief No. 09-5-13-1)
Once abandoned, considered a failure and an embarrassment, it now appears that North Korea’s tallest building will be completed by 2012. The Ryugyong Hotel is becoming the largest symbol of the North’s plan to construct a ‘Strong and Prosperous Nation’ by the 100th anniversary of the birth of Kim Il Sung. The hotel, on the bank of the Botong River, stands 105 stories tall.
An article in the May 11 copy of the Choson Sinbo proclaimed, “Like a phoenix ceaselessly reaching for the sky, the high-rising Ryugyong Hotel is one emblem of North Korea, which is soundly knocking on the door of [becoming] a Strong and Prosperous Nation.” The North has set 2012 as the year that door will be swung open. The newspaper described the hotel as a “phoenix” after a May 1 celebration, “We Will Triumph!” at which the hotel was used as the background for a fireworks display.
The paper reported on the “brilliant cannon salute” fired from this “super-highrise” at heights “not imaginable” to the spectators, creating a “picturesque view” of Pyongyang” as the fireworks display created a “grand spectacle” centered on the “magnificent 300m-tall building.” This praise is a significant change from the North’s previous practices of removing the hotel from pictures and portraits of the city skyline, leaving if off of city maps, and diverting tourist groups around it.
Construction began on the hotel in 1987, but was halted without completion of interior or exterior surfaces in 1992. Since last year, construction has been underway on 10,000 private residences in Pyongyang as part of its modernization drive, and at the same time, the hotel has been receiving a facelift, with large glass panels being installed on its exterior.
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33% of poll respondents unimpressed by Chinese tourists: survey
2009.05.09 20:59:05
A group of Chinese tourists visit Taipei 101 tower in the April 25 file photo
Taipei, May 9 (CNA) A total of 33 percent of the respondents to a recent poll said they are unimpressed with the influx of Chinese tourists, according to the results of the government -commissioned survey released Saturday.
The poll, conducted by the Research, Development and Evaluation Commission under the Executive Yuan, found that only 24.9 percent of the respondents said they had a favorable impression of the Chinese tourists who have arrived since the government opened its doors wider to visitors from China.[Straits]
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Preparing for the Games: Delhi beggars learn languages
May 6th, 2009 - 10:13 am ICT by IANS -
New Delhi, May 6 (IANS) Beggars cannot be choosers, but beggars are quick to spot an opportunity, especially when there is a buzz in the city about “thousands of tourists” flocking here for the Commonwealth Games next year.
And beggars are gearing up for it by learning not just English but languages like French and Spanish as well, not knowing that only English is spoken in all the Commonwealth countries.
“There will be thousands of foreign tourists when the games are going on. That is why some beggar families are teaching younger child beggars to beg in foreign languages,” said Savitri, a street performer from Prem Nagar, west Delhi.
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Bali airport renovation rejected by governor
By balidiscovery.com | May 05, 2009
Kompas.com reports that Bali's governor, Made Mangku Pastika, has rejected renovation plans advanced by Bali's airport managers, calling instead for a more Balinese design concept with greater emphasis on public as opposed to commercial spaces.
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Iran's Supreme Leader Opposes Merger Of Hajj And Tourism Organizations
Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei: Hajj is hajj, tourism is tourism
By tehrantimes.com | May 04, 2009
TEHRAN – Supreme Leader Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei has expressed his opposition to a merger of the Hajj and Pilgrimage Organization and Cultural Heritage, Tourism and Handicrafts Organization (CHTHO).
“I have emphatically cautioned Mr. president that the merger of this organization (the Hajj and Pilgrimage Organization) with the tourism organization is not right,” Ayatollah Khamenei’s office said in a letter to Hojatoleslam Mohammad Mohammadi Reyshahri, according to HPO website.
[Islam]
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Korea’s candidate evades interview then picks and chooses questions via email
By Nelson Alcantara | May 04, 2009
South Korea’s Oh Jee-chul, the president and CEO of the Korea Tourism Organization, has the backing of his government in his bid to become the next secretary-general of the United Nations World Tourism Organization. And yet, he is one very hard person to get a hold of. The quest to interview Jee-chul began at this year’s ITB Berlin, where I was told that I “missed him by a few minutes.” Once back at eTN headquarter in Hawaii, numerous phone calls were made to the KTO office in Seoul, South Korea. The idea of interviewing Jee-chul became an intricate affair, because as eTN sought out to interview him, he was supposedly traveling to various parts of the world. At some points, the KTO’s Seoul office could not even make up its mind whether Jee-chul was in South America or Germany. All the while, interviews of him kept appearing in The Korea Times.
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Babylon Ruins Reopen in Iraq, to Controversy
By STEVEN LEE MYERS
Published: May 2, 2009
BABYLON, Iraq — After decades of dictatorship and disrepair, Iraq is celebrating its renewed sovereignty over the Babylon archaeological site — by fighting over the place, over its past and future and, of course, over its spoils.
Colonial archaeologists packed off its treasures to Europe a century ago. Saddam Hussein rebuilt the site in his own megalomaniacal image. American and Polish troops turned it into a military camp, digging trenches and filling barricades with soil peppered with fragments of a biblical-era civilization.
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New Visa for Medical Tourists Introduced
Foreigners seeking medical treatment in Korea will face less red tape starting Monday. The Ministry of Justice and the Ministry of Health have decided to create a new M visa category for those coming to Korea to see a doctor.
To receive a 90-day or one-year medical visa, visitors have to submit medical records, a statement of financial responsibility, and proof that they have appointments at Korean hospitals. To prevent M-visa holders from taking advantage of the relatively loose visa rules, government officials plan to strengthen supervision while the visitors are in the country
[Medical]
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China And North Korea Will Open Tourist Train Route In Late May
May 7, 2009
A cooperation agreement has been signed between the government of Tumen in Jilin province, North Hamgyong Tourism Bureau, Tumen River International Travel Service, and Chongjin Railway Bureau on routes for train tours.
Under the agreement, the tourist train route from the Tumen-Nanyang border crossing to Chongjin and Qibaoshan in North Korea, will be operated jointly by two travel agencies from China and North Korea.
It is reported that North Korea will set up an office to deal with problems during the operations. The route is expected to open in late May.
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Air China Expands Network To Pyongyang
November 30, 2007
Air China will increase its global network with a new service in Asia linking the Beijing capital to Pyongyang, the capital of North Korea, on January 2, 2008, and will operate three times per week with Boeing 737 aircraft.
This Beijing-Pyongyang addition will bring Air China's international network to a total of 72 individual routes from 2008. The Pyongyang launch is the most recent in Air China's growing network. In the current quarter Air China initiated nonstop service on the Beijing-Sydney sector, increasing its Australia presence, as well as on the Beijing-Macao route, adding service to the booming Pearl River delta area that includes Hong Kong, Shenzhen, and Guangzhou.
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Korea Halts Foreign Tourists
August 27, 2004
It is being reported in the local press that Korea will not be opening its door to foreign tourists until August 31.
The toll-gate between Korea and Dandong in Liaoning Province has already been closed. The reason given is that, as a country with a planned economic system for all its sectors (including the tourism industry), Korea has filled its tourist quota for the third quarter.
Korea will reopen its borders to tourists on September 1.
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China reopens border tourism after three years' suspension over rampant gambling
www.chinaview.cn 2009-04-29 20:47:43 Print
DANDONG, Liaoning, April 29 (Xinhua) -- China reopened its land border with the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) to tourism at Dandong, a city in the northeastern province of Liaoning, beginning Wednesday.
A group of 71 tourists left Dandong for Sinuiju, the border city facing Dandong across the Yalu River for one-day tours early Wednesday. They were mostly Dandong locals.
They were the first group of tourists to arrive in Sinuiju since February 2006 when China suspended all of its border tour programs following rampant gambling by Chinese tourists, according to the exit and reentry section of the Public Security Bureau in Dandong
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APRIL 2009
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MARCH 2009
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Korea Gears Up to Meet the North in World Cup Preliminary
The Korean national soccer team gathered in the National Football Center in Paju, Gyeonggi Province, on Thursday, and began training for the fifth match in the Asian preliminaries for the 2010 World Cup against North Korea scheduled for Apr. 1.
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Japan Wins World Baseball Classic
Lucy Nicholson/Reuters
Japan celebrated their team's win over Team Korea in the tenth inning of the World Baseball Classic in Los Angeles.
By JACK CURRY
Published: March 24, 2009
LOS ANGELES — To Japan and South Korea, the final of the World Baseball Classic was more than the last game of a 16-team tournament. It was the chance, the prized chance, to subdue a despised rival and be called the best team in the world. It was an opportunity for one proud country to incense another.
With a pulsating 5-3 win against South Korea in 10 innings Monday night, the Japanese won their second straight Classic and remained atop the international baseball world.
The all-Asian championship reiterated that the rest of the world plays excellent baseball, too, and was a credit to the two teams that play in a more disciplined way than the United States.
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Nation’s tourism ranking improves
Publication Date:03/13/2009 By Jean Yueh
According to the latest survey report released March 4 by the World Economic Forum, Taiwan’s global travel and tourism competitiveness ranking moved up to 43rd this year from 52nd in 2008.
The island ranked 9th in the Asia-Pacific region, trailing Australia, Singapore, Hong Kong, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia and Thailand, but one notch ahead of mainland China.
Despite improved world ranking in 2009, Taiwan fell far behind the 30th place it held in 2007 in the first edition of the report. In comparison, mainland China ranked 47th this year, up from 62nd in 2008. Switzerland, Austria and Germany maintained the top three places as last year, followed by France, Canada, Spain, Sweden, the United States, Australia and Singapore, in that order.
The Travel and Tourism Competitiveness Report is published annually by the World Economic Forum, an independent Swiss non-profit foundation “committed to improving the state of the world by engaging leaders in partnerships to shape global, regional and industry agendas.”
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Travel & Tourism Competitiveness Report 2009
Switzerland, Austria and Germany have the most attractive environments for developing the travel and tourism industry, according to the third annual Travel & Tourism Competitiveness Report, published by the World Economic Forum. Among the top ten, France (4), Canada (5), Sweden (8) and Singapore (10) post improvements.
The rankings are based on the Travel & Tourism Competitiveness Index (TTCI), which measures the different regulatory and business-related issues that have been identified as levers for improving travel and tourism competitiveness in countries around the world.
This year’s report, published under the theme “Managing in a Time of Turbulence”, reflects the difficulties the industry currently faces, which must be overcome to ensure strong sectorial growth in the future.
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Incheon Airport Sees 200 Mil. Passengers in 8 Years
By Cho Hyun-jeong
Intern
Hitosi Dakai, 50, of Japan, received an 18.75-gram gold "key of luck" and a round trip ticket from Seoul to Japan as a special gift when he arrived at Incheon International Airport as its 200 millionth traveler Monday afternoon. He flew to the airport on the Korean Air Flight KE776 from Komatsu, in the western Japanese Prefecture of Ishikawa, at 2:05 p.m.
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Airlines Battle It Out on Land
Airlines around the world are competing on land in order to overcome the economic slump. Competition over luxury lounges at airports has begun in order to attract wealthy, first-class passengers.
The Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday that Deutsche Lufthansa AG opened a 12,000 sq. m lounge featuring a full-service spa, spacious bathrooms with whirlpool tubs, and a bar offering 84 different single-malt whiskeys, at Frankfurt Airport. Fliers get zipped to and from planes in Mercedes limousines or Porsche Cayenne sport-utility vehicles. Lufthansa has invested more than US$190 million to upgrade airport lounge services for its first-class passengers.
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Are Korean Hospitals Ready for Medical Tourism?
Last week, Melissa Lowe, an American, was with a bored expression leafing through an English newspaper in the waiting room of the foreigners' clinic of a university hospital in Seoul. Since arriving on time for her 9 a.m. appointment, she had been waiting for about two hours, because the hospital staff told her to wait. "Because I'm a patient, I have to be patient," she said.
The hospital has no doctor in charge of foreign patients, so three nurses who can speak English handle foreign patients' registration, give them directions, and even provide translation services for them if necessary during medical examination and treatment.
It will become possible for hospitals to accept foreign patients for profit-making purposes in May after the passage of a revised medial law in January. The government plans to attract 100,000 foreign patients by 2010. But are we ready to accept them?
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Assembly Resolution Sought for Resuming Mt. Geumgang Tour
By Kang Hyun-kyung
Staff Reporter
Twenty lawmakers urged Seoul and Pyongyang leaders to work toward resuming tours to Mt. Geumgang, saying the travel ban has taken a toll on South and North Koreans heavily dependent on tourism income.
Seoul suspended the cross-border tours, which kicked off in November 1998, five months ago, shortly after a female South Korean tourist was killed by a North Korean soldier last July. The North has offered no official apology for the shooting.
``Since the suspension of the program, dozens of South Korean businesses and approximately 1,000 travel agents that offered organized trips to the North have gone to the brink of bankruptcy,'' said independent lawmaker Song Hun-suk, an architect of the resolution.
Song said some 30,000 South and North Koreans are on the verge of losing their jobs due to the travel ban and eighty percent of shops and restaurants in Gosung, Gangwon Province, near the border with the North, have also been forced to shut down as a result of immense business losses.
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Huge Demand for Reopening Mt.Kumgang Tours
The number of people who booked tours to Mt. Kumgang topped 15,000 in only 16 days since February 13, when the sales of the package tour resumed, organizer Hyundai Asan said Sunday. A total of 15,856 people have made reservations for the tours, which were suspended after the fatal shooting of a South Korean tourist in the area last year.
Customers who pay a deposit can get a 50 percent discount if they make the tour within one month after resumption of the tour to the scenic mountain in North Korea, a 40 percent discount within two months, and a 30 percent within three to six months.
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FEBRUARY 2009
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TOUR NORTH KOREA: International Friendship Brigade
Departs/returns Beijing
September 3rd to 10th 2009
8 Days/7 Nights Fully Escorted
Accommodation Meals Touring
Full itinerary each day including a visit to the DMZ.
Fare from Euro995 per person
e-mail: info@interDDR.com
Australia-DPRK Friendship and Cultural Society
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NKorea beats Saudi Arabia 1-0 in WCup qualifier
The Associated Press
Wednesday, February 11, 2009; 3:56 AM
PYONGYANG, North Korea -- Mun In Guk scored the only goal Wednesday to help North Korea move a step closer to a 2010 World Cup berth with a 1-0 win over Saudi Arabia in Asian qualifying.
It was a deserved victory for the nation that made its only appearance at the World Cup in 1966. The three points gives North Korea seven from four games to share the Group 2 lead with rival South Korea, which plays third-place Iran later Wednesday.
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MASS GAMES 2009
News from Koryo Tours, Beijing
The latest news from Pyongyang (February 2009) is that the mass games will almost certainly be held from the beginning of August until the end of September this year. These dates have not yet been finally confirmed and it is normal for them to be altered slightly as the event draws closer - we expect the actual run of the games to go on into October so please keep checking the website for updates.
All tourists who visit the country during the period of the Mass Games are able to attend the performance
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JANUARY 2009
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N.Korean Sports Commentators Take Note of Park Ji-sung
Home> Culture/Sports Updated Jan.6,2009 08:58 KST
A screen capture of Park Ji-sung from the (North) Korean Central Television Station /Yonhap
The (North) Korean Central Television Station on Sunday evening broadcast a recording of the second half of final match of the Club World Cup between Manchester United and Liga de Quito of Ecuador, held in Yokohama, Japan, on Dec. 21, 2008. Park Ji-sung was praised by North Korean commentators as "a player who does the job of two men."
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Town Asks Kung Fu Monks for Tourism Blessings
By ANDREW JACOBS
Published: January 1, 2009
GUANDU, China — The cluster of temples at the heart of this dusty, traffic-clogged town are picturesque reminders of China’s faded Buddhist past. On a recent day, dogs warmed themselves in the winter sun as a few toothless devotees bowed before smiling Buddhas. The only sounds were the occasional clanging of wind chimes and the splash of coins tossed into a mucky pond.
Mr. Dou found a savior 1,200 miles away, in the Song Mountains of central China, where the warrior monks of Shaolin have mastered the art of monastery marketing. Since the early 1990s, the chief abbot, Shi Yongxin, has turned Shaolin into a lucrative draw for kung fu enthusiasts and has transformed his lithe disciples into global emissaries for the temple’s crowd-pleasing mix of Zen Buddhism and fly-kick combat.
[Religion]
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Hallyu Marketing Attracts Japanese Tourists to Seoul
By Bae Ji-sook
Staff Reporter
At 7 p.m. on Dec. 22 at the Grand Hilton Hotel in Seoul, rooms were filled with round tables where people, mostly women, sat and waited.
Soon, they began cheering ? TV actor and singer Kim Jung-hoon appeared with a smile and talked to his ``fans.’’
At a fan meeting dubbed ``Sweet X-Mas with Kim Jung-hoon,’’ Kim, who already has a steady fan base with hit drama Gung and his elite image as a top Seoul National University student, greeted more than 300 fans.
[Hallyu]
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DECEMBER 2008
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South Korea Expects 400,000 Chinese, Japanese Tourists in January
With South Korean won’s value plummeting against those of neighboring countries, the nation expects a rush of 400,000 Chinese and Japanese tourists next month, a major holiday traffic time, Maeil Business News reported Saturday.
“As Korean won’s value decreased by 40 percent, South Korea has become a new popular destination for Chinese people,'' a Chinese tourism official was quoted as saying.
The most popular tour package by Chinese envisions a three-night-two-day schedule whose itineraries include major shopping areas in Seoul, including the well-known Myeongdong district.
Last year, Chinese visitors to South Korea totaled 1.07 million. In the first 11 months of this year, 1.08 million Chinese visited South Korea.
The number of Japanese tourists, who traditionally favor South Korea as one of their major travel destinations, reached 2.12 million in the first 11 months this year and is expected to grow further next year.
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North Korean leader's former home open to tourists
A childhood picture of Kim Jong Il, second from left, along with childhood friends and a Soviet playmate is displayed Tuesday, Nov. 11, 2008 on a wall outside the villa at Hwajinpo Beach, South Korea near the heavily fortified Korean border where late North Korean founder Kim Il Sung spent his summer holidays with his family before it fell into South Korean hands following the 1950-53 Korean War. The letters read " Kim Jong Il". (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon) (Ahn Young-joon - AP)
A scratched childhood picture of Kim Jong Il, second from left, along with childhood friends and a Soviet playmate is displayed Tuesday, Nov. 11, 2008 on a wall outside the villa at Hwajinpo Beach, South Korea near the heavily fortified Korean border where late North Korean founder Kim Il Sung spent his summer holidays with his family before it fell into South Korean hands following the 1950-53 Korean War. The letters read " Kim Jong Il". (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon) (Ahn Young-joon - AP)
By HYUNG-JIN KIM
The Associated Press
Sunday, December 21, 2008; 12:18 PM
HWAJINPO BEACH, South Korea -- This small stone villa perched among fragrant pine trees is about as close as most people can get to North Korea, in more than one way. It is only a few miles away from the border, and it was the childhood home of the boy who grew up to become the leader of the North.
Kim Jong Il was 6 years old when his father, North Korea founder Kim Il Sung, took ownership of the house known as "The Castle" near scenic Hwajinpo Beach. When the Korean War ended in 1953, the border between the Koreas was redrawn, and the villa wound up in the South.
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Koryo Tours newsletter
December edition of our newsletter is now online
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Korea-Unique Tourism Plan Unveiled
Vice Culture Minister Kim Jang-sil
By Kim Rahn
Staff Reporter
Royal palaces will be more open to visitors and tour programs involving traditional and eastern religious cultures will be developed in a government effort to develop more ``Korean-style'' tourist programs.
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Weak Won Lures Tourists to Korea
The record-weak won is helping improve the current account balance by inducing foreign tourists to visit at a time when the economy needs all the help it can get.
The won plunged to a record W1,595 against 100 yen on Friday, a spectacular fall from the W840 around the same time last year. Against the dollar, the won has lost a staggering 60 percent since last year.
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N. Korea Loses to US in U20 Women's World Cup Final
North Korea has failed to capture its second consecutive under-20 women's World Cup title after losing 2-1 to the United States in the final, according to Yonhap News.
North Korea's Cha Hu-nam scored in injury time, but the goal came too late to squash the lead the United States built after Alex Morgan and Sydney Leroux scored at the Estadio Municipal de La Florida stadium in Santiago, Chile.
North Korea, the 2006 debutants and champions, had advanced to the final by beating both Japan and France 2-1 successively. Cha knocked home a volley shot in the 92nd minute, but no further effort materialized against the United States, the 2002 champions.
North Korea is a powerhouse in women's football. The reclusive country became regional champions in the Asian Cup tournament in June, and the country also won the under-19 AFC tournament last year.
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3 Million Begin Hajj Pilgrimage
Associated Press
Sunday, December 7, 2008; Page A23
MINA, Saudi Arabia, Dec. 6 -- Nearly 3 million pilgrims chanting prayers converged Saturday in a valley just outside the holy city of Mecca at the beginning of the five-day hajj pilgrimage, a lifelong dream for many Muslims.
The pilgrims, from about 100 countries, left Mecca after completing the first ritual of the hajj by circling the sacred Kaaba structure seven times inside the Grand Mosque, which Muslims across the world face during their five daily prayers.
Pilgrims in white robes piled into and on top of buses on their way to a ritual of prayer and reflection in Mina, three miles east of Mecca.
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Saudis step up security in run-up for Hajj
By Abeer Allam in Mecca
Published: December 5 2008 16:39 | Last updated: December 5 2008 16:39
More than two and a half million Muslim pilgrims will begin moving to tents on Mount Arafat east of the holy city of Mecca this weekend to perform rituals that mark the climax of the annual Hajj.
Amid tight security, worshippers from all over the world, dressed mostly in white, will spend Sunday praying, meditating and asking for forgiveness on or near Arafat, where the Prophet Mohammed gave his last sermon to pilgrims in 632.
As the world’s largest annual religious gathering, the Hajj poses immense logistic, health and security challenges for the Saudi government. With pilgrims coming from so many countries and speaking so many different languages while performing the rituals in a confined space within a tight timeframe, deadly accidents such as fires or stampedes are serious risks.
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DPRK Soccer Team Advances into Finals
Pyongyang, December 5 (KCNA) -- The DPRK football team advanced into the finals of the 2008 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup held in Chile.
The DPRK team defeated its French rival 2-1 in the semi-finals on Dec. 4 to meet with its U.S. rival in the finals.
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North Korean Women Reach U20 World Cup
By Yoon Chul
Staff Reporter
Defending champion North Korea has clinched a place in the International Federation of Association Football (FIFA) U-20 Women's World Cup final after defeating France 2-1 in Temuco, Chile, Thursday.
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Hyundai Asan Asks Gov't for Help
Hyundai Asan, the operator of package tours to North Korea, has asked the government to normalize inter-Korean relations and to give urgent financial support to businesses operating in the North.
Hyundai Asan on Wednesday said it submitted a petition to the Unification Ministry the previous day "urging the government to take a bold, epoch-making measure for the swift normalization of inter-Korean relations." The petition was signed by all Hyundai Asan staff.
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N. Korea Reaches Women's U20 World Cup Final
Ri Ye-gyong Thursday scored in injury time to help North Korea overturn France 2-1 and secure a berth in the final of the women's under-20 World Cup, Yonhap News reported.
The defending North Korean champions lost a goal early in the second half when France's Nora Coton-Pelagie netted the ball just six minutes in. North Korea leveled the score in the 68th minute when Ri Un-hyang powered in a header, and Ri Ye-gyong sealed the deal three minutes into injury time by blasting a goal off her right foot for a long-range cross from the midfield, FIFA said on its Web site.
The victory in Santiago, Chile, will pit North Korea against the United States at the Estadio Municipal de La Florida stadium in Santiago for the final Monday.
North Korea is a powerhouse in women's football. They became regional champions in the Asian Cup tournament in June, and the country also won the under-19 AFC tournament last year.
Sixteen nations have competed in the biennial under-20 women's World Cup. North Korea won the 2006 title in 2006.
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U.S. vs. North Korea, Redux
By Jack Bell
Perhaps it has something to do with the air in the Southern Hemisphere. Or maybe it is the approach of summer on the opposite end of the globe. Then again, perhaps 60 years of enmity between the two countries can never be discounted.
Whatever the reasons, a United States women’s national team will be playing a team from North Korea for a global title for the second time in less than one month.
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Hyundai Asan seeks resumption of Mount Geumgang tours
Seoul needs to shift its thinking to resolve the impasse in inter-Korean relations, and tour resumption could be the first step: Hyundai CEO
Hyundai Asan CEO Cho Kun-sik urged the government to make a priority of the unconditional resumption of Mount Geumgang (Kumgang) tourism to prevent further deterioration of inter-Korean relations and resume dialogue.
In an interview Tuesday evening with The Hankyoreh, Cho said, “Currently, not only Hyundai’s inter-Korean economic cooperation projects but all inter-Korean relations are in an overall state of crisis, and as such there need to be historic and bold measures from the government to find a solution.” This means that because it was Seoul that declared a halt to Mount Geumgang tourism in the first place, it needs to “shift its way of thinking” to make a breakthrough in the improvement of overall North-South relations by first expressing its intent to resume [tourism] unconditionally as a solution to the problem it created itself.
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DPRK Soccer Team Beats Japanese Rival
Pyongyang, December 2 (KCNA) -- The DPRK team beat its Japanese rival 2-1 in the quarterfinals of the 2008 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup held in Chile on Dec. 1, advancing into the semi-finals
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Tourism under siege in Bangkok and Mumbai
By David Beirman | Dec 01, 2008
Terrorists in Mumbai and political activists in Thailand have both made it clear that if there is a sure way to publicize a cause--target tourists or tourism. The murderous attack in Mumbai which simultaneously targeted Indian civilians, Western tourists and Jews, traditional enemies of Islamonazis was guaranteed blanket global publication because of the fact that two of its prime targets , the Taj Mahal and the Oberoi hotels are high profile hotels popular with tourists from Western countries. On a very different level the largely non-violent occupation of Bangkok’s international airport by Thai anti-government protesters propelled an essentially internal political protest movement into a global issue because its actions closed one of the world’s busiest airports.
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Opening the Door to Mainland Tourists
Mainland Chinese tourists take in the sights at Sun Moon Lake, one of Taiwan's most popular scenic spots. (Courtesy of Taiwan Panorama)
Publication Date:12/01/2008
Byline:JIM HWANG
After a nearly six-decade hiatus, visitors from mainland China are finally getting a chance to know Taiwan.
The morning of July 4 saw the landing at Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport of flight CZ3079, a China Southern Airlines chartered aircraft carrying about 100 passengers from Guangzhou, mainland China. Later that day, five more charter flights carrying passengers from four other mainland Chinese cities landed in Taoyuan and at Songshan Airport in Taipei. These 752 passengers, including tourists, 60 journalists and 31 officials, were led by Shao Qiwei, director of both mainland China's National Tourism Bureau and its Cross-Strait Tourism Association. They were the first batch of mainland Chinese nationals to land in Taiwan via a direct flight in nearly six decades.
[Straits]
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NOVEMBER 2008
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Hyundai Asan Reeling as N.Korea Halts Kaesong Tours
Hyundai Asan is in shock after North Korea announced it is stopping package tours to the city of Kaesong from Dec. 1. That means all tourism to North Korea stops for the first time in 10 years. The fatal shooting of a South Korean tourist in July already forced the company to halt tours to Mt. Kumgang.
Hyundai Asan will cancel all reservations for December but will run the tourist business as usual until the end of November. The tours to Kaesong, which began in December 2007, had already attracted a total of 109,000 tourists as of last Sunday, with 4,200 people booked for next month. Places to Kaesong have been fully booked until the end of November. The price for the Kaesong tour is W188,000 per person, of which North Korea takes US$100 per person. Due to the weak won, Hyundai Asan has sustained substantial losses.
[Spin]
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Myths and Realities of Chinese
Tourists to Canada
Kenny Zhang
Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada
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In Mongolia, sex tourism by S. Korean males leads to anti-Korean sentiment
With Korean men contributing to growth of industry, the damage to Korea’s image has increased
» In the photo on the left, Korean tourists enter a karaoke bar in Ulan Bator, Mongolia, on June 18. On the right, another karaoke bar in the Mongolian capital has put the Korean national flag on its signboard. The number of Korean men traveling to Mongolia as sex tourists has continued to increase, resulting in a corresponding rise in anti-Korean sentiment.
South Koreans’ sex tourism to Mongolia remains widespread. According to an investigative report by The Hankyoreh, Mongolians accused South Korean tourists of spawning a culture of buying sex in their country. In 2002, a South Korean opened the first karaoke bar in Mongolia’s capital city of Ulan Bator and most karaoke bars in Mongolia are owned by South Koreans. The number of karaoke bars in Mongolia has increased to include some 50 bars.
To avoid the crackdown, prostitution has spread to horseback-riding schools, massage parlours and others. An official at a Mongolian horseback-riding school, which is only identified by the letter “G” and is located an hour’s drive from the city center, said, “When (men who are here as sex tourists) arrive at the airport, they are escorted here. Local women arrive here in a different van. When they move off to the grassland, (the women) are accompanied by the men.”
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DPRK Girls Football Team Returns Home
Pyongyang, November 21 (KCNA) -- The DPRK girls football team, winner of the FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup New Zealand 2008, returned home on Friday.
It was greeted at the airport by Kim Jung Rin, secretary of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea, and Kwak Pom Gi, vice-premier of the DPRK Cabinet, and others.
Sportspersons and working people presented the players with garlands and bouquets and congratulated them who encouraged the servicepersons and people in the DPRK waging an all-out charge for the building of a great prosperous powerful nation after glorifying the 60th anniversary of the DPRK as a grand festival of victors.
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More Publicity Essential for Medical Tourism
Participants take part in the 3rd International Medical Travel Conference at the COEX InterContinental Hotel in Seoul, Thursday. The Korea Tourism Organization (KTO) and Korea Health Industry Development Institute (KHIDI) are co-hosting the annual event to attract more medical tourists from overseas. / Courtesy of KTO
By Kim Rahn
Staff Reporter
The increase in international recognition of Korea's medical skills is essential to the attraction of more medical tourists, a survey showed Thursday.
Korea Tourism Organization (KTO) and Korea Health Industry Development Institute (KHIDI) announced the interim result of their survey regarding medical travel in Asia and Korea during the International Medical Travel Conference, held in Seoul from Wednesday through Friday.
The research was conducted on foreigners who had visited or planned to visit Korea or other Asian nations on medical tours. The final result will come at the end of this year. The survey showed medical tour visitors put more weight on the quality of hospital staff, reliability of institutions and cost savings than the condition of facilities and equipment.
The surveyed showed 75.8 percent of medical tourists in Asia mainly came for medical skin care when multiple answers were allowed, followed by Oriental medicine and health checkups.
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Tours of Mt. Kumgang Resume Since Shooting Incident
The government on Monday allowed the first tour of Mt. Kumgang since the shooting death of a South Korean tourist last July.
A government official said the government approved four officials from the Briquette Distribution Movement for Warm Korean Peninsula, an organization donating 50,000 briquettes to North Korea, for the trip to the North’s mountain area on Tuesday, which marks the 10th anniversary of the launch of Mt. Kumgang tours by Hyundai Asan.
The government has banned tours of the Mt. Kumgang area for safety reasons since the shooting incident in July.
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Mount Geumgang tour project marks 10-year anniversary
Symbolic occasion passes amid doubts about the future of the project and inter-Korean relations
On November 18, 1998, the deluxe cruise ship Kumgang departed from the South Korean port of Donghae and set sail for the first cruise to Mount Geumgang (Kumgang), on North Korea’s eastern coast. After some 50 years of separation, exchanges between the South and the North had been initiated. A decade later, the tourism project to Mount Geumgang has reached a milestone in inter-Korean relations, despite the ups and downs. However, the project is currently facing a more tremendous challenge than ever.
The Mount Geumgang tour program was one of the most prominent byproducts of the South’s sunshine policy of engagement with the North.
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North Korea Wins U-17 Title Game
By Bryan Kay
Staff Reporter
It's a victory likely to spark triumphant scenes in Pyongyang, as much for against whom it was achieved as for the result itself.
For North Korea's Under-17 Women's football team was crowned world champions in Auckland, New Zealand, Sunday - after overcoming the United States 2-1 in a grueling 120-minute final.
U.S. coach Kazbek Tami admitted the North Koreans proved tough opponents.
"They're a fantastic team and their recent record speaks for itself," he told the FIFA Web site. "To have won a World Cup at U-20s and now U-17s speaks volumes for them as a country and shows how good their youth programme must be.
"If those players progress and fulfil their potential, I see no reason why their senior team won't be every bit as great in the next few years."
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DPRK Girls' Football Team Emerges Winner in FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup
Pyongyang, November 16 (KCNA) -- The DPRK girls' football team Sunday beat its U.S. rival, the strongest team in the world, thus emerging a winner of the FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup New Zealand 2008.
The DPRK team surpassed its U.S. rival in the number of ball possession, corner kick and shooting of ball into the goal mouth throughout the finals.
The DPRK team snubbed its U.S. rival 2-1, winning the first title of the FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup New Zealand 2008.
- North Korea claim title in extra time
4:00AM Monday Nov 17, 2008
By Terry Maddaford
North Korea's amazing record in women's age-group soccer tournaments hit another high with their stunning extra time win in Fifa's Under-17 Women's World Cup at North Harbour Stadium yesterday.
Down by a goal after just 1m 42s - and that credited as an own goal - the Koreans needed almost 75 minutes to claw their way back to 1-1 and take the game into a tense period of extra time.
The winning goal, scored by substitute Jang Hyon Sun nine minutes after her introduction and eight minutes into the second period, sparked scenes of joy for the red-shirted players and their supporters.
It was a body-blow for the Americans who had gone into the match as slight favourites.
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Soccer: North Koreans overcome horror start to win under-17 World Cup
6:25PM Sunday Nov 16, 2008
North Korea fought back from a nightmare start to secure a 2-1 extra-time win over the United States in the women's under-17 soccer World Cup final in Auckland today.
A bizarre own goal from luckless Korean goalkeeper Hong Myong Hui opened the United States account after barely two minutes.
Defender Cloee Colohan's mammoth throw-in cleared all the players in the box before bouncing over Hong, whose despairing fingers scraped the ball as it dropped into the net.
Had she not touched the ball, the goal would have been disallowed as a goal cannot be scored directly from a throw-in.
North Korea battled back and although play was scrappy for much of the first half they looked the stronger team through the midfield.
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Editorial: Something special afoot in symbolic soccer finale
4:00AM Saturday Nov 15, 2008
Something special in sport and international relations will take place at North Harbour Stadium tomorrow afternoon. A team of schoolgirls from North Korea, a country which is an immediate past member of George W. Bush's "axis of evil", will play his United States under-17 girls' side in the Fifa World Cup final.
That a schoolgirl side from North Korea would be involved in the biggest sports event in New Zealand this weekend is peculiar in itself. We rarely see a visitor from the Hermit Kingdom. That these girls will find vocal support in the stands at Albany from local fans, resident here but formerly of South Korea, will speak volumes for sport's power to unify. It was on display in Christchurch during North Korea's victory over England midweek and a repeat must be on the cards from the Korean population on the North Shore and wider Auckland.
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Soccer: Coy Koreans square up to US
4:00AM Saturday Nov 15, 2008
By Craig Borley
It's one of those sporting moments the script writers couldn't have penned any better - the United States and North Korean women's under-17 soccer teams meeting in the World Cup final at Albany tomorrow.
The symbolic leaders of the free world, playing toe-to-toe against a communist nation America tagged as part of the "Axis of Evil".
But for the North Koreans, it's just about football. Or so the Weekend Herald understands. An attempt to talk to the squad at their Takapuna training yesterday proved difficult.
The US team has relatively short defenders, but tall strikers, three of the North Korean girls said through an interpreter.
"But if we do our best we will have an opportunity to win in the final."
But out on the training pitch their bashfulness melted away. If their discipline, soft touches and team unity are anything to go by, they will be a powerful force against the United States tomorrow.
So too will their fans - a score of whom are South Korean.
The two countries have a strained war-torn relationship, but at Thursday's Christchurch semifinal many of those cheering for the North Koreans were from South Korea.
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Medical Tourism: Surviving the Global Recession
Like many medical centers in Asia, Bangkok's Bumrungrad Hospital had big expectations for a global trend known as medical tourism. Administrators were especially eager to attract more patients from the U.S. (BusinessWeek.com, 3/17/08) keen on saving money by having hip replacements, cosmetic surgery, and other operations overseas. For years, some of Asia's premier hospitals have been popular destinations for U.S. patients who either lack health insurance or can't get coverage for certain procedures. And recently there have been signs that insurance companies might start actively encouraging this trend to save on costs.
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Medical Tourism &
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Women's Football Match between DPRK and Ghana Held
Pyongyang, October 30 (KCNA) -- A match between the DPRK team and the Ghanaian team belonging to Group B of group league matches of the FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup New Zealand 2008 was held on Oct. 29.
The heated seesaw match between the two teams ended in a 1-1 draw.
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OCTOBER 2008
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Tourism Deficit With US to Jump to $10 Billion
Korea has craved the United States to grant visa waivers for Korean tourists for years for reasons of convenience and status on the international stage.
According to a report by the Korea Tourism Organization, however, it will send tourism deficits with the U.S. skyrocketing.
``In 2007, our tourism deficit amounted to $10.1 billion, $4.6 billion of it from the United States,'' Joo Sang-yong, a KTO spokesman, said. ``The deficit is expected to balloon to $11 billion by 2011, three years after the U.S. visa waiver system is kicked in.
Joo said that this estimation was compiled before the current financial crisis hit, adding that outbound tourists would decrease until the economy is put back on track.
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Gaeseong Tourists to Top 100,000
Monday, October 6, 2008 08:18:46
The cumulative number of tourists that have traveled to North Korea’s border city of Gaeseong is likely to top 100-thousand in the middle of this month.
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Can Chinese Tourism Beat the Credit Crisis?
China's GDP has slowed, a sign the nation is feeling the effects of the global downturn. Now its tourism engine is sputtering, too
By Bruce Einhorn
Recent news from China might be causing jitters among tourism industry executives counting on a surge in business from China's newly wealthy travelers. With gross domestic product growth slowing to 9% for the third quarter, the slowest rate in five years, the Chinese economy is starting to feel the effects of the global downturn. At the same time, China's tourism engine is showing signs of slowing. The number of Chinese tourists traveling to many overseas destinations fell in August; Hong Kong retailers accustomed to big-spending visits by mainland tourists griped about disappointing sales during the week-long National Day holiday in early October; and casino operators in Macao, the former Portuguese colony that depends largely on Chinese tourists, saw revenues fall to $890 million in September, a 3.4% drop from the same period a year ago and a 28% drop from the previous month.
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Ladyhawke sings New Zealand's praises
New Zealand is the latest long-haul country to up the creative ante by enlisting the help of Ladyhawke to entice travellers
Andy Pietrasik guardian.co.uk, Wednesday October 22 2008 09.55 BST
Faced with the global credit crunch and rising airfares, long-haul countries are having to be more creative in their efforts to entice travellers. And that's especially true for destinations on the other side of the world. Last week, Australia dropped its prosaic "Where the bloody hell are you?" campaign for the more poetic "Come walkabout" promotional films by Moulin Rouge director Baz Luhrmann.
New Zealand - which this year has seen visitor numbers from the UK, its second-largest market, fall by four per cent – has gone the other way with its "What Do You Say UK?" campaign. This sees past visitors enthusing about their holiday adventures in New Zealand. But it is also relying on the help of its creative talent.
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Re-Branding Korean Tourism
Korea Has Religious, Spiritual Pilgrimage Destinations
This is the third in a series of articles highlighting ways of upgrading Korea’s image and brand from international ‘Nation Brand’ experts on the occasion of the 58th anniversary of The Korea Times, which falls on Nov. 1 ? ED.
Korea has an amazing amount of treasures that can interest and entertain international tourists, but they are still far too little-known around the world. Korea's tourism brand-image suffers from a very low profile, and we attract far fewer visitors every year than our potential should warrant.
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Mt.Kumgang Tours ‘to Resume for 10th Anniversary’
Tours to Mt. Kumgang, which have been halted since a South Korean tourist was shot dead in the North Korean resort, will resume by the end of this month or early next month, Unification Minister Kim Ha-joong said Monday. Early November marks 10 years since tours began.
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Gaeseong Visitors Top 100,000
The tourism business at the inter-Korean industrial complex is expected to reach a milestone in October. The cumulative number of tourists that have visited the Gaeseong Industrial Complex in North Korea is forecast to surpass the 100,000 mark this month.
South Korean tourists began visiting the industrial complex on Dec. 5, 2007. Since then up to 300 tourists have been visiting the area on a daily basis, according to Hyundai Asan. It is a unit of the Hyundai Group conglomerate that runs the tourism business there. Hyundai Asan reportedly pays the North Korean government $100 for every South Korean tourist.
The tourism business at Gaeseong reportedly did not suffer significant downturns even after the shooting death last July of a South Korean tourist at Mount Geumgang resort, which had been another popular tourism destination in North Korea.
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Asphalt designated for N. Korean runway diverted for use elsewhere
Unification Ministry failed to prevent asphalt donated by S. Korea for use at Samjiyon Airport
North Korea has either poorly used or diverted 9.3 billion won (US$8.6 million) worth of asphalt pitch given by South Korea to pave the landing strip at the Samjiyon Airport near Mount Baekdu, according to a report released August 25 by the Board of Audit and Inspection.
The pavement work that was done at Samjiyon was done haphazardly, and 2 billion won worth of asphalt was used elsewhere, and not for the Samjiyon Airport runway.
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Korea Least Attractive Tourist Spot
By Kang Hyun-kyung
Staff Reporter
Korea is one of the least attractive countries for tourism, but the average five-star hotel rate is one of the highest among Asian countries, Rep. Choi Gu-sik of the Grand National Party (GNP) said Tuesday.
Korea ranked seventh among eight Asian countries in the ranking of attractive tourist spots, according to an opinion survey conducted by the Korea Tourism Organization.
In the poll of 7,000 foreigners aged between 18 and 64 who are familiar with the country, Japan ranked first, Singapore and Thailand joint second, followed by Hong Kong, China and Malaysia.
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SEPTEMBER 2008
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Visit Korea 2010-2012 Committee Launched
A private committee to promote Visit Korea 2010-2012 was launched with the aim of attracting more foreign tourists on the occasion of the Yeosu Exposition to be held in 2012 in the southwestern city.
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South Korea Draws With North Side
South Korean midfielder Ki Sung-yueng, above, scores the equalizer during a match in Shanghai, China against North Korea in the final phase of the qualifying tournament for the 2010 World Cup, Wedneday. / Yonhap
By Kang Seung-woo
Staff Reporter
In the almost-empty Hongkou Stadium in Shanghai, China due to ``host'' North Korea's ``malicious'' high-price ticket tactic, South Korea drew 1-1 with the North in its opening match in the final qualifying rounds for the 2010 World Cup, Wednesday.
Huh Jung-moo's side conceded the lead on a penalty to its Northern neighbors in the second half, but Ki Sung-yueng equalized six minutes later.
With the tie, the two Koreas have drawn in all four of this year's meetings _ two others in the World Cup preliminary qualifiers and one in the East Asian Championship.
Adding one point to its tally, the North leads Group B with four points, while the South has one.
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AUGUST 2008
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DPRK Delegation and Players' Group Back from Olympic Games
Pyongyang, August 26 (KCNA) -- The delegation of the Olympic Committee and players' group of the DPRK led by Pak Hak Son, chairman of the Physical Culture and Sports Guidance Commission, flew back home today after participating in the 29th Olympic Games held in China.
The DPRK players bagged two gold medals, one silver medal and three bronze medals in the games.
They were met at the airport by Kim Jung Rin, secretary of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea, Kwak Pom Gi, vice-premier of the DPRK Cabinet, and others.
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Pyongyang Suggests Cross-Border Car Race
With a permission from North Korean leader Kim Jong-il, the North Korean authorities have suggested an inter-Korean version of the "Gumball Rally," a global car race, Radio Free Asia reported on Tuesday. According to RFA, Maximilian Cooper, the organizer of the Gumball Rally, has already begun preparations for a car race that will start in North Korea, cross the DMZ and travel across South Korea, and will consult with the South Korean government soon.
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DPRK Player Wins Gold Medal at Olympiad
Pyongyang, August 18 (KCNA) -- DPRK player Hong Un Jong bagged a gold medal in the vaulting horse contest of women's gymnastics in the 29th Olympic Games now underway in China.
In the final competition held on Aug. 17 Hong made flawless performance requiring high technique from the start by turning herself 900 degrees backward in the air, turning herself 540 degrees frontward in the air and conducting accurate standing.
She scored 15.650, the biggest points, placing first in the competition.
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US Olympic team eyes state help
By Roger Blitz in Beijing
Published: August 13 2008 20:07 | Last updated: August 13 2008 23:06
As the US Olympic team contemplates the abrupt loss of its longstanding dominance of the medals table to its Chinese hosts, American officials are looking at asking the federal government for money to make sure it never happens again.
In what has the potential to become a sporting version of the cold war, China has poured millions into its state sports system to produce medal winners at the Beijing Games, and the US is positioning itself to retaliate.
The US team, which gets no money from Washington, relies on only $150m a year from sponsors, fundraising and a share of revenues from the International Olympic Committee.
As a result, China has opened up such a comfortable lead over the US in the race for gold medals that it is poised to top the tally of overall medals for the first time, a position the US has held for 16 of the 24 Games in which it has competed.
[China competition]
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DPRK Weightlifter Wins Gold Medal
Pyongyang, August 13 (KCNA) -- DPRK weightlifter Pak Hyon Suk won a gold medal at the weightlifting competition of the 29th Olympic Games now under way in China.
She lifted 241kg total with 106kg in snatch and 135kg in jerk by making a quick jerk and a brilliant show of strength. She thus came first in the 63kg category final competition held on Tuesday.
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Summer Games Medals
DPRK equal 9th with Britain
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Gumball drivers set to enter NK tomorrow
August 12, 2008
More than a hundred participants in Gumball 3000, an annual international rally where luxury car owners join to drive around the world, are expected to visit hardly luxurious North Korea tomorrow.
Participants, who started their eight-day trip at San Francisco last Saturday, are expected to spend a night in Pyongyang on Wednesday before going on to China to watch the 2008 Beijing Olympics.
“All participants will get to experience an unprecedented one night in North Korea as part of a global ‘friendship’ initiative, getting to watch the Mass Games (their version of the Olympics) en route to rejoin their cars in Nanjing,” the rally organizer said in its official Web site (http://www.gumball3000.ro).
Owners of 120 cars including Ferraris, Porsches, Corvettes, Range Rovers, Bugattis, Lamborghinis, low riders and electric cars kicked off their 4,830-kilometer (3,000-mile) journey through San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Diego and Las Vegas. Each participant paid $120,000 to take part in the 10th anniversary rally, which will cover Hangzhou, Shanghai and Xuzhou in China before reaching the final destination, Beijing.
“Fueled by adrenaline, amusement and amity, the 2008 route from the West to the East, including the city of Pyongyang, North Korea, will be a real once-in-a-lifetime adventure,” Maximillion Copper, Gumball founder, said in a statement.
This year’s entrants include actor David Hasselhoff driving KITT from his 1980s “Knight Rider” television series.
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Fair travel’ - making tourism moral
August 11, 2008
Much like the "fair trade" social movement, which promotes social consciousness in the consumer arena, the new concept of "fair travel" is now pushing tourists to take responsibility for their leisure trips.
The new campaign aims to build healthy relationships between travelers and people living in the countries they visit, focusing on morally responsible tourism, beyond simple enjoyment - it is also called "moral" or "sustainable" travel.
Seo Jeong-gi, 30, a graduate student at Yonsei University, was one of those practicing fair travel recently.
During his trip in mid-June to Dharamsala, India, which hosts the Tibetan government in exile, Seo chose to stay at an inn run by locals and patronized smaller restaurants instead of large resort hotels or fast-food restaurant chains.
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Samaranch Says Seoul Olympics Changed Korea
By Sunny Lee
Korea Times Correspondent
BEIJING ? Juan Antonio Samaranch, the honorary president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), doesn't know whether Korea will finish in the top 10 in the gold medal count in the Beijing Olympics, but he's hopeful that Korea will do very well.
``I don't know about the Korea's expected ranking. But I am sure Korea will do very well,'' Samaranch told The Korea Times on the sidelines of the opening ceremony of the Korea press center for the Beijing Olympics, also known as the ``Korea House.''
Samaranch was the president of the IOC during the 1988 Seoul Olympics. ``I remember very well the immense success of the Olympic Games in 1988,'' he said in a speech at the ceremony, adding ``I will never forget all the good memories I had in Korea.''
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Kaesong tours to get 10,000 won hike
August 09, 2008
Tourists visiting Kaesong, North Korea, will have to pay an extra 10,000 won ($9.73) starting September. According to the Hyundai Group yesterday, Hyundai Asan has decided to raise its adult weekday tour package price.
Prices for students and children will stay the same, along with weekend prices for all tourists. Weekday prices in September for adults will be raised to 188,000 won from the present 178,000 won. Students (primary, middle and high school) pay 170,000 won. Weekday prices for children and infants are 150,000 won and 120,000 won, respectively.
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Asan Pays N.Korea for July Tours
Despite stalemate over the shooting death of a South Korean tourist at North Korea's Mt. Kumgang, tour operator Hyundai Asan made its July payment for tours to North Korea.
Asan said Thursday it paid US$675,250 to North Korea to cover costs accrued by 10,380 South Korean tourists who visited the mountain resort on July 1-11, until the tours halted after a South Korean tourist was shot and killed by a North Korean soldier at Mt. Kumgang.
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North Korea beats Nigeria 1-0 in opener
By TALES AZZONI
The Associated Press
Wednesday, August 6, 2008; 9:39 PM
SHENYANG, China -- North Korea beat Nigeria 1-0 in women's soccer Wednesday, getting a 27-minute goal from Kim Kyong Hwa on the opening day of Olympic competition.
The victory puts North Korea atop Group F after title contenders Germany and Brazil drew 0-0 in the first match of the day at Shenyang Olympic Stadium. The North Koreans have three points, while Germany and Brazil have one each and Nigeria none.
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No talks as Hyundai Asan chief returns home
August 06, 2008
Hyundai Asan Chief Executive Officer Yoon Man-joon returned from the North yesterday afternoon after no discussions with North Korean officials on how to resolve the Mount Kumgang shooting case.
The crucial inter-Korean tourism project is facing an increasingly uncertain future nearly a month after a South Korean tourist was shot dead by a North Korean soldier at the North’s scenic mountain resort.
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N.Korea Pins Olympic Hopes on Women
Since the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, North Korea has failed to win a single gold medal in the games and is therefore eagerly hoping for a change of fortunes in Beijing, pinning its highest hopes on judo heroine Kye Sun-hui and the women's football team.
Kye, at dinner in a North Korean restaurant near the country’s embassy in Bejiing some time ago, was quoted by a waiter as saying she was confident she can win gold. She reportedly made the remarks when she ordered ox tail soup after eating a large quantity of steak tartar and raw fish.
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N. Korea Threatens to Expel S. Koreans From Resort
By CHOE SANG-HUN
Published: August 4, 2008
SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea threatened on Sunday to expel South Korean businesspeople from a joint tourist resort, escalating a standoff over the shooting death of a South Korean homemaker visiting a tourism zone.
South Korean visits to the Kumgang Mountain resort, at the southeastern corner of North Korea, had already been suspended since July 11 when North Korean soldiers shot and killed a 53-year-old South Korean woman who strayed off the resort enclave and entered a restricted military zone.
About 300 South Korean tourism officials and business people remain there, most of them affiliated with Hyundai-Asan, a Seoul-based company that operates the resort together with the North Korean government.
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Korea Still Hopes for Joint March in Beijing
Korean Olympic Committee (KOC) President Lee Yeon-taek still hopes for a joint march with North Korea at the Beijing Olympics.
/ Yonhap
By Kang Seung-woo
Staff Reporter
Korean Olympic Committee President Lee Yeon-taek said Friday that he still has hope that the two Koreas will march together at the opening and closing ceremonies of the Beijing Summer Olympics.
``I will strive to get them marching together,'' Lee said before leaving for China with South Korea's main 56-member Olympic delegation at Incheon International Airport in the morning.
The team comprised 25 athletes from weightlifting, gymnastics, cycling and rowing and 31 officials.
Since the 2000 Sydney Olympics, the two Koreas have marched together in eight international competitions, including the 2004 Athens Olympics and the 2006 Doha Asiad.
Bilateral ties, however, have been worsening since conservative President Lee Myung-bak took office in South Korea in February.
[SK NK policy]
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JULY 2008
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Koreans Spend Much More Abroad Than Japanese
Compared with the Japanese, Koreans spend excessively when they travel overseas given their income level, and this adversely affects the service and current account balance. The Bank of Korea on Tuesday released a comparative analysis of the current-account progress of Korea and Japan, showing that Koreans spent US$20.9 billion, or 2.2 percent of the GDP, on overseas travel, which is 3.7 times more in terms of percentage than what Japanese tourists spent, namely $26.4 billion, or only 0.6 percent of GDP
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Tourist Numbers to Kaesong Dwindle
The number of South Korean tourists to the North Korean border city of Kaesong has plunged following the fatal shooting of a tourist at the North's Mt. Kumgang resort. Tour operator Hyundai Asan says Kaesong tour reservations fell from 14,455 to 12,065 during the 11 days from July 10, when Park Wang-ja was killed, and last Monday. Cancellations were 16.6 percent, far above the usual 2 percent. Reservations for next month stood at 13,991 on July 10, falling to 13,366 as of last Monday with 625 or 4.5 percent cancellations. In the 10 days since the incident, more than 3,000 people canceled Kaesong tours.
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N. Korea to Send Olympic Cheering Squad to China
North Korea's cheering squad is expected to arrive in Shenyang, China, Monday to support its national team in the Beijing Olympic Games, which will open Aug. 8, Yonhap News reported quoting sources in China Sunday.
"North Korean Olympic supporters are due in Shenyang by train on July 28," one of the sources said, adding that they are mostly women and they will number between 180 and 200.
The cheering squad will visit Beijing and Tianjin to cheer for North Korea's teams during the 2008 Olympic Games, which will continue through Aug. 24. They will be joined by ethnic Koreans living in China, Yonhap said.
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N. Korea has high expectations for Olympic success
Exchange of articles between Hankyoreh and N. Korea’s Tongil Sinbo produces interview with N. Korean sports director
The Hankyoreh Shinmun received from the North Korean news publication Tongil Sinbo a news article and photographs about the North’s preparations for the Beijing Olympics in what is the first such exchange of articles since the two publications signed an exchange agreement in May. It is also the first agreement of its kind between news media organizations in North and South Korea.
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Koryo Quarterly – August 2008
As before the big news though in terms of tourism in DPRK is the Mass Games event – this year for the first time two different performances have been arranged with the classic Arirang show being performed on Mon, Wed, Fri and Sat, and the brand new, not-yet-seen (even by the critics!) Prosper the Motherland! taking place on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Both of these shows feature the full complement of 100,000 performers in the May Day Stadium and both will run to approx 90 minutes offering anyone who s there the chance to witness what is simply the greatest show on Earth, some information on the events can be found here. The Olympics will pale in comparison… a double dose of Mass Games will undoubtedly be vastly superior to the sight of amateur athletes running around in circles and throwing things!
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English suburbia in the clouds
By Claire Wrathall
Published: July 25 2008 22:03 | Last updated: July 25 2008 22:03
Bound for the Himalayas in search of medicinal herbs needed to save the wounded Lord Rama, the flying monkey god Hanuman paused on Jakhu Hill to rest.
The precise location is a detail omitted in the great Sanskrit epic Ramayana but a gaudy temple marks the spot where Hanuman is said to have alighted and a troop of handsome monkeys – reddish-gray rhesus macaques the size of cats – is usually in attendance.
At 2,455m, Jakhu is the highest of the seven hills on which Shimla was built (a 2km path rises steeply to its crest from just behind the town’s imposing Anglican church), and the best vantage point from which to survey the town and the sublime mountainscape that surrounds it. The air is cool and aromatic, especially after the stifling heat of Delhi. You can see why Hanuman might have thought to stop here. Indeed, you can see why the British Raj chose this as the site of its summer capital and would move its government here en masse from April till October, when the temperature can be up to 20°C cooler than Delhi.
Shimla is the capital of Himachal Pradesh, the state that markets itself as “the land of gods” but it is equally a land of monkeys
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China's Olympic Nightmare
What the Games Mean for Beijing's Future
Elizabeth C. Economy and Adam Segal
From Foreign Affairs, July/August 2008
On the night of July 13, 2001, tens of thousands of people poured into Tiananmen Square to celebrate the International Olympic Committee's decision to award the 2008 Olympic Games to Beijing. Firecrackers exploded, flags flew high, and cars honked wildly. It was a moment to be savored. Chinese President Jiang Zemin and other leaders exhorted the crowds to work together to prepare for the Olympics. "Winning the host rights means winning the respect, trust, and favor of the international community," Wang Wei, a senior Beijing Olympic official, proclaimed. The official Xinhua News Agency reveled in the moment, calling the decision "another milestone in China's rising international status and a historical event in the great renaissance of the Chinese nation."
[China confrontation]
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Over 60 Sportsmen and Sportswomen of DPRK Will Go to Beijing
Pyongyang, July 23 (KCNA) -- The 29th Olympic Games is scheduled in China next month.
@Jong Hae Man, vice-chairman of the Sports Subcommittee of the DPRK Olympic Committee, told KCNA that more than 60 sportsmen and sportswomen of the country will compete in over 10 events at the Olympics.
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Incredible (for) India…
Jul 20, 2008
The Incredible India campaign has taken off for the country making the tourism sector witness huge buoyancy in recent times. The marketing strategy has helped India achieve unprecedented growth in terms of both volume and value.
Foreign tourists arrivals to the country have grown at a cumulative annual growth rate of 15.86 percent touching almost 4.2 million in 2007, an increase of 12.4 percent compared to 2006. Foreign exchange earnings from tourism registered a cumulative annual growth rate of 30.97 percent in the same period with figures for 2007 closing at $ 11.956 billion – an impressive spike of 33.8 percent over 2006. Domestic tourism continues to surge, showing more than encouraging trends with tourist visits over 461 million in 2006. By 2010, with the Commonwealth Games to be held in New Delhi, India expects to hosts 10 M tourists.
Everything seems perfect. The problem: lack of rooms.
“But there is no decline in corruption in India. The downside to all progress – the power of the bureaucrats has become less too. We have corruption – but the efficient kind,” Bhalla said, comparing theirs with inefficient corruption in Russia, Vietnam and China.
[Tourism] [China India comparison] [Corruption]
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Temple Serenity Is a Storming Success
Foreign participants in a temple stay program at Geumsansa Temple in Gimje, North Jeolla Province take a walk in the woods. /Courtesy of the Jogye Order of Korean Buddhism
Summer is a season of temple retreats, which give you a chance to refresh your body and soul, reflect and find the inner light. The temple stay program was first introduced in 2002, targeting foreign visitors for the 2002 World Cup, and has become one of the most popular cultural activities in Korea. In a survey by the Korea Tourism Organization in 2005 of 2,300 French people, 79 percent said they would like to experience a temple retreat. The program was recently named Best Korean Developer of Seoul Tour Program in the 2008 Seoul Tourism Awards by the Seoul Metropolitan Government.
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Why global tourism campaigns do not travel
By Michael Skapinker
Published: July 21 2008 18:12 | Last updated: July 21 2008 18:12
"So where the bloody hell are you?" One of the advertising world’s most derided taglines was formally buried this month when Tourism Australia appointed the DDB Worldwide agency to find a new way to entice visitors to the country.
You can still catch the old advertisement online with its school-play acting and excruciating lines ("We’ve been rehearsing for over 40,000 years," chirps an Aboriginal dancer).
The UK broadcasting authorities briefly banned the ad from television because of the "swearing", but even that publicity kick was not enough to redeem it. Kevin Rudd, Australia’s prime minister, has described the campaign as a "rolled gold disaster".
Even more successful was the Lord of the Rings film trilogy, said to have enticed thousands of tourists to New Zealand. Visitors increased by a healthy 5 to 6 per cent annually in the early years of this decade, after the release of the films. They leapt 10.4 per cent in 2005 before dropping slightly in 2006 and then rising by a mere 2.8 per cent last year.
Films do make a difference but, as we see in New Zealand’s case, it is not easy to sustain. In spite of the hype, it is also not clear how many people in fact come because of the movie.
People who visit a country purely because they have seen a film tend to be slightly unusual. One Tolkien- obsessed US visitor to New Zealand, jan howard finder ("all lower case, like e.e.cummings"), told The New York Times in 2004 that part of the joy of a Lord of the Rings trip was travelling with "15 other nut cases".
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Two Koreas to March 'Virtually' Together at Olympics
The Olympic teams from the two Koreas will effectively parade together at the Beijing Olympics opening ceremony on Aug. 8, although they have not formally agreed to do so, officials of the Chinese Foreign Ministry and the Beijing Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games said Sunday.
During the opening ceremony, teams will parade according to the stroke count of their names written in simplified Chinese characters. Thus "" ("Han") symbolizing South Korea and "?" ("Zhao") meaning North Korea have the same stroke count of 12, and the two characters have the same radical on their left-hand side. The radicals normally serve as classification indicators. As a result, the Olympic teams from the two Koreas are expected to parade one following on the heels of the other.
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Hyundai Asan Faces Punishment for Tourism Project
By Kim Sue-young
Staff Reporter
The government is considering punishing Hyundai Asan, the operator of the tour project to North Korea, if it is found to have violated the law, the Unification Ministry said.
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Thanks to Olympics, Beijing gets its Eiffel Tower, of sorts
By Tim Johnson | McClatchy Newspapers
BEIJING — London has Big Ben, Paris has the Eiffel Tower, San Francisco has the Golden Gate Bridge and now Beijing has an iconic structure that's likely to identify the city forever.(sic)
It's an audacious monolith that looks like two drunken high-rise towers leaning over and holding each other up at the shoulders.
The eye-catching building, which is nearly finished, will be the headquarters of China Central Television, the staid propaganda arm of China's ruling Communist Party, and it's perhaps the boldest and most daring of several new buildings that have given Beijing a stunning new appearance for the upcoming Summer Olympic Games.
In keeping with the playful nature of the new buildings, all have weird popular names. There's "the egg" and the "bird's nest." The "water cube" isn't far away, and lastly there's "short pants," also known as the "twisted doughnut."
The last of them is the new television building, the CCTV headquarters, and it can nearly make one dizzy standing on the ground and looking up at its odd, teetering 49-story towers connected by a multistory, cantilevered, jagged cross section over open space at a vertiginous 36 stories up in the air.
Designed by Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas, the building has been called an "angular marvel" and a "dazzling reinvention of the skyscraper."
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Gaeseong tours could be suspended
Without joint investigation into Geumgang shooting, S. Korea will get tough on North
The government will consider suspending tours to Gaeseong (Kaesong) if North Korea does not ensure the safety of South Korean tourists, referencing the recent shooting death of a female tourist from the South at Mount Geumgang (Kumgang).
Participants in a meeting of the National Security Council on July 18 presided over by President Lee Myung-bak agreed that poor safety measures taken by tour operator Hyundai Asan should be completely checked, according to presidential spokesperson Lee Dong-kwan. Hyundai Asan was very late in reporting on the incident and continued the tour even after the shooting occurred, the spokesman added. It was the first time that Lee has convened an NSC meeting since he took office.
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China’s will to win
By Mure Dickie
Published: July 18 2008 21:29 | Last updated: July 18 2008 21:29
She could not even swim. "When I first saw the boat, I was terrified," recalls Yang, who was 14 when she was recruited in 1997. "Coming from a village, I was scared by any deep water – and now I had to go out paddling in a boat." Yet in an illustration of the power of China’s state-directed sports system, Yang became a world-class kayaker.
[Olympics]
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Western Olympic Ads Cheerlead for China
Ryan Pyle for The New York Times
An Adidas campaign showing the Chinese masses supporting top athletes was honored at an international advertising festival.
By DAVID BARBOZA
Published: July 20, 2008
BEIJING — It is becoming increasingly clear which nation global corporations will be rooting for at this summer’s Olympics: China.
Or at least that’s what it looks like from advertisements here. McDonald’s is running a "Cheer for China" television ad. Nike ads feature China’s star hurdler, Liu Xiang, and other Chinese athletes besting foreign competitors. Earlier this year, Pepsi even painted its familiar blue cans red for a limited edition "Go Red for China" promotion.
The campaigns for Western companies are part of an advertising blitz the likes of which this ostensibly communist nation has never seen. Ads are papered over bus shelters, projected on giant outdoor television screens and plastered on billboards. Commercials even flicker at commuters as they zoom through subway tunnels.
China, already the world’s second-largest advertising market, after the United States, is a dream for consumer product companies. "For most international brands here, China is the growth market for the next 10 years," said Jonathan Chajet, strategic director at Interbrand, which consults on brands.
[IM] [Olympics]
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Beijing to Feel The Strain From Olympic Visitors
By REUTERS
Published: July 20, 2008
Filed at 3:23 a.m. ET
BEIJING (Reuters) - There is little doubt at ordinary Beijingers' enthusiasm for next month's Olympic Games.
But a whole series of problems that have proven tough to fix could give visitors an Olympic-sized headache, and may put many off coming altogether.
From rioting passengers angry at delayed flights to poor foreign language skills, Beijing's tourism infrastructure faces a huge challenge dealing with their guests -- the ones who have obtained hard-to-get visas, that is.
"The hardware will be there but the software will be lacking," said Paul French, chief China analyst at research firm Access Asia.
Beijing has always known it would have a big challenge on its hands, and started its preparations early, erecting more English signs, correcting the plethora of 'Chinglish' that dots the city, building new roads and expanding the subway network.
But a lot of the preparations are aimed at tour groups, which is traditionally how Chinese go on holiday, rather than individual tourists, the common preference of many foreign, especially Western, travelers.
[Olympics]
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Beijing opens new subway lines for Olympics
By Claro Cortes IV
Reuters
Saturday, July 19, 2008; 6:43 AM
BEIJING (Reuters) - Beijing opened two new subway lines on Saturday, delayed from a planned late-June start but just in time to carry passengers banned from their cars as the capital tries to clean up its skies before next month's Olympics.
Passenger service has yet to start, however, on a third line that will serve the Olympic Green and was the site of an opening ceremony and test ride for the media on Saturday morning.
An official with the Beijing subway operating company said it was not clear when the line would begin regular service.
The three new lines, which cost 22.3 billion yuan ($3.3 billion) to build and are part of massive infrastructure plans to ease transport during the Games, will increase the city's subway lines to eight and expand their reach by 40 percent to 200 km (125 miles).
Beijing has largely avoided the problems the last Olympic host, Athens, encountered with delayed infrastructure projects, and has won praise from the International Olympic Committee for finishing venue construction work either on time or ahead of schedule.
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Seoul Could Stop Tours to Kaesong
The government is reportedly considering a halt to package tours to the North Korean border city of Kaesong unless Pyongyang cooperates in an investigation of the fatal shooting of a South Korean tourist at Mt. Kumgang last week.
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North Korea's "Hotel of Doom" wakes from its coma
Thu Jul 17, 2008 3:56am EDT
By Jon Herskovitz
SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea's phantom hotel is stirring back to life. Once dubbed by Esquire magazine as "the worst building in the history of mankind", the 105-storey Ryugyong Hotel is back under construction after a 16-year lull in the capital of one of the world's most reclusive and destitute countries.
According to foreign residents in Pyongyang, Egypt's Orascom group has recently begun refurbishing the top floors of the three-sided pyramid-shaped hotel whose 330-metre (1,083 ft) frame dominates the Pyongyang skyline.
The firm has put glass panels into the concrete shell, installed telecommunications antennas -- even though the North forbids its citizens to own mobile phones -- and put up an artist's impression of what it will look like.
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At Royal Balinese Funeral, Bodies Burn and Souls Fly
Justin Mott for The New York Times
As a wooden bull burns, Balinese tradition says, the body within returns to earthly elements and its soul flies up in sparks.
By SETH MYDANS
Published: July 16, 2008
UBUD, Indonesia — In a roar of orange flame, the body of Agung Suyasa, head of the royal family of Ubud, was reduced to its earthly elements on Tuesday, liberating his soul to fly upward, in a spray of sparks, through the night sky to the heavens.
A procession of porters carried the coffin of a member of Bali’s ancient royal family to a platform for its final ride, this time around.
In the most spectacular royal funeral in Bali in at least three decades, the energy, mysticism and creativity of this Hindu island came together in the mass cremation of three royal figures and 68 commoners.
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The Missing Road: Clashing Visions of Development across the Russian-Chinese Border
Pál Nyíri and Joana Breidenbach
In 2004, we visited the Altai Republic, a remote mountainous region in Southern Siberia, bordering on Kazakhstan, Mongolia, and China. For some time, the republic had been supposedly involved in an international collaboration called “Altai: Our Common Home,” supported by the German government. The project focused on economic development, tourism, and — somewhat contradictorily — environmental protection. One of the plan's central elements was a road linking the Altai Republic and China: currently, traffic between them has to detour via Kazakhstan or Mongolia. By the end of 2004, a 140 km road on the Chinese side had been completed, but no progress had been made on the Russian side.
Xinjiang, on the Chinese side of the border, lies the Altay Kazakh Autonomous Prefecture, home to the Lake Khanas National Scenic Area. Like the Altai Republic, it is largely inhabited by a Turkic-speaking population. In recent years, Lake Khanas has become the most popular tourism destination in Xinjiang, and the Chinese government has favoured a road that would connect the lake to the Russian border at the Khanas Pass, facilitating cross-border tourism. Burqin County, where the lake lies, received nearly three-quarters of its income from tourism; its airport has more than 20 flights a day in peak season. The government renovated buildings in the county town's main street in a “European style,” developed a pedestrian shopping and entertainment street “in Russian style,” and a neighbourhood of “European-style villas.” The Chinese government declared Lake Khanas a nature reserve, and—ostensibly for environmental protection, but no doubt also not to disturb the investors—the nomadic Kazak and Mongol herder population has been resettled outside. All tourist accommodation is removed from the shore, and swimming in the lake is forbidden. Nearly two thousand private enterprises operate in Burqin County, and the government claims that locals’ incomes, which only a few years ago had to be supplemented by emergency food aid, had risen dramatically because of tourism-related services.
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Foreign Office urges caution as Kashmir tries to lure back tourists
Area out of bounds after kidnappings by insurgents
· Rafters and climbers among first to return
Maseeh Rahman in Delhi The Guardian, Tuesday July 15, 2008
Article history
Almost two decades after gunfire first echoed across the mountains of Kashmir, concerted efforts are being made to reintroduce adventure sport and tourism in the Himalayan territory.
Tomorrow the inaugural Kashmir Cup international rafting championship will begin on the Sindhu river in Sonamarg, 52 miles north-east of the capital, Srinagar.
Men and women from 11 international teams, including Ukraine and the Czech Republic, will participate.
"This is just the beginning," said Farooq Shah, director of Jammu & Kashmir Tourism, which is sponsoring the rafting event.
"Kashmir is the unexplored frontier of international adventure sport and tourism. There is tremendous scope for a variety of activities besides rafting - mountaineering, trekking, skiing, heli-skiing, trout fishing, high altitude golf."
[Separatism]
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Asan Strives to Recover From Shooting
By Kim Tong-hyung
Staff Reporter
The fatal shooting of a South Korean woman by a North Korean solider at the Mt. Geumgang resort has Hyundai Asan breathing heavily on the ropes as it struggles to keep its cross-border tourism business afloat.
The company has been criticized for what was exposed as its loose control of tourist activities following the death of 53-year-old Park Wang-ja, who is believed to have been shot after wandering into a military zone near her beachfront hotel.
With the government suspending tours to Mt. Geumgang indefinitely, depriving the company of its biggest revenue source momentarily, and the chances for a quick resolution looking faint, Hyundai Asan is enduring its darkest hours since former Chairman Chung Mong-hun leaped out of his 12th floor office window in 2003.
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Phone Call From China Transformed ’84 Games
By LYNN ZINSER
Published: July 14, 2008
The call he will never forget came for Peter Ueberroth in the middle of the night on May 12, 1984, over a crackling phone line from Beijing. It carried the news he believed would determine the fate of the Olympics, not just the Games he was working to organize in Los Angeles that summer but all the ones beyond.
At the other end of the line was Charles Lee, the man he had sent to persuade the Chinese to send their team to the Olympics for the first time. Ueberroth, the leader of the Los Angeles organizing committee, was asking China to defy a Soviet Union-led boycott that was announced four days earlier. The Soviets said the boycott would keep 100 countries away from the ’84 Games. If the Soviets succeeded, Ueberroth said flatly, “we were done.”
Salvation came when Lee called and told Ueberroth, “They’re coming.”
As the world prepares for the Beijing Games in August, that moment is all but lost in the history of the Olympics, when the winds shifted and carried the Games away from a political bludgeon in the cold war to the combination of athletic and commercial success they have become since.
Ueberroth, now 70 and the chairman of the United States Olympic Committee, will lead the American team into China with a deep sense of gratitude. He believes China saved the Olympics.
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Hyundai Asan to start tours of western side of Mt. Geumgang in June
Hyundai Asan Co., an affiliate of South Korean conglomerate Hyundai Group, said Wednesday it will begin tours of the western side of Mt. Geumgang on the eastern coast of North Korea in June.
The company has conducted tours of the mountain's eastern side, which faces the East Sea, since 1998 but the other side has been closed to outsiders so far for security reasons.
Hyundai Asan Chief Executive Officer Yoon Man-jun and North Korean tour officials reached an agreement Monday to start the tour program in June, the company said.
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China: Stirring Dragon, Leaping Numbers
The Chinese inbound travel and tourism industry has reason to be bullish.
UNWTO's 'World Tourism Barometer' for June reveals sustained strong interest in China (PRC) in 2007, with arrivals totalling 54.7 million pushing it to the fourth in the world rankings behind France, Spain and the US.
China's arrivals fell short of the US by less than 2 million arrivals. And from a revenue standpoint China received just under US$42 billion last year, not much less than that received by Italy (US$42.7 billion).
There's also reason for the rest of the world to be bullish about China.
Outbound travel from China has continued to grow in both volume and expenditure. Mainland travellers last year generated US$29.8 million as they moved around the globe.
In US$ terms, China now ranks 5th in the world in the travel expenditure rankings. Only 13 years ago, in 1995, the aggregate tourism expenditure by Chinese travellers was less than US$4 million.
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The Beijing Olympics in Keywords
A Beijing Olympics 10 yuan note, part of memorial currency unveiled
The Beijing Olympic Games have the motto "One World One Dream.” The world the host country dreams of, however, lies elsewhere -- to achieve a return to a Sino-centric China in politics, economy and culture.
The basic concept of the opening ceremony of the Olympics appears to be a return to the spirit of the Tang Dynasty, which built an empire in its heyday. The acclaimed film director Zhang Yimou, who is in charge of directing the opening and closing ceremonies, said, "We're going to attempt to compress China's 5,000-year history into a single event." Preparing the sporting event, the Chinese have tried to represent all things Chinese -- thought, culture, tradition and customs.
[IM] [Country image]
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India's Star Shines Bright
India presents the perfect place for PATA Travel Mart 2008 (PTM2008), as the country's tourism industry is among the strongest, most dynamic in the world and still shows plenty of room for growth.
Between 1996 and 2006, the Indian outbound market expanded nearly 10% per year. In 1996, Indians made nearly 3.5 million trips. By 2006, the number of outbound trips topped 8.3 million.
These outbound numbers combined with a double-digit growth rate in inbound last year to around 5 million make India "one of the shining stars" in Asia Pacific travel and tourism, according to PATA's Strategic Intelligence Centre.
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Beef Protests Disrupt Tourism Industry
Travel and tourism agencies that deal with foreign visitors are suffering because of the anti-U.S. beef protests which have continued for two months in downtown Seoul. A travel official whose agency provides school excursion trips for Japanese students says many Japanese parents who have sent their children to Seoul are calling to make sure of their safety. The Japanese Embassy in Seoul has issued an alert on its homepage advising Japanese tourists and residents not to be swept into the protests.
[Boycott]
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JUNE 2008
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KTO Spices Up Tourism
By Kim Rahn
Staff Reporter
Korea lacks natural or historic tour resources appealing to foreign tourists. That's why it needs to develop cultural or unique tour products to attain its goal of making tourism a new growth engine for the country.
Korea Tourism Organization (KTO), marking its 46th anniversary Thursday, has devoted itself to promoting the tour industry. It is now putting a greater focus on unearthing competitive cultural contents and exploring medical tour options to develop them into attractive tour programs.
Its efforts to develop new tour products are bearing fruit. The number of foreign visitors to Korea reached 2.75 million during the five months to May, growing more than 10 percent from a year earlier. The tour agency's tour promotion is seen as having brought 2.3 million visitors out of 6.4 million incoming tourists in total in 2007, according to the Tourism Sciences Society of Korea.
[IM]
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Latest no-shows for Beijing Olympics: Tourists
By Tim Johnson | McClatchy Newspapers
BEIJING — China says the welcome mat remains out for tourists who want to attend the Beijing Summer Olympics, but foreigners apparently view the invitation as a little prickly.
Tightened visa regulations, a major earthquake in southern China, unrest over Tibet and a scarcity of tickets to Olympics events have combined to slow the torrent of foreigners once forecast for this summer.
When the Olympic Games begin Aug. 8, television cameras are likely to pan over venues filled largely with Chinese faces, few foreigners among them.
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Two Koreas Battle to Scoreless Draw
South Korea's Oh Jang-eun, right, and North Korea's Mun In-guk compete for the ball during their World Cup qualifier at Seoul World Cup Stadium, Sunday. / Yonhap
By Kang Seung-woo
Staff Reporter
South and North Koreas played to a scoreless draw in their final match in the third World Cup qualifying round.
In the first FIFA-organized match which was held on the Korean Peninsula between the two sides on Sunday night, the Huh Jung-moo-led South Korean squad predominated over the opposing team through the full 90 minutes, but had to leave the ground with no decision.
Irrespective of the match's result, the two Koreas have already earned appearances to the final qualifying round.
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Governments readying for increase in mainland visitors
Publication Date:06/20/2008
By John Scott Marchant
Following the announcement of direct weekend charter flights beginning July 4, the central and local governments began stepping up efforts to prepare for the expected influx of mainland Chinese visitors.
The historic accords, signed between Taiwan's Straits Exchange Foundation and the mainland's Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits June 13, will allow for 36 services between Taiwan and mainland China each week. They will operate Friday to Monday, with carriers from each side running 18 flights. Taiwan will allow a maximum of 3,000 mainland tourists a day starting July 18.
[Straits]
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North Korean national football team arrives
The North Korean national football team arrive at the Incheon International Airport Thursday ahead of its World Cup qualifier against South Korea at the Seoul World Cup Stadium Sunday.
[photo]
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India's Star Shines Ever Brighter
India's outbound market is continuing to boom, fuelled by a strong increase in new air services. According to the statistics just released, outbound travel to Asia Pacific destinations grew from 3.5 million trips in 1996 to 8.3 million trips in 2006 - an average increase of almost 10% a year. Singapore led the way in 2006 with 660,000 arrivals, followed by Thailand, the US, China (PRC) and Hong Kong SAR.
Last weekend, Jet Airways became the first Indian private airline to launch flights to China, starting a service that will connect the thriving financial hubs of Mumbai, Shanghai and San Francisco
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The List: Top Tourist Spots Americans Can’t Visit
Page 1 of 1
Posted June 2008
Looking for someplace special to spend the Fourth of July? FP investigates five fabulous destinations where a summer getaway is next to impossible.
Mount Kumgang, Kumgangsan Tourist Region
Location: North Korea’s east coast
Why you should go: It’s an unspoiled spiritual retreat. Mount Kumgang and the surrounding area feature exquisite natural beauty, a famous Zen monastery, and challenging trails for hiking enthusiasts. Nearby Kuryong Falls plunges 242 feet before crashing into a series of lagoons below. A pavilion allows easy viewing of the falls, and mountain paths take travelers more than 5,000 feet up for a stunning panoramic view of the surrounding valleys and the white-sand beaches of the Korean coastline. Enjoy the latter while you can, as electric and barbed-wire fences make access to these beaches rather difficult.
Why you can’t: Because it’s almost impossible. Americans can acquire visas for North Korea, but the only access points are through China and South Korea. Tony Poe, a travel agent based in Little Rock, Arkansas, says that although the North Korean regime has begun to allow U.S. tour groups entry, “you’re basically under quarantine” the entire time. American tourists (of which there have been fewer than 500 since the Korean War ended in 1953) are generally restricted to Pyongyang and the surrounding areas, with Kumgangsan essentially off limits. Straying too far from the tour group is strictly forbidden, and the nonexistent U.S. Embassy and Consulate aren’t going to be of much help if you get into trouble with the Stalinist regime’s notorious secret police.
[Disinformation] [media]
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Going green. Everyone’s doing it and those who aren’t, want to know how they can.
By Ken Walsh, CTIE | Jun 04, 2008
Going green. Everyone’s doing it and those who aren’t, want to know how they can. Some companies are starting small by replacing their old light bulbs with energy efficient bulbs and switching off computers and printers at night, while other companies are undertaking much larger initiatives like purchasing carbon offsets when they purchase airline tickets and becoming a designated recycling center for their community. Regardless of how they decide to get involved, companies today understand the value of becoming more environmentally-friendly. ASTA also understands this and as part of its commitment to the environment and the travel community, it created the Green Member Program for travel professionals and companies.
ASTA saw how important the green movement was becoming, but realized that in terms of progressing the movement, American efforts weren’t up-to-par with Europe’s. European travelers have been demanding more green alternatives for quite some time now, while American tourists are just now starting to learn about their options and the importance of responsible travel.
[Green] [IM]
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China’s Pride: A 24-Karat Olympic Machine
Doug Kanter for The New York Times
Rowing is unfamiliar to most Chinese, but their national team, in the gym and on the water, is among the world’s best. More Photos >
By JULIET MACUR
Published: June 1, 2008
QIANDAO LAKE, China — When Igor Grinko, a former Soviet coach with an impressive résumé, agreed to take over the Chinese rowing team four years ago, Olympic officials outlined their expectations with a simple equation: one gold equals 1,000 silvers.
The Coach China’s coach, Igor Grinko, once led the Soviet and U.S. teams. "Silver? It means nothing here; you might as well finish last," he said. More Photos »
"Silver? It means nothing here; you might as well finish last," Grinko said. "Coaches like me come, help them win gold medals, or we are fired."
In anticipation of China’s debut as an Olympic host, officials here have seized the opportunity to prove their country is a world power in sports. Rowing is at the heart of China’s plan to capture, for the first time, more gold medals than any other nation at the Olympic Games.
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Cuba woos Indian travellers
By Anil Mathur | May 30, 2008
NEW DELHI, India (eTN) - Only a few years ago, it would have been difficult to comprehend, but today communist Cuba is wooing Indian traveler.
The move comes follows a recent trip to India by a strong Cuban delegation s touring India to see how the numbers Indian travelers to Cuba can be increased. In 2007, some 3000 Indians travelers visited Cuba for leisure.
Cuba Tourism marketing director Mayra Penichet said while in Delhi that she and her delegation were looking forward to catering to a larger number of Indian travelers. Though she didn’t divulge numbers, three travel agents in Cuba are dealing with Indian operators currently.
The Cuba delegation said they are aiming to increase the awareness on Cuba, which has seven UNESCO heritage sites. Scuba diving and other water activities are attractions being highlighted, apart from beauty of nature and culture. Recently the country was in news for promoting golf.
Cuba receives some two million tourists a year--some 600,000 are from Canada and 200,000 from the UK
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MAY 2008
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Olympic Sponsors Cheer the Home Team
Western businesses are harnessing Olympic fervor in China and playing up national pride in their advertising campaigns
McDonald's China launches the sponsorship logo for the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games at a 2005 ceremony. STR/AFP/Getty Images
by Chi-Chu Tschang
SPECIAL REPORT
Business and the Olympics
More Red Tape for Olympic Advertisers
Olympic Sponsors Cheer the Home Team
Video Piracy's Olympic Showdown
Podcast: Chinese Nationalism and the Olympics
Olympic Diplomacy: Don't Fear China
China's Li Ning Toe-to-Toe Against Nike and Adidas
Beijing's Olympic-Sized Headaches
Multinationals and the Beijing Games
As a sponsor of the Beijing Olympics, McDonald's (MCD) has built most of its global marketing campaign around the idea of people from all over the world coming together in a festival of sport. The company's ads exhort people to "Celebrate Olympics with McDonald's." But within China, where pride in hosting the games is running high and feelings are sensitive because of the Tibetan protests and the Sichuan earthquake, this universalism gives way to something else. For its Chinese marketing, McDonald's dispenses with appeals to unity and friendship and instead focuses on cheering for the home team. Its slogan in Chinese is "wo jiu xihuan zhongguo ying." The translation: "I'm loving it when China wins."
The nationalist campaign demonstrates the company's "deep-seated commitment to the people of China, the Chinese government, and the Chinese Olympics," says Jeff Schwartz, McDonald's China's chief executive officer. "I think that's going to resonate very, very strongly with all the Chinese consumers."
[IM]
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For foreign tourists, U.S. is Filene's Basement
By Britney Maloney | McClatchy Newspapers
WASHINGTON — The shoe's on the other foot now.
For years, American tourists plundered Europe's shops with strong dollars and hauled home bargains.
Now, foreign visitors bearing Euros and other robust currencies shop giddily in America, feasting on iPods and other electronics, U.S. fashions, books and other sweet deals.
[Decline]
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Bali tourism gets OK back from US gov’t
By Yusof Sulaiman | May 27, 2008
Bali tourism, after having been in the dark shadows of terrorist activities, may soon be on the road to recovery. The US government has endorsed the Indonesian tourism capital by lifting its almost decade-long travel advisory.
The move is expected to have a domino effect on Bali's tourism, with other countries following the US action.
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Luxury golf, spa resort open in Kumgang today
May 28, 2008
Kumgang Ananti Golf Club, the first golf course built by a South Korean company in North Korea, opens today. Provided by the company
The first golf course built by a South Korean company in North Korea is scheduled to open in Mount Kumgang today.
The 18-hole golf course at Kumgang Ananti Golf and Spa Resort will host 25 groups of players selected by lottery among its members on its first day, said Kim Min-jung, a spokeswoman for course builder Emerson Pacific Group.
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Travel Experts Say Indian Tourism On Rise
A five-year-long economic boom in India has led to a dramatic rise in the number of Indian tourists heading overseas for a vacation. Anjana Pasricha has a report from New Delhi.
A teacher in Delhi University, 54-year-old Nandini Guha, is packing her bags to fulfill a long-cherished dream - a holiday to Europe with some friends.
Guha loves to travel, but like most middle class Indians, she was unable to afford overseas vacations until recently.
"Things were much more expensive and it was difficult to plan a holiday, especially abroad," said Nandini Guha. "But now it is a little easier to take a holiday like this."
Indians can now travel more easily thanks to an economic boom that has raised incomes and fueled consumer spending. The growth of low-cost carriers in recent years has slashed air fares, and made travel more affordable.
Five million Indians traveled overseas last year. The number is expected to triple, to more than 16 million by 2011, according to travel industry associations.
The growing number of Indian tourists has prompted countries as far apart as China, Ireland and New Zealand to open tourist offices in India to tap into the large market.
[IM]
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10 top affordable Delhi hotels
At last, Delhi has a decent choice of mid-range hotels between the hostels and five-star luxe. Here are 10 of the best
Claire Colley guardian.co.uk, Tuesday May 20 2008
One of the bugbears of travel to India has been the lack of good affordable accommodation, especially in Delhi. Choice has largely been limited to hostels, or five-star luxury at a painful £150 a night. Changes are afoot however. India's astonishingly rapid economic boom, along with the fact that Delhi is hosting the 2010 Commonwealth Games means that a profusion of mid-range hotels and B&Bs are popping up everywhere. Unusual for Delhi, they are reasonably priced, clean, quiet and well run. Here are 10 of the best:
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Orascom and DPRK to complete Ryugyong Hotel construction
Posted Date : 2008-05-20 (NK Brief No. 08-5-20-1)
Sources recently returning to China from Pyongyang have reported that North Korea has resumed efforts to complete the 105-story Ryugyong Hotel. With only 20 buildings in the world taller than the 330-meter structure, it would be by far the largest building in all of North Korea.
Baekdu Mountain Architects and Engineers began building the highrise in 1987 but halted construction in 1992 amid economic hardships and rumors of structural deficiencies. The North has been seeking foreign investment of up to 300 million USD to complete the structure.
Traders in Shenyang, China with ties to Pyongyang say the North has now found that funding, partnering with Egypt’s Orascom Group. Orascom has publicized significant investment plans for North Korea in the last twelve months. Orascom Telecom Holding announced on January 30 of this year that it had been granted the first-ever commercial license to provide WCDMA 3G technology-based cellular service to North Korea, and put forth plans to invest 400 million USD to create a nationwide infrastructure.
This deal followed on the heals of Orascom’s first venture into DPRK investment, announced in mid July, 2007, when Orascom Construction Industries purchased a 50 percent stake in the North’s Sangwon Cement Factory near Pyongyang. This venture involved the injection of 115 million USD, which is being used to modernize the facility and increase production capacity from 2.5 million tons to 3 million tons per year.
In addition to Orascom Telecom Holding and Orascom Construction Industries, the Orascom Group also includes Orascom Hotels and Development and Orascom Technology Solutions.
[FDI] [JV]
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N. Korea resumes construction of luxury hotel
SHENYANG, China, May 19 (Yonhap) -- North Korea resumed the construction of a highrise hotel building in Pyongyang last month, which was suspended for nearly 20 years due to funding problems, informed sources here said Monday.
The construction of the luxury Ryugyong Hotel began in 1987 with French capital and technology for completion in 1992. The 105-story building has long been left uncompleted since early 1990s amid North Korea's chronic economic problems.
[FDI] [JV]
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Hyundai Asan Losses From N.Korea Tours Mounting
Hyundai Asan is in trouble as losses mount from its package tours to North Korea. According to the Financial Supervisory Service on Sunday, Hyundai Asan suffered a net loss of W9.64 billion (US$1=W1,041) in the first quarter this year, three times greater than the W3.34 billion in the corresponding quarter last year.
Despite the large number of tourists, which, at 125,000 as of mid May this year, nearly doubled since last year, it is the largest loss reported since the tours to Mt. Kumgang began in 2004. Over 45,000 people have traveled to the North Korean city of Kaesong since the tour program began in December 2007, and it is almost certain that the company would reach its goal of 100,000 tourists for this year.
The reason for such struggle is the weakness of the won against the U.S. dollar, since North Korea charges admission fees to Kaesong and Mt. Kumgang in dollars -- US$ 100 for one and $80 for the other per person for three days and two nights. As the dollar has risen more than 10 percent since the beginning of the year, from W940 to W 1,040, so has the initial cost. The tour program to Kaesong has reportedly gone into the red already. Moreover, Asan has to pay off $200 million of North Korean foreign debt in return for the license to develop Mt. Kumgang granted in 1999.
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Mass Games expanded
British run Koryo Tours have just been informed that this year’s Mass Games in North Korea have been expanded to include two different events, both staged in Pyongyang’s May Day stadium with a full compliment of 100,000 performers
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What can the West Gain from
Politicising the Olympics?
EAI Bulletin,
East Asia Institute, National university of Singapore
[China confronTation] [Olympics] [Softpower]
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Landmark Report Launched on Maximising China's Tourism Potential
By PATA COMMUNICATIONS
BEIJING, CHINA (PRC), May 8, 2008: With the world’s attention firmly on China (PRC) in the run-up to the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games, the Pacific Asia Travel Association (PATA) has produced a landmark report on how the country’s tourism potential can be maximised.
Endorsed by the China National Tourism Administration (CNTA), and sponsored by Visa, ‘Realising China’s Tourism Potential: Recommendations for Future Development’ is the first definitive international study that presents a roadmap for growth and management of the US$100bn industry.
Poised to become the world’s most popular tourist destination within a decade, mainland China stands to benefit not only from international tourist arrivals but also a massive increase in domestic tourism as the country’s economy booms.
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Chinese travelers follow their palate when they travel
Strong regional differences among Chinese travelers
30 Apr 2008
Shanghai
Nielsen’s latest China Outbound Travel Monitor reveals that when choosing a leisure destination, Chinese people are following their taste buds as they travel around the world.
Not surprisingly, affordability topped the list of key factors (61%) influencing Chinese people’s choice of destination, but good food was a close second with 58 percent of respondents considering it an important factor when choosing a leisure destination.
"With limited knowledge about many overseas destinations, Chinese outbound travelers are more likely to visit famous landmarks and major tourist attractions than they are to visit little known or niche regions. But knowing that Chinese people are influenced by good food provides a unique opportunity for marketers to tap into the fact that Chinese are influenced by destinations known for their good food,” said Dr Grace Pan, Head of Travel & Leisure Research, The Nielsen Company China.
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FIFA Says World Cup Qualifier Stays in Seoul
The International Football Federation (FIFA) has effectively dismissed North Korea's proposal to relocate the venue for the qualifier for the 2010 World Cup against South Korea, which is scheduled to be held in Seoul on June 22.
The Korea Football Association said Wednesday it received an official notice from the FIFA confirming the date, time, venue, and referee of the game. The match will be held at the Seoul World Cup Stadium at 8 p.m. with a Malaysian referee.
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Emotions High as Olympic Flame Scales Everest
By REUTERS
Published: May 8, 2008
Filed at 4:25 a.m. ET
EVEREST BASE CAMP, China (Reuters) - The Olympic flame reached the top of Mount Everest on Thursday, an emotional high for China and the crowning moment of a Beijing Games torch relay that was mired in anti-Chinese protests on its world tour.
"Long live Tibet!" and "Long live Beijing!," the climbers, all wearing red, shouted joyously into a TV camera after unfurling the Chinese national flag, the Olympic flag and a flag bearing the Beijing Olympic logo.
Rights groups criticized the climb as politically motivated, saying China had used the torch to underline its claim to sovereignty over Tibet.
Beijing student Huang Chungui passed the flame to ethnic Tibetan woman Ciren Wangmu, who trudged the final steps unaided by oxygen to hold the torch aloft.
That prompted jubilation among the reserve climbers, officials and a small team of journalists who had endured thin air at high altitude, sub-freezing temperatures and basic sanitation for nearly two weeks as they waited for the final ascent.
The tent to which the live pictures were relayed from the summit was rent with cheers and tears, and several renditions of the Chinese national anthem echoed out across the Himalayas.
The Everest climbing team, which included 22 Tibetans, eight Han Chinese and one man from the Tujia minority, had been on the mountain for more than a week preparing the route along the north-east ridge.
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N.Korea Wants to Move World Cup Qualifier
North Korea is apparently hoping to relocate the venue for the World Cup qualifier for the 2010 World Cup against South Korea, which is scheduled to be held in Seoul on June 22. The homepage of the Asia Football Confederation reported on Tuesday that North Korea’s Football Association vice president Son Kwang-ho visited the AFC Office in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on Monday to discuss "a number of footballing matters with AFC president Mohamed Bin Hammam, including the upcoming 2010 FIFA World Cup match against Korea Republic in Seoul on June 22, 2008." The Korea Football Association has not been officially notified of the details of the discussion between Son and Bin Hammam.
In March, in another qualifier game between South and North Korea originally planned for Pyongyang was moved to Shanghai, China after North Korea violated FIFA regulations by refusing to raise the South Korean flag and play the South’s national anthem. North Korea insisted on raising the unified Korean Peninsula flag and playing the famous folk tune "Arirang" instead. It now argues that the return match should therefore also be played in another country.
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Seoul Steps Up Campaign to Upgrade Tour Business
Samuel Koo
By Kim Rahn
Staff Reporter
Tourism is what a country should develop on its way towards becoming a developed nation, as tourism is a barometer of a country's attitude toward foreigners, said Samuel Koo, president and CEO of Seoul Tourism & Marketing.
Seoul Tourism & Marketing is a corporation that Seoul city government set up with 16 tourism-related companies in March in its aim to invite 12 million annual travelers to the capital by 2010, and Koo is the inaugural head.
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More South Koreans toured North Korea despite chill in ties
SEOUL, May 4 (Yonhap) -- The number of South Korean tourists heading to North Korea's scenic Geumgang Mountain nearly doubled in the first four months of this year, industry sources said Sunday, despite strained inter-Korean relations following the launch in February of the conservative Lee Myung-bak government.
North Korea has reacted angrily to Lee's pledge to get tough on North Korea unless Pyongyang abandons its nuclear weapons programs, threatening to turn South Korea into ashes, suspending all inter-Korean dialogue and expelling South Korean officials from the inter-Korean industrial complex in the North's border town.
The industrial complex in Kaesong and the Geumgang Mountain tourism project are among the conspicuous inter-Korean economic cooperation projects agreed on at the unprecedented inter-Korean summit in 2000 between then South Korean President Kim Dae-jung and North Korean leader Kim Jong-il.
As many as 100,300 South Koreans toured Mount Geumgang so far this year, up from 58,000 a year earlier, according to a spokesman for Hyundai Asan, Hyundai Group's arm dealing with business with North Korea.
Hyundai Asan officials expect more than 500,000 South Korean to visit the North's mountain resort this year alone, up from last year's 350,000.
A total of 40,090 South Koreans also visited the North's medieval capital city of Kaesong during the first four months this year, Hyundai officials said, adding they recently increased the daily quota for South Korean visitors to Kaesong to 500 from 300.
The tours of Kaesong began last December and then President Roh Moo-hyun, and Kim Jong-il agreed last October to launch another tour project for South Koreans in North Korea's Baekdu Mountain, the highest peak on the Korean Peninsula which has long been considered a sacred place and the birthplace of the Korean nation.
"The fact that so many South Korean tourists visited North Korea's Kaesong and Geumgang Mountain this year despite the chillied ties shows that the places are attractive in their own right as sightseeing places," a Hyundai Asan official said.
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Tours to Mount Baekdu not likely to resume this year
N. Korean airport facilities in dire need of repairs and upgrade
Tours to Mount Baekdu are expected not to resume this year due to problems with the infrastructure of North Korea’s Samjiyon Airport, the closest airport to the mountain resort.
According to a report on Mount Baekdu tours, which was prepared by a joint inspection team composed of government officials and civilians and submitted by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism to GNP lawmaker Chin Young, of the National Assembly’s Unification, Foreign Affairs and Trade Committee on May 5, the facilities at Samjiyon Airport were old or had problems.
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Awaiting Tourism Deal, Taiwan Is Primed for More Mainland Chinese Visitors
Christie Johnston for The New York Times
Tourists in Taipei took photographs in January at a memorial hall formerly named for Chiang Kai-shek. Sites associated with him are popular among visitors from mainland China, whose numbers in Taiwan may soon grow under an anticipated tourism deal.
By JONATHAN ADAMS
Published: May 5, 2008
PULI, Taiwan — At his hotel here, a short drive from scenic Sun Moon Lake in central Taiwan, Chang Tse-yen is already making plans for a possible boom in tourism from mainland China.
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Beijing Air Terminal Goes All Out for the Games
In China, an Airport Colossus for the Olympics Adorned with the colors of imperial China and a roof that evokes the scales of a dragon, the massive glass- and steel-sheathed structure, designed by the renowned British architect Norman Foster, cost $3.8 billion and can handle more than 50 million passengers a year. The developers call it the "most advanced airport building in the world," and say it was completed in less than four years, a timetable some believed impossible.
It opened in late February with little fanfare, but also without the kind of glitches that plagued the new $8.7 billion terminal at Heathrow in London, a project that took six years to complete.
This is the image China would like to project as it hosts the Olympic Games this summer — a confident rising power constructing dazzling monuments exemplifying its rapid progress and its audacious ambition.
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Korea, Japan Declare 2008 as Tourism Exchange Year
Last year was a significant one for both Korea and Japan, as the two countries saw a combined number of almost 5 million tourists from each other. And tourism ministers from both countries took another step to boost the already blooming tourist industry.
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Chinese cheer Olympic torch in peaceful Vietnam relay
By Grant McCool
Reuters
Tuesday, April 29, 2008; 10:22 AM
HO CHI MINH CITY (Reuters) - Crowds of Chinese waved red national flags and cheered the Olympic torch in Vietnam on Tuesday, the last international leg of its harried voyage around the world.
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Olympic torch finishes first-ever relay in N. Korea
The Olympic torch's first-ever relay in North Korea, one of the closest communist allies of China, was marked by enthusiasm Monday, media reports said, despite anti-Chinese protesters having marred the event elsewhere in the world.
The torch travelled a 20-km route through the North Korean capital where about 400,000 citizens lined in the city's main streets, waving paper flowers and small flags, according to Chinese news reports.
The torch is to leave for Vietnam in the evening before going to Hong Kong and Macau.
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Torch Relay for 29th Olympic Games Held
Pyongyang, April 28 (KCNA) -- The torch relay for the 29th Olympic Games was held in Pyongyang on Monday.
A ceremony of starting the torch relay took place in the plaza of the Tower of the Juche Idea at 10 in the morning.
Present there were Kim Yong Nam, president of the Presidium of the DPRK Supreme People's Assembly, Pak Hak Son, chairman of the Korean Physical Culture and Sports Guidance Commission who is chairman of the DPRK Olympic Committee, and Pak Pyong Jong, first vice-chairman of the Pyongyang City People's Committee, and other officials concerned and working people in the city.
The torch bearers covered 20 odd kms from the Tower of the Juche Idea to the Kim Il Sung Stadium, passing the East Pyongyang Grand Theatre, the April 25 House of Culture, Jonsung Square, the Pyongyang Indoor Stadium, the Pyongyang Grand Theatre, Kim Il Sung Square and the Arch of Triumph being accorded enthusiastic welcome from hundreds of thousands of people from all walks of life who turned out to the routes with pennants of the two countries.
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Well-organized Olympic relay completed smoothly in Pyongyang
Video
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APRIL 2008
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Chinese Turn Out in Force for Seoul Torch Relay
The Olympic Park in Songpa-gu, southwestern Seoul was swarming with over 6,500 Chinese students and residents in Korea on Sunday afternoon holding or wrapping their bodies in Chinese flags. Many carried banners declaring, "We love China", "We will let real China known to the world", and "Tibet belongs to China forever."
Kim Seong-yong (71) from Seoul, who witnessed the event, said he had "never seen so many Chinese flags waving in central Seoul, not even during the Korean War."
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Reports: N.Korea to Surprise World with Torch Relay
Pyongyang has been busy preparing for the torch relay coming to the North Korean capital.
Japan's Kyodo News Agency and China's official Xinhua News Agency say North Korea vows to wow the world on Monday.
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S. Korea expresses regret over torch relay violence
South Korea expressed "strong regret" Monday over clashes between anti-China activists and Chinese residents during Sunday's Olympic torch relay amid concerns that public outrage here may harm Seoul-Beijing ties.
The Foreign Ministry said Deputy Foreign Minister Lee Yong-joon met with Chinese ambassador to Seoul Ning Fukui and delivered a message of regret.
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Pyongyang leg of Olympic torch relay begins: reports
The North Korean leg of the Beijing Olympic torch relay got off to a peaceful start Monday with thousands of citizens enthusiastically waving pink paper flowers and Chinese flags, news reports said.
It marked the Olympic torch's first run in the reclusive North.
Kim Yong-nam, head of the North's rubber-stamp Supreme People's Assembly who acts as ceremonial head of state, presided over a ceremony to mark the start of the leg, according to the Associated Press.
Kim passed the torch to the first runner Pak Du-ik, the North Korean soccer striker who led his national team to the quarter finals of the 1966 World Cup, the AP said.
Thousands more cheering people lined Pyongyang's city streets waving pink paper flowers and the national flags of the North and China as well as small flags displaying the Beijing Olympics logo, as Pak began the 20-km route through the North Korean capital, according to news reports.
The Choson Sinbo, the newspaper of the pro-Pyongyang General Association of Korean Residents in Japan, said Monday Jong Song-ok, the North's marathon heroine, will be the last of the North's 80 torch runners. The group was composed of 56 North Koreans, including three residents in Japan, and 24 Chinese people, it said.
The flame arrived in Pyongyang's Sunan Airport before dawn aboard a chartered flight from South Korea over the West Sea.
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Tensions mount as Olympic torch approaches Seoul
Tensions are rising in South Korea Friday ahead of Sunday's arrival of the troubled Olympic torch amid fears over a possible clash between Chinese residents and human rights activists preparing welcoming and protesting events, respectively.
[China confrontation]
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Olympic torch tours Canberra unimpeded
By Peter Smith in Canberra
Published: April 24 2008 04:28 | Last updated: April 24 2008 07:10
The Olympic torch was shepherded through the streets of Canberra on Thursday amid a large security presence as thousands of Chinese supporters descended on the Australian capital determined to counter the high-profile protests being mounted around the world by pro-Tibet campaigners.
[Reassertion]
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S. Korea scrambles to find torchbearers for this weekend’s torch run
Civic leaders refuse to participate in protest against rights violations in Tibet
The hosts of the Beijing Olympic torch when it comes to Seoul on April 27 are scurrying to find torchbearers in the wake of announcements by Koreans previously designated to run with the torch that they are now refusing participate. The torch run is being organized by the Korean Olympic Committee and the Seoul city government. [China confrontation]
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Torch Relay for 29th Olympic Games Supported
Pyongyang, April 12 (KCNA) -- A spokesman for the Olympic Committee of the DPRK gave the following answer to a question put by KCNA in connection with the torch relay for the 29th Olympic Games:
The torch relays for the 29th Olympic Games to be held in China in August this year are now underway amid the support and welcome from sportspersons and other people of various countries.
However, there occurred incidents of creating difficulties in the way of events in some countries.
The Olympic Committee of the DPRK positively supports the above-said torch relays taking place in line with the Olympic idea of peace and friendship and vehemently condemns some disruptive forces' obstructions as a challenge to the Olympic idea.
It is our belief that the international community including the International Olympic Committee will conduct the above-mentioned torch relay in the Olympic idea and spirit as planned.
The Olympic Committee of the DPRK is now pushing ahead at a final phase with all preparations for successfully ensuring the torch relay slated to take place in Pyongyang on April 28 in close touch with the Organizing Committee of the 29th Olympiad.
This event will take place in the most secure and smooth manner as planned in the DPRK where all the people have formed a big harmonious family, single-mindedly united around the WPK, a great party.
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Never mind the Olympics! - North Korea puts on a more impressive performance
If you are in Beijing during the Olympics you will be missing the biggest show on earth - the Mass Games in Pyongyang, DPRK (North Korea).
British-run Koryo Tours (specialists in tourism to North Korea since 1993) were contacted today by the North Korean authorities who announced that they are staging the Arirang Mass Games in Pyongyang’s May Day stadium (capacity 150,000 - the highest in the world) between August 4th and September 30th 2008.
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Bush to attend Olympic opening ceremony
By Demetri Sevastopulo and Daniel Dombey in Washington
Published: April 9 2008 06:23 | Last updated: April 9 2008 06:23
President George W. Bush will not skip the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games in Beijing to protest the Chinese government crackdown on protestors in Tibet, according to a senior US official.
Ambiguous comments from the White House sparked speculation on Tuesday that Mr Bush might be considering a boycott of the opening ceremony. Asked several times whether the president was considering attending only the sporting events, Dana Perino, White House spokeswoman, replied: "I would not put it that way".
The White House has privately criticised European threats to miss the opening event. Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, will not attend the ceremony, while Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president, is considering a similar move.
Tibet witnessed its worst bloodshed in two decades in early March as long-standing unrest escalated into violent protests that sparked a Chinese government crackdown. World leaders have called on Beijing to reopen talks with the Dalai Lama, the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader, to resolve the tensions.
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Joint inter-Korean Olympic squads in limbo: officials
The two Koreas appear stalled in their efforts to field joint athletic and cheering squads for the Beijing Olympics amid a recent freeze in their relations, sporting officials said Tuesday.
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Air China opens Beijing-Pyongyang route
+ - 20:53, March 31, 2008
An Air China Boeing 737 landed at Pyongyang Sunan Airport Monday, launching the company's direct flight service from Beijing to Pyongyang, the capital of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK).
Flight CA121 will take off from Beijing at 1:40 p.m. local time (05:40 GMT) every Monday, Wednesday and Friday and arrive in Pyongyang at 4:20 p.m. (07:20 GMT).
Flight CA122, the return flight, will leave Pyongyang at 5:20 p.m. local time (08:20 GMT) and arrive in Beijing at 6:05 p.m. (10:05 GMT).
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Koryo Quarterly
Newsletter from Koryo Tours in Beijing
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Islamic hotels in demand in Mid East
By Aftab H. Kola | Apr 07, 2008
DUBAI (eTN) - Islamic hotels are becoming increasingly popular with Muslims and non-Muslims alike for their quiet, family-friendly approach, according to the manager of one of Dubai’s oldest establishments.
Islamic hotel brands are springing up in the UAE and the Middle East with their developers citing the concept’s popularity and as Jawhara Group general manager Hani Lashin quotes, a nearly 100 percent occupancy, even in Dubai, is hard to argue with. Jawhara, including Jawhara Gardens, Jawhara Apartments and Jawhara Metro, was the first company with an Islamic hotel in Dubai 27 years ago and the collection of hotels has since been certified to international standards, as well as being Shariah-compliant.
[Islam] [Halal]
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London may forgo 2012 procession after global protests against Beijing Games
IOC revising organisers' proposal for world relay
· Officials concerned over damage to Olympic brand
Paul Kelso, Vikram Dodd and Tania Branigan The Guardian, Tuesday April 8 2008 Article historyAbout this articleClose This article appeared in the Guardian on Tuesday April 08 2008 on p3 of the Top stories section. It was last updated at 03:24 on April 08 2008.
The International Olympic Committee will consider abandoning plans for an international torch relay in advance of the 2012 Games following the violent protests that accompanied the Olympic flame's progress through Paris and London in the past two days.
Olympic sources said yesterday the IOC was likely to review its position on relays in light of the clashes, a move that would undermine Britain's plans to stage an international event in the build-up to 2012. During their successful bid the London Games' organisers committed to holding a domestic relay, and said they would consider staging an international "journey of hope and reconciliation".
After Sunday's troubled event in London, those plans were already under review. The IOC's move may yet take the decision out of their hands.
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MARCH 2008
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Shanghai Stalemate Leaves Huh Few Excuses
South Korean striker Seol Ki-hyeon, left, was ineffective against the North Koreans in their World Cup qualifier in Shanghai Wednesday. / Yonhap
By Kim Tong-hyung
Staff Reporter
Since taking the job in December, South Korea football manager Huh Jung-moo pledged to rebuild the national team into a flamboyant and resilient squad that is tough to beat, an expanded version of his own traits as a former midfielder.
However, after the Taeguk Warriors labored through a goalless and gutless draw against North Korea in a World Cup qualifier in Shanghai, China, Wednesday, it's hard to deny that the all-new Huh era is looking much like the old Pim Verbeek era that was as dull as ditchwater.
The Shanghai showdown was among the most anticipated sporting events of the young year, and Huh clearly hoped his squad would flex its muscles against a less-heralded North Korean side before a nationally televised audience.
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Tours to Highest Peak in Mt. Kumgang to Open in April
Beginning in April, Birobong, the highest peak in North Korea's Mount Kumgang range, will be opened to visitors.
South Korean tour operator Hyundai Asan will start tours to "inner" Kumgang early next month, while tours to the mountaintop will begin later in mid-April, owing to inclement weather conditions at the summit.
Last year, some 350,000 tourists visited Mount Kumgang, but Hyundai Asan says it is expecting that number to grow by nearly 25 percent this year.
The tour company will make one last visit to the area at the end of this month to determine whether the 16-km-long Birobong trek will be a day trip or require an overnight stay.
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South and N.Korea Face Off in World Cup Qualifiers
South and North Korea battled it out in a much-anticipated game to qualify for the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa. The showdown ended with no goals scored.
The game took place on neutral turf in Shanghai after North Korea refused to let the South raise its flag and play its national anthem in Pyongyang, the original venue.
South Korea, ranking 47th in the world, seeks its seventh straight ticket to the World Cup
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Koreas draw in World Cup qualifier
North Korea held South Korea to a scoreless draw Wednesday in an Asian World Cup qualifier at the neutral venue of Shanghai, China, keeping the Cold War rivalry alive on the pitch.
The divided Koreas exchanged heavy fire and counterattacks throughout the match at Hongkou Stadium as their top players showcased their speed and power to knock their opponents out.
During the first half of the match, North Korean midfielder Hong Yong-jo nearly stunned the South Korean squad when he rifled a powerful mid-range shot in the 27th minute that went wide of the right post.
South Korea returned a similar threat in the 60th minute when Kim Do-hyun, who is with with England's West Bromwich Albion, launched an impressive ground shot that was stopped by the hunching North Korean goalie, Ri Myong-guk.
Seol Ki-hyeon, summoned from the English Premier League club Fulham, also came close to breaking the stalemate two minutes into the second half when he rushed into the penalty area and nearly deflected a lob pass into the North Korean net with his right foot.
The North's top striker, Jong Tae-se, also had his chance to claim a goal in the 66th minute when he possessed the ball over the penalty spot and fired a shot that flew off the pitch after hitting South Korea's charging goalie, Jung Sung-ryong.
South Korea summoned three of its English Premier League players, including Park Ji-sung of Manchester United and Lee Young-pyo of Tottenham Hotspur, for the match while North Korea sought to stun its opponent with its regular target man, Jong.
Jong, who plays for Japan's professional Kawasaki Frontale club and is nicknamed "North Korean Wayne Rooney" among the Seoul press for his speed and agility, scored an equalizer to hold South Korea to a 1-1 draw in an East Asian derby on Feb. 22 in China.
[IM] [Services] [Opening]
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Koreas to collide in World Cup qualifier
South and North Korea will face off against each other Wednesday in an Asian qualifier for the 2010 FIFA World Cup soccer finals in South Africa, reviving their Cold War rivalry on neutral ground in Shanghai, China.
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Tensions, hope rise ahead of inter-Korean World Cup
What makes Wednesday's rare inter-Korean World Cup qualifier interesting is not just the fact that the countries sharing the last Cold War frontier on earth are squaring off on the pitch.
Nor is it simply that the match comes after North Korea refused to allow South Korea to raise its national flag and play its national anthem in the initial venue, Pyongyang, leading FIFA to compromise by ordering them to play in the neutral city of Shanghai.
It is worth noting, among others, that South Korea, which ranks 47th in the world and seeks its seventh straight World Cup ticket, is in no mood to enjoy complacency ahead of its showdown with the 126th-seeded North.
"Individually, we're more talented, but North Korea has the ability to attack quite fast and skillfully," South Korean manager Huh Jung-moo said before departing for the Chinese city with his squad on Sunday. "It is threatening when the North Koreans quickly reverse from defense to offense."
North Korea had insisted that the two Koreas jointly use a flag depicting the Korean Peninsula and a traditional folk song in Pyongyang for the March 26 match, prompting the intervention by the world football governing body.
South Korea has a record of five wins, four ties and one loss against the North. North Korea has not appeared in the World Cup since 1966, when it stunned the world by reaching the quarterfinals of the tournament in England.
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Playing Games: The Two Koreas and the Beijing Olympics
Brian Bridges
For divided nations such as the two Koreas, which by their very rationales are involved in a highly-charged competition for legitimacy with their other ‘part-nation’, the Olympics have been a particularly potent arena for political posturing. This article examines the troubled history of the two Koreas’ endeavours to out-do each other in the Olympic movement, the prospects of a joint Korean team for the Beijing Olympics being realised, and the potential Chinese role in the run-up to those Olympics, which mean so much to China.
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Asia Pacific Tourism Revenues set to soar to us 4.6 Trillion by 2010
March 19, 2008 in Travel Related
(Forimmediaterelease.net) Despite concerns over a US recession, PATA's new Forecasts predict a bright future for the region, with China (PRC) and Korea (ROK) set to generate strong outbound growth to Asia Pacific destinations.
SINGAPORE, March 19, 2008 - The Pacific Asia Travel Association (PATA) is forecasting robust growth for travel and tourism in the Asia Pacific region, with tourism revenues to top US$4.6 trillion and visitor arrivals to reach close to 500 million by the end of 2010.
[IM] [Tourism]
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S. Koreans May Get Chance to Golf in Pyongyang
A South Korean company operating tours to North Korea said Thursday it was preparing to launch a rare program that would allow South Korean visitors to play golf in the North's capital.
Seoul-based Pyeonghwa Air Travel Agency Corp. said it has agreed "in principle" with North Korean officials to offer the golf tour for South Koreans from June and is waiting an approval from the South's Unification Ministry.
"We are receiving pre-sales orders to start the golf tour to Pyongyang as soon as we get the ministry's permission," said an official at Pyeonghwa Air.
Pyeonghwa Air is an affiliate of Pyeonghwa Motor, which has exclusive rights to produce cars for the North Korean market. [FDI]
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Crossings by vehicle to Mt. Kumgang to be allowed
March 08, 2008
This road, parallels to an inter-Korean railway, will open next week to tourists who want to drive to Mount Kumgang in North Korea. [Joint Press Corps]
Tourists bound for Mount Kumgang in North Korea will be allowed to take their own cars to pass the military demarcation line starting next week, Hyundai Asan said yesterday.
The access will remain limited, however. The visitors can only drive straight to their hotel. Once there, they will be required to take a designated bus to tourist attractions.
The Hyundai Group¡¯s inter-Korean business arm, which has an exclusive deal with North Korea for tourism programs, said in a release that a maximum of 20 cars will be permitted per day.
The program has been designed to last two nights and three days. Only vehicles which have 12 seats or less will be allowed to cross the border.
It will be the first time South Korean civilians drive their own vehicles across the heavily armed North-South border.
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Visa-Free Visit Planned for Chinese
By Kim Tae-jong, Park Si-soo
Staff Reporters
Beginning this summer, the government plans to allow visa-free entrance for Chinese nationals.
Justice Minister Kim Kyung-han said Friday the measure is part of ongoing efforts by the new government to attract more tourists.
``The ministry will continue to ease visa restrictions on Chinese nationals so that we can get more Chinese tourists and hopefully help boost the economy,'' Kim told reporters at Incheon International Airport. [Tourism]
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Anthem, flag flap still unresolved for Korean FIFA match
March 06, 2008
The Korea Football Association, South Korea¡¯s governing body for football, yesterday refuted a Tuesday news report that the FIFA flag and anthem will be used in the World Cup qualification match between the two Koreas in Pyongyang on March 26.
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FEBRUARY 2008
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N. Korea’s cultural diplomacy not extended to sports
[Editorial]
The Northerners are acting irrationally about a preliminary match between North and South Korea scheduled for March 24 in Pyongyang. The match is being held in advance of the 2010 FIFA World Cup, which is to take place in South Africa. Following the breakdown of the working-level planning meeting yesterday in Gaeseong (Kaesong), the Korean Football Association, or KFA, has decided to ask the Federation Internationale de Football Association, or FIFA, to intervene. The match could end up being played in a third country, or it is even within the realm of possibility that the match could be declared a forfeit by North Korea’s national team.
The North insists the "Korean Peninsula Flag" (bandogi) be flown and the traditional Korean song "Arirang" be played at the start of the game, instead of the official flag and anthem of South Korea, but this is a demand that goes against FIFA regulations
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Pyongyang Match Likely Relocated
By Kim Tong-hyung
Staff Reporter
South Korea football manager Huh Jung-moo might be spared from a daunting trip to Pyongyang's massive Kim Il-sung stadium after all.
With North Korea continuing to refuse South Korea to display its flag and play its national anthem in their World Cup qualification match in Pyongyang next month, the South's Korea Football Association (KFA) plans to submit the matter to FIFA for arbitration.
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A Peek Behind North Korea’s Iron Curtain
By HILARY HOWARD
Published: February 24, 2008
The Berlin Wall might be a thing of the past, but the demilitarized zone between North and South Korea — the world’s most heavily armed border — is still a modern-day phenomenon. Americans who’d like to take a peek behind North Korea’s Iron Curtain, including the zone have a chance to do so this fall with two tours offered by Snow Lion Expeditions (www.snowlion.com), a Salt Lake City-based travel company. "We have a crack in the door for Americans to get in," said Steve Pastorino, vice president of marketing for the company, who has found a way to procure visas for Americans through a partnership with Koryo, a British consortium of documentary filmmakers and tour guides who work regularly in North Korea.
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Pyongyang to start using buses with air conditioning: report
SEOUL, Feb. 12 (Yonhap) -- North Korea will begin using more than a hundred new buses with air conditioning for the convenience of a growing number of foreigners visiting Pyongyang, a U.S. government-funded radio station reported Tuesday.
Pyongyang's municipal people's committee recently requested a Chinese bus manufacturer to install air conditioning in 110 new buses to be used in the capital city, Radio Free Asia said.
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S. Korea Draws With North in Chongquing [Chongqing]
North Korean defender Nam Song-chol, center, clears the ball for goalkeeper Ri Myong-guk during a match against South Korea in the East Asian Football Championship being held in Chongqing, China, Wednesday. / Yonhap
By Kim Tong-hyung
Staff Reporter
South Korea failed to protect a first-half lead and played out a 1-1 draw against North Korea in the East Asian Football Championship in Chongqing, China, Wednesday.
The match was a preview for next month's World Cup qualifier between the two countries and South Korea boss Huh Jung-moo surely isn't looking forward to the scheduled visit to Pyongyang's massive Kim Il-sung Stadium.
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Airlines Vie for Mt. Baekdu Tours
By Ryu Jin
Staff Reporter
Competition is getting fierce among local airlines to grab the business opportunity in the Mt. Baekdu tourism project as Hyundai Asan, the main operator, gears up for the official launch in May.
According to industry sources Monday, Hyundai Asan has been discussing possible flights to the mountain on the border area between North Korea and China along with some minor airlines as well as the country’s flagship carriers.
In particular, the opportunity seems open to minor firms such as Jeju Air and Hansung Airlines, which provide low-priced flights, as planes with around 100 seats are most suitable for the Samjiyeon Airport ? the only airport to Mt. Baekdu ? which has a narrow runway.
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Two Koreas agree to send 600-strong joint cheering squad to Beijing Olympics
South and North Korea agreed Monday to send a 600-strong joint cheering squad to the Beijing Olympic Games in early August using a cross-border railway, the Unification Ministry said.
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JANUARY 2008
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N. Korea lures foreign tourists to soccer match
North Korea has invited foreign tourists to a rare soccer match between the two Koreas, set to kick off in Pyongyang in late March, a foreign tourism agency said Wednesday.
North Korea is to face South Korea on March 26 in a regional qualifier for the 2010 FIFA World Cup finals in South Africa. The two Koreas will also meet in Seoul on June 22 in another qualifier under FIFA's home and away match system. It will be the first match between the national soccer teams of the two Koreas in Pyongyang since 1990, when a friendly was held to symbolize hopes for reunification.
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North Korea, last Cold Warrior standing at Games
By Jon Herskovitz
Reuters
Tuesday, January 15, 2008; 8:31 PM
SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korean athletes will enter the 2008 Beijing Olympics with pluck, a soldier-like fighting spirit and a completely different concept of international sport to the one embraced by former Cold War allies.
Eastern Bloc states used to spend heavily on sports systems that turned out Goliaths, whose victories at the Olympics were used to validate what they argued was a superior political system.
The impoverished North, however, is much happier playing the role of David where its rare victories are attributed to the teachings of pudgy leader Kim Jong-il and its losses are blamed on a playing field made unfair by its foes.
"North Korea's paranoid nationalism can use defeat just as well as it can use victory," said Brian Myers, an associate professor at the South's Dongseo University who specializes in analyzing the North's ideology.
The reclusive North spends its limited resources to inspire its masses and not to impress the outside world on the playing field.
[Media]
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Eager South Koreans Tour a Semi-Open City in the North
By NORIMITSU ONISHI
Published: January 4, 2008
KAESONG, North Korea — Under the gaze of a bronze statue of Kim Il-sung standing atop a hill, a convoy of 11 buses packed with South Koreans wound its way through this quiet city center in North Korea, which was opened up to daily tours early in December and is now suddenly host to hundreds of mostly South Korean tourists seven days a week.
Bus No. 1 came to a halt at a street corner, temporarily blocking two middle-aged North Korean women from crossing the street and producing a telling moment in the short history of tourism in the North. Finding themselves only feet away from North Koreans — real, live North Koreans who were neither guides nor minders — the South Korean tourists stared at the two women outside, some even pressing their noses against the bus windows.
The two women, wearing gray overcoats and the kind of high-heeled boots that seemed to be in fashion here, smiled in embarrassment. Then they waved at the South Korean tourists, who waved back just as the bus started moving.
And so went a recent visit to Kaesong, the product of a rare period of relative openness in the North, which strictly controls even the glimpses it provides of itself to the outside. Waved to, most women waved back. Men nodded. Schoolchildren, who could be seen going about unaccompanied by adults, did not fail to return a wave.
[EWA]
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NOVEMBER 2007
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Tours to Gaeseong start Dec. 5
Fee includes visits to historical sites and Gaeseong Industrial Complex
Hyundai Asan Corp. will run tourist trips to the North Korean border city of Gaeseong (Kaesong) beginning on December 5. The one-day tourist fee will be 180,000 won per person and includes transportation, food and traveler’s insurance. The number of tourists will be limited to 300 each day, and they will be divided into three groups for separate bus tours around the area.
The tour includes a visit to the 37-meter Bagyeon Falls, which is one of three attractions in Songdo, and Gwaneum Temple in the morning. In the afternoon, tourists will visit traditional and historical sites such as Goryeo Museum and Seonjookkyo, the bridge where ranking Goryeo official Jeong Mong-ju was killed by Lee Seong-gye, who was the founder of the Joseon Dynasty. Visitors will be served a lunch composed of food traditional to Gaeseong and will cross the Military Demarcation Line around 5 p.m. via Gaeseong Industrial Complex.
[Kaesong]
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South, North Korea to Face Off in World Cup Soccer Qualifier
South and North Korea were drawn together in the same group for the 2010 World Cup preliminary competition Sunday, meaning the cold war rivals will compete against each other for the first time in 15 years for a place at the tournament in 30 months time.
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Olyroos heading to Beijing
November 21, 2007
North Korea 1 Australia 1
Hero .. Mark Milligan scored the all-important equaliser.
Photo: Getty Images
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The Olyroos have fought back from near-disaster to qualify for the Beijing Olympics with a 1-1 draw against North Korea in Pyongyang tonight.
Skipper Mark Milligan's header in the 70th minute secured Australia's under-23s the point they needed to top Group A and secure their passage to next year's Games.
The Olyroos trailed for most of the match after being caught napping defensively after just 10 minutes.
Striker Pak Chol Min nipped in between Milligan and goalkeeper Danny Vukovic, then lobbed neatly over the keeper's head to give the home side the lead.
Despite being out of contention to qualify, North Korea torched the Aussies in the first half, peppering their goal while the Olyroos struggled to master a plastic pitch and near-zero temperatures in the North Korean capital.
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Package Tours to Pyongyang ‘Likely in 2009’
South Koreans may be able to go on package tours to Pyongyang from as early as 2009, while tours to the historic city of Kaesong on the North Korean side of the border will start on Dec. 5. Meeting the press at the North’s Mt. Kumgang on Sunday afternoon on the ninth anniversary of tours to the mountain resort, Hyundai Asan CEO Yoon Man-joon said, "We are pushing for tour packages of Mt. Baekdu and Pyongyang. Mt. Baekdu tours will start in May next year."
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NK Told to Think About Hosting Asian Games
WASHINGTON _ North Korea was encouraged to think about hosting the Asian Games as a way of bolstering its economy at a meeting last week with U.S. experts, sources here said Monday.
The suggestion came from Victor Cha, former Asia director at the National Security Council who returned to teach at Georgetown University, according to the sources. Kim Myong-gil, North Korea's deputy chief of mission to the United Nations, "took note" of the suggestion, they said.
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Agreement on Tourism between North and South of Korea Published
Pyongyang, November 3 (KCNA) -- An agreement on tourism between the north and the south of Korea was published.
The Korea Asia-Pacific Peace Committee and Hyundai Group agreed as follows after discussing the issues related to tourism between the north and the south of Korea in Pyongyang:
1. The Korea Asia-Pacific Peace Committee decided to grant Hyundai Group the right to conduct the tour of Mt. Paektu.
‡@ Both sides agreed to start the tour of noted places in Mt. Paektu from May of 2008.
‡A They agreed to conduct the tour of Mt. Paektu by use of Mt. Paektu-Seoul direct air service.
2. The Korea Asia-Pacific Peace Committee decided to grant Hyundai Group the right to conduct the tour of Kaesong area.
Both sides agreed to start the tour of historic sites and scenic places in Kaesong area from early in December of 2007.
3. The Korea Asia-Pacific Peace Committee and Hyundai Group agreed to take practical measures for the tour of Mt. Paektu and Kaesong area.
This agreement takes effect from the date of its signing.
November 3, 2007
Pyongyang
Choe Sung Chol Hyon Jong Un
Vice-Chairman Chairwoman
Korea Asia-Pacific Peace Committee Hyundai Group
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OCTOBER 2007
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S.Korean Tourists Injured in N.Korean Bridge Accident
A tourist (right) hangs from Mooryong bridge near Guryong Falls on North Korea's Mt. Kumgang as rescuers pull people to safety. Around 20 South Korean tourists were injured when the bridge tilted on Monday./Yonhap
A group of South Korean tourists at Mt. Kumgang in North Korea were hurt on Monday when they fell 5 m from a bridge near Guryong Falls. About 20 were injured, five of them seriously.
The accident reportedly happened when the bridge tilted to one side after an iron buckle failed under the weight of the tourists. The bridge was designed to hold only five people at a time, but the tourists were apparently trying to cross it in a crowd. Some 1,300 tourists were visiting the falls at the time as this is the peak tourist season for the area. Most of the injured are seniors in their 60s or 70s on a package tour.
Hyundai Asan said it checked the safety of all the facilities in the area, including the collapsed bridge, earlier this year and in August, September and October. The accident was not due to its negligence, the tour company said.
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Hyundai Head to Visit N.Korea for Mt. Baekdu Talks
Hyundai Group Chairwoman Hyun Jeong-eun is planning a trip to Pyongyang to discuss tours to Mt. Baekdu, including direct flights to the mountain area as agreed upon at the inter-Korean summit.
The chairwoman's visit is intended to thresh out plans for the non-stop flights to Mt. Baekdu from Seoul. Hyundai Group plans to offer the tours from April next year.
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Hyundai Group hopes to operate new North tours
October 06, 2007
Hyun Jeong-eun
Hyundai Group may soon be able to expand its tourism program in North Korea from the Mount Kumgang program to the city of Kaesong and Mount Paekdu, the highest mountain on the Korean Peninsula. The group's chairwoman, Hyun Jeong-eun, discussed the plan with North Korean leader Kim Jong-il during the presidential summit earlier this week. Hyun, one of 17 business representatives who accompanied South Korean president Roh Moo-hyun on his trip to the North, talked about her trip and future plans during an exclusive interview with the Joongang Ilbo on her way to the office yesterday morning.
Q. We heard Kim talked a lot about Chung Mong-hun (Hyun's late husband).
A. Yes, Kim often talked about my husband, like how the two got together to drink makgeolli and how my husband admired the unspoiled beauty of Mount Paekdu.
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NK taekwondo in Los Angeles:
A female North Korean taekwondo practitioner receives a bouquet of flowers on arrival at Los Angeles, Thursday. The North Korea taekwondo team is to give demonstrations in the U.S. for the first time.
[photo]
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South and North Koreans to travel by train to Beijing Olympics
First inter-Korean cheering squad will take rail link from Busan to Beijing via Pyongyang
North and South Korea are about to create their first "official" joint cheering squad for an international sports event.
Even better, the cheering squad is going to go to the 2008 Beijing Olympics via the Seoul-Sinuiju railway connecting North and South Korea.
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SEPTEMBER 2007
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New Cable-cars Operated on Mt. Paektu
Pyongyang, September 21 (KCNA) -- New cable-cars started on operation on Mt. Paektu, the ancestral mountain of Korea.
@The cable-cars run between the Paektu Station and the Hyangdo Station on the peak of Mt. Paektu under the Paektusan (Mt. Paektu) Revolutionary Battle Site Cableway Management Office.
@The new cable-car has more seats than the former one and its exit is so convenient that many people get on and off at one time.
@Its vibration and noises are little. And visitors can command a bird's eye view of the splendid and beautiful scenery of Mt. Paektu through the wide windows.
@The cable-car service will provide better convenience to the visitors.
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DPRK Weightlifter Wins World Men's Weightlifting Title
Pyongyang, September 19 (KCNA) -- DPRK weightlifter Cha Kum Chol won the title in the 56kg category at the World Men's Weightlifting Championships for 2007 held in Thailand.
At the 56kg category contest held on Sept. 18 he lifted a total of 283 kg (snatch 128kg, clean and jerk 155kg) to come first and win a gold medal.
And he also placed second in snatch and clean and jerk events respectively.
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NK reaches quarters finals
North Korea’s Ri Un-suk, right, celebrates with Ri Kum-suk, center, and Ri Un-gyong after Ri Un-suk scored against Sweden Tuesday during their Group B match at the 2007 FIFA Women’s World Cup tournament in Tianjin, China. North Korea lost 2-1, but advanced to the quarter finals. [Photo]
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N. Korea Ousts Sweden Despite Loss
Sweden 2, North Korea 1
Associated Press
Wednesday, September 19, 2007; Page E10
TIANJIN, China, Sept. 18 -- North Korea advanced to the quarterfinals of the Women's World Cup, finishing second in Group B despite losing, 2-1, to Sweden on Tuesday.
The teams finished tied with four points each, but North Korea advanced because of a better goal differential. Sweden needed to win by at least three goals to advance.
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FIFA Women’s World Cup China 2007
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Two Judoists From Two Koreas Win World Championship
South Korea's Wang Gi-chun beat Azerbaijan's Elnur Mammadli to grab the gold medal in the men's
under-73-kilogram class in the 25th World Judo Championships held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Sunday, the Korea Judo Association said.
Wang gave his country the first gold in world judo championships in four years. Lee Won-hee and two other South Koreans won golds in the World Judo Championships held in Osaka, Japan, in 2003.
North Korea's Kye Sun-hui, meanwhile, defeated Spain's Isabel Fernandez to win gold in the women's under-57-kilogram category. It is her fourth world championships title since 2001.
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DPRK Women Football Team Beats Nigerian Rival
Pyongyang, September 14 (KCNA) -- The DPRK women football team beat its Nigerian rival 2-0 in the game of Group B of the 2007 Women's World Cup held in Chengdu, China on Friday.
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N.Korea Becoming Tourist Spot for Young Chinese
As the economic gap between China and North Korea widens, more and more young Chinese people are traveling to North Korea to see the sort of poverty their parents endured, China's Xinkuai Bao reported on Thursday.
About thirty years ago, before Deng Xiaoping began reforms, China's economy was similar to that of North Korea. But now youngsters from China which is brightly illuminated at night are visiting North Korea where the electricity is cut off after dark.
The tourists usually go by train to North Korea through the Chinese border city of Dandong. The Chinese youngsters look different from their North Korean counterparts, with their trendy clothes, digital cameras, and loud laughter at tourist attractions like Panmunjon.
North Korean authorities ask the tourists to use the euro, but the Chinese prefer to use the Chinese yuan. That means the yuan is now accepted as hard currency at most sightseeing spots in North Korea.
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North Korea Wounds Temporarily Shorthanded U.S. Team
By JERÉ LONGMAN
TAGS: NORTH KOREA WOMENS TEAM, US WOMENS TEAM, WOMENS WORLD CUP
SEPTEMBER 11, 2007, 8:37 AM In the post-Mia Hamm era, the United States women’s soccer team is being billed by Nike, its corporate sponsor, as “the best team you never heard of.”
On second thought, that distinction might belong to North Korea
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Some Stitches in Time Help Americans Gain a Tie
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: September 12, 2007
CHENGDU, China, Sept. 11 (AP) - Blood streaming from a gash on the top of her head, Abby Wambach came off the field. For 10 minutes, the United States played short-handed while she got stitches.
North Korea did not waste its opportunity. The United States allowed two goals with Wambach off the field - one on a mistake by goalkeeper Hope Solo - and then rallied for a 2-2 tie Tuesday in its opener at the Women's World Cup.
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U.S. Team Is Ready for the World
By Steven Goff
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, September 10, 2007; Page E04
CHENGDU, China, Sept. 9 -- The U.S. women's national soccer team has been in China for almost two weeks adjusting to the time difference and climate. The players have practiced without distraction and studied film. They've explored Shanghai, visited a panda reserve here in Sichuan province -- "they were cute," team captain Kristine Lilly confirmed -- and seen a towering statue of Mao Zedong presiding over Tianfu Square in the heart of this southern city.
So now what?
"We just want to play," striker Abby Wambach said Sunday following an hour-long training session at Chengdu Sports Center Stadium. "We're so ready. We've been ready for a long time."
For Wambach and the Americans, the wait will finally end Tuesday (5 a.m. Eastern) when they open their Women's World Cup schedule against North Korea, the first of three potentially troublesome Group B matches.
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DPRK Women's Football Team Attracts World's Attention
Pyongyang, September 6 (KCNA) -- The DPRK women's football team has attracted the world's attention by establishing a new record at the Asian regional qualifier for the 29th Olympics.
The DPRK team won all the six games in the Group B. It netted 51 goals in the matches, thus becoming the top goal-scorer among all the eight teams of Asia.
It exceeded the 45 goals the four teams of the Group A made in 12 matches. It was 24 more than those of the Japanese team and 11 more than those of the Australian team.
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Air Koryo
Passenger comments
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How to get there
The overwhelming majority of foreigners travel to North Korea via China. The North Korean national airline, Air Koryo, has three regular flights per week linking Beijing and Pyongyang.
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North Korean taekwondo team to tour U.S. in October
A North Korean taekwondo team will visit the United States for the first time in October for a goodwill tour in major cities, an Internet web site said Friday.
Taekwondo Times, a magazine on martial arts, said about 20 performers and masters will arrive in the U.S. on Oct. 4. They will perform first in Los Angeles on Oct. 6 and travel on to San Francisco; Cedar Rapids, Iowa; and Louisville, Kentucky. The tour ends in Atlanta on Oct. 14.
The Los Angeles performance is expected to be aired on U.S. television.
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AUGUST 2007
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South Koreans now spectators
United States, North Korea advance to round of 16 in tournament
August 27, 2007
The South Korean team, acknowledging fans in Ulsan Friday after beating Togo 2-1, has been eliminated. [YONHAP]
In the end, winning just one game in the group stage wasn't enough to get South Korea into the round of 16 at the FIFA U-17 World Cup.
The host country did its part to stay alive in the tournament, beating Togo 2-1 Friday and securing third place in Group A with three points. South Korea was hoping to take one of four wild card spots, awarded to the top-four third-place teams from six groups.
On Wednesday, Spain faces North Korea in Ulsan; Tunisia plays France in Changwon, South Gyeongsang; Peru meets Tajikistan in Suwon, Gyeonggi; and Brazil battles Ghana in Gwangyang, South Jeolla.
On Thursday, Argentina meets Costa Rica in Goyang, Gyeonggi; Nigeria faces North Korea in Gwangyang; England plays Syria on Jeju Island and Germany faces the United States in Cheonan, South Chungcheong.
On Wednesday, Spain faces North Korea in Ulsan; Tunisia plays France in Changwon, South Gyeongsang; Peru meets Tajikistan in Suwon, Gyeonggi; and Brazil battles Ghana in Gwangyang, South Jeolla.
On Thursday, Argentina meets Costa Rica in Goyang, Gyeonggi; Nigeria faces North Korea in Gwangyang; England plays Syria on Jeju Island and Germany faces the United States in Cheonan, South Chungcheong.
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DPRK Women's Football Team Places First at 24th Universiad
Pyongyang, August 18 (KCNA) -- The DPRK women's football team placed first by trouncing its Russian rival 1-0 in the finals of the 24th Universiad held in Bangkok on August 17.
In the preceding matches Korean girls won overwhelming victories over its Irish, Thai, German and south Korean rivals and beat its Brazilian rival, supposed to be a winner, 4-3.
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North Korea Meets England
By Kang Seung-woo
Staff Reporter
The Opener between dark horses at the FIFA U-17 World Cup will draw world football fans' attention to South Korea.
Mysterious North Korean U-17 football squad, who was veiled but has shown up on the world football stage recently will take on powerhouse England in the first preliminary match of Group B at Seogwipo World Cup Stadium in Jeju at 2:00 p.m.
The young North Koreans, led by manager An Ye-gun, arrived in South Korea on August 7, becoming the first visitor among participants and have trained in secret including two closed-door friendly games.
England defeated South Korea 4-0 in a closed-door match last Saturday and it will go all-out against North Korea assuming it will have an easy win over New Zealand in that the Korean side had a 4-0 win over the Oceanian country.
In addition, Jeju citizens' rooting will be an x-factor to the North Korean players in facing England.
``The players are excited because it's their first World Cup. ``They are very, very proud to represent their country and needless to say, all the people back home are eagerly looking forward to the team's triumphant return.
``So far, the players have been preparing well. I am very confident that we will qualify from the group and that we will defeat England in the opening game. I am hoping that we qualify for the semi-finals,'' North Korean manager An said.
Meanwhile, the opening match will be aired to North Korea live.
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Korea goes from military barracks to tourism complexes
By Yusof Sulaiman l eTN Asia
Is North Korea on track to become the next Communist country to emerge from its troubles to tourism? A company based in South Korea has announced plans to turn North Korea's east coast into a major tourist destination.
Hyundai Asan, the South Korean operator of privatized tours in North Korea, has announced its plans to spend US$3 billion by 2025 to develop its tourism complexes in the North's east coast into a major tourist destination.
The company said it plans to develop the coastal area from North Korea's eastern port city of Wonsan to Haegeumgang, near Mount Geumgang, where it has built a mountain resort.
Mt. Geumgang, divided into three parts--Naegeumgang (inner, western part), Oegeumgang (outer, eastern part) and Haegeumgang (seashore), has long held a spiritual allure for Koreans and will now be accessible daily starting this summer season, instead of three times a week in the past.
Located just north of the border between the two Korea's east coast, the complex has attracted 1.5 million visitors since 1998, up to now mostly consisting of South Koreans. Official records show 8,000 other visitors came from 48 countries.
"This year we are targeting 400,000 visitors," said Yoon Man-joon, CEO of Hyundai Asan.
"We are expecting a large number of visitors to go camping at the resort complex since inter-Korean ties are good,” he added. "Since campers are not allowed to cook due to environmental and safety reasons, they can have their meals at the hotels and restaurants."
Part of Hyundai Asan's marketing strategy is to develop new tour programs to the other side of the mountain, in addition to water sports activities.
The company said it is expecting increased tourist arrivals following restoration of the railway services linking South Korea to the north. "First they came by ship, then by road and now by train," remarked a tourist guide from the North. "We hope South Koreans will come to experience a taste of the future, undivided Korea."
North Korea has also opened a new hiking trail at the Diamond Mountain resort, run by South Korea's Hyundai, in a further proof of its openness to the world.
Hyundai is now waiting for approval from North Korea's environmental experts, expected to be confirmed by September, said the CEO for the South Korea-based group.
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North Korean youth soccer players arive
North Korean youth soccer players arrive yesterday at Incheon International Airport. The North Korean team will participate in the U-17 World Cup organized by FIFA in South Korea from Aug. 18 through Sept. 9.
[Photo]
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JULY 2007
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War Museum Visited by at least 550,000 Foreigners
Pyongyang, July 27 (KCNA) -- At least 550,000 foreigners visited the Victorious Fatherland Liberation War Museum over the past more than 50 years since it was opened to visitors in Juche 42(1953).
Exhibited at the museum are materials and evidence proving that the army and people of the DPRK heroically defeated the armed invasion of the U.S.-led imperialist allied forces under the leadership of President Kim Il Sung in the Fatherland Liberation War. [Statistics]
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Unification Politics of the Olympics
by Victor Cha
What happened to Pyeongchang's failed bid for the 2014 Winter Olympics? Hosting the games would have been a major achievement for the ROK. Not only would it have marked the second time that Korea hosted the world for the Olympics, but also the first time the Winter Games would have been held in Asia outside of Japan (the previous two occasions were Nagano in 1998 and Sapporo in 1972), and collectively only the sixth time since 1896 that the Games would have been held in Asia.
There is no reason that a better, stronger South Korean athlete should give up her place on the team to an inferior DPRK athlete. The ROK bid for 2014 Pyeongchang was well done in the end. But next time, don't play the unification card again. It doesn't work anymore.
Victor Cha served as a White House advisor on Asia from 2004 to 2007. He is now a professor at Georgetown writing a book on Sports Diplomacy and the Beijing Olympics.
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Buddhist group to organize regular monthly tours to Kaesong temple
South Korea has authorized regular monthly pilgrimages to a Buddhist temple in the North Korean border city of Kaesong, government officials said Sunday.
The first regular visit to Ryongthong Temple organized by the Cheontae Order is to take place on July 26, with one 500-person pilgrimage to be allowed per month, the Ministry of Unification said.
Each trip to the temple, originally built in 11th century, will cost 170,000 won per person (US$185), with North Korea receiving $50 from each payment.
[Religion]
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Roh Expects Unified Korean Team If PyeongChang Wins
President Roh Moo-hyun said Sunday that he would seek a unified Korean team in the 2014 Winter Olympics if PyeongChang wins the bid to be decided in Guatemala on July 4, the Associated Press reported. [Joint Korean]
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JUNE 2007
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PyeongChang: Melted dreams
By James Card
PYEONGCHANG - I've been visiting PyeongChang county in south central Gangwon province for the past eight years. I sometimes go in the winter but not for the skiing. I quit skiing in South Korea a year ago, frustrated with the mediocre slopes and poor quality snow. I come to the region for a few trout streams that tend to fish well during the dry, semi-snowless winter months.
Yes, semi-snowless could be an adjective to describe the countryside of PyeongChang county. Most sorely lacking is snow, and snow is needed to make a mountain town that people want to visit. South Korean winters are dry and precipitation is scarce. Snow comes in spurts and there are a few good dumpings a year and then the white stuff quickly melts off.
In many ways these small details are linked to South Korea's massive tourism deficit, with huge numbers of Koreans traveling overseas and few foreign visitors coming into the country.
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Implications of Inner Geumgang Tourism
By Tong Kim
Last week I had the rare opportunity to join a group of prominent citizens and celebrities from South Korea to visit Geumgangsan (Mt. Diamond) known to be the most beautiful mountain in Korea. Although I visited Pyongyang 17 times, I had never been to Geumgangsan before.
I do not question that the tourism of Inner Geumgang was made possible by the gutsy, bold decision on the part of the North Korean leader, whose motive must have been a complicated combination of military, economic and political considerations. Hyundai CEO Yoon Man-jun said, ``The North made a big decision to show its master bedroom, which is shown only to close, trustful friends.’’
After crossing back to the south, I started seeing familiar junky concrete structures and disorderly commercial signs, obstructing the views of the mountains and the fields. The South is 20 to 40 times better off economically than the North. But the underdevelopment in the North seems to have better preserved the traditional Korean landscape.
Along with the Kaesong Industrial Complex, the Geumgang tourist project no doubt has positive military implications. I want to believe that the security issues, including North Korean nuclear weapons, will be resolved soon to the benefit of all concerned. What’s your take?
[Kumgangsan]
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MAY 2007
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PATA: Officials a bigger threat than terrorists to US tourism
By eTN Staff Writer
A Pacific Asia travel organization says US government officials as a reason not to visit.
Citing a presentation by the executive director of the Discover America Partnership (DAP), the Pacific Asia Travel Association (PATA) has put the blame for the decline in US tourism blame on officials.
PATA yesterday said in its official newsletter, stringent entry policies and procedures since the terror attacks of September 11, 2001 have created perceptions of a paranoid and unwelcoming US in the minds of prospective travelers, leading to a decline in the US' share of global travel; from 7.5 percent in 2000 to 6.1 percent in 2006,
PATA based these facts from a presentation by DAP executive director Geoff Freeman at PATA’s 56th annual general meeting held in Vancouver, Canada on April 22.
Freeman told PATA, more travelers see US government officials as a reason not to visit (70 percent) compared to the threat of terrorism or crime (54 percent).
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Korea Unpopular Tour Destination in Asia
By Na Jeong-ju
Staff Reporter
South Korea is not as attractive as Thailand, Japan and most of other Asian countries as a tourist destination, a survey showed.
According to an online survey of 5,050 tourists from the United States, Japan, China, the United Kingdom and six other nations, South Korea ranked 10th among 14 Asian nations in the category of the most favored places to travel in the near future.
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APRIL 2007
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Hyundai Asan to start tours of western side of Mt. Geumgang in June
Hyundai Asan Co., an affiliate of South Korean conglomerate Hyundai Group, said Wednesday it will begin tours of the western side of Mt. Geumgang on the eastern coast of North Korea in June.
The company has conducted tours of the mountain's eastern side, which faces the East Sea, since 1998 but the other side has been closed to outsiders so far for security reasons.
[Kumgangsan]
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Americans Get Tough World Cup Draw
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: April 22, 2007
Filed at 3:26 p.m. ET
WUHAN, China (AP) -- The top-ranked United States got a tough draw Sunday for this year's women's World Cup, placed in Group B with Sweden, North Korea and Nigeria.
Sweden was runner-up at the 2003 World Cup and is ranked No. 4 by world governing body FIFA. North Korea is ranked No. 5, Asia's top team.
The United States, one of the four seeded teams this year, has won the World Cup twice -- the inaugural tournament in 1991 and again in '99. Norway won in 1995 and Germany is the defending champion.
The Americans, who were knocked out in the semifinals by Germany in 2003, will open against North Korea on Sept. 11 in the western city of Chengdu.
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20 Questions From North Korea's Young Football Aces
"Why are so many crosses out there?" "Why do most children wear glasses?" "Can I see your mobile phone?" These were just a few of the many questions North Korea's youth football squad had over the weekend. On the pitch, they are not different from young South Korean players. But moving around by bus or train, they were full of curiosity about the things they saw. Twenty-three members of the under-17 football team have been staying in South Korea for 20 days.
The North Korean under-17 football squad take a rest at the Suwon World Cup Stadium in the morning on Thursday watching North and South Korean officials kick a ball around.
The lobby of the Suncheon Royal Tourist Hotel at 9 a.m. on Saturday. The North Korean soccer squad look trim in their black uniform, shoes in hand. They had countless questions for the South Korean officials of the Sports Exchange Association accompanying them. "What is the cross for?", one asks, and when told asks again, "What is a church?" The answer seemed to baffle them. When an official explained that many young South Koreans wear glasses because they use computers a lot, one team member said, "In North Korea, only few children and scholars who read lots of books wear glasses."
The players were particularly taken by mobile phones. They wondered how people could make calls without lines and play games or take pictures with their phones. Whenever officials from the association used their mobile phones, the North Korean youngsters gathered to see their phones.
When shown magazine photos and asked to pick the most beautiful among actresses, Jeon Ji-hyun, Song Hye-gyo and Beyonce Knowles, they chose Beyonce Knowles, still insisted they didn't care.
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DPRK Team Defeats Taiwan of China Team
Pyongyang, April 7 (KCNA) -- A match between the DPRK and Taiwan of China teams was held at Kim Il Sung Stadium here on Saturday as part of the Asian regional women's football games (Group B) to obtain the qualification for the 29th Olympiad.
The host team beat the other side 8-0.
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1st Meeting of Taekwon-Do Integration Coordinating Committee Held
Pyongyang, April 7 (KCNA) -- The first meeting of the Taekwon-Do integration coordinating committee was held in Beijing on Mar. 31.
The meeting formally organized the Taekwon-Do integration coordinating committee. Ryu Song Il, chairman of the integration policy of the side of the International Taekwon-Do Federation, and Ri Tae Sun, vice-president of the World Taekwon-Do Federation, were appointed as co-chairmen of the coordinating committee.
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N. Korean IOC member hopes Pyeongchang will host 2014 Winter Olympics
North Korea's only member of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) said Saturday he hopes that Pyeongchang will host the 2014 Winter Olympic Games, and that this weekend's North Korean taekwondo demonstration will help unify the two Koreas.
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N. Korean IOC member in Seoul for taekwondo merger talks
North Korea's only member of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) flew here Friday to discuss a possible merger of the South Korean and North Korean-led world governing bodies of Korea's traditional martial art taekwondo.
Chang Ung, concurrently head of the International Taekwondo Federation (ITF), arrived on a direct flight from the North's capital Pyongyang.
"I have just come here to celebrate the inauguration of the ITF office in Seoul," Chang told reporters as he went out of the airport terminal. "Please don't push me. I have much time to talk because I will stay here for three days."
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North, South plan merger of taekwondo headquarters
April 06, 2007 The heads of the two world federations that govern taekwondo, one based in North Korea and the other in South Korea, plan to meet in Seoul today to talk about merging.
Chang Ung, the head of the North Korea-based International Taekwondo Foundation, is due to arrive in Seoul this morning on a direct flight from Pyongyang, leading a 47-member delegation including 30 North Korean taekwondo athletes, an official of the ITF Korea Corp. said.
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DPRK Beats India in Soccer Match
New Delhi, March 28 (KCNA) -- The DPRK beat India 2:0 in the Asian regional men's football second-round qualifier (group e) held in India on Wednesday to obtain qualification for the 29th Olympic Games.
The two teams will compete with each other again in Pyongyang on April 18.
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MARCH 2007
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Lotte Tour cancels application to visit North for tourism talks
Tourism company was competing with Hyundai Asan for right to run tours to ancient city of Gaeseong
Lotte Tour, a subsidiary of Lotte Group, withdrew its application for permission to visit North Korea to have consultations regarding running tours to the ancient capital city of Gaeseong (Kaesong), the Unification Ministry said on March 22.
Until Lotte Tour cancelled its planned visit, the Ministry of Unification reportedly had mulled over how to address Lotte Tour's application - either an approval of the visit but a disapproval for Lotte Tour to gain the rights to Gaeseong, or disapproval on both counts. The government reportedly favors Hyundai Asan, the North's original choice, as the tour operator.
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Lotte plans visit to N.K. to push for tourism deal
Visit part of Lotte Tour's battle with Hyundai Asan over who will lead Gaeseong tours
Sources confirmed on March 18 that Lotte Tour is trying to visit with North Korean authorities next week, part of the tourist company's ongoing fight with Hyundai Asan over the business rights for the tours of Gaeseong (Kaesong) in North Korea, which was the capital of the Goryeo Dynasty (918-1392 AD).
The management of Lotte Tours, including its chairman Kim Ki-byung, has submitted applications for a March 25-31 visit to North Korea through the Ministry of Unification's Web site. On the application, Lotte Tour wrote that the purpose of its visit is to "discuss the Gaeseong historical site tours."
Lotte Tour is an affiliate of Lotte Group, one of Korea's large-scale conglomerates.
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N. Korea's taekwondo chief due in Seoul on unification of world taekwondo bodies
The head of the world taekwondo body led by North Korea will come to Seoul next month to discuss uniting the two world governing bodies of the traditional Korean martial art run separately by the two Koreas, officials here said Wednesday.
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Lotte plans visit to N.K. to push for tourism deal
Visit part of Lotte Tour's battle with Hyundai Asan over who will lead Gaeseong tours
Sources confirmed on March 18 that Lotte Tour is trying to visit with North Korean authorities next week, part of the tourist company's ongoing fight with Hyundai Asan over the business rights for the tours of Gaeseong (Kaesong) in North Korea, which was the capital of the Goryeo Dynasty (918-1392 AD).
The management of Lotte Tours, including its chairman Kim Ki-byung, has submitted applications for a March 25-31 visit to North Korea through the Ministry of Unification's Web site. On the application, Lotte Tour wrote that the purpose of its visit is to "discuss the Gaeseong historical site tours."
[Kaesong]
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N.Korean Champ Becomes S. Korean
Hong Chang-soo, the former World Boxing Council Super Flyweight champion, has acquired South Korea citizenship.
In a media interview, Hong, a pro-North Korean resident in Japan, said, ``Once I was a North Korean but I am a South Korean now because I got citizenship last month.''
Asked about the reason he changed his nationality,
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Vice-President of IIHF and His Party Arrive Here
Pyongyang, March 15 (KCNA) -- Vice-President of the International Ice Hockey Federation Kalervo Kummola and his party came here today for the 2007 World Women's Ice Hockey Championships (B class) to be held in the DPRK.
Hockey teams from Netherlands, Austria, Italy, Slovenia and Slovakia arrived to participated in the championships.
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DPRK-Iraq Football Match Held
Pyongyang, March 14 (KCNA) -- A football match between the DPRK and Iraqi teams was held at Kim Il Sung Stadium in Pyongyang today as one of the Asian regional preliminaries to obtain the qualification for the men's football matches of the 29th Olympic Games.
The match drew 2-2.
Earlier, the DPRK footballers played with the Thai team in Thailand on February 28 and won the game with the score of 1-0.
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DPRK Girls Overwhelm Thai Team at AFC U-16 Women's Championship
Pyongyang, March 12 (KCNA) -- DPRK girls trounced the Thai team 7:1 on March 10 at the First AFC U-16 Women's Championship which is now under way in Malaysia.
They beat the Japanese team 1:0 in the first game of the group round robin. Finishing on top of the round robin, they have secured the berth in the semi-finals.
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Ex-PM Asks N.Korea to Co-Host Pyeongchang Olympics
Former prime minister Lee Hae-chan asked North Korea to co-host the 2014 Winter Olympic Games in the South Korean city of Pyeongchang if it wins the bid. Lee on Saturday said the North had been "positive" about the idea.
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Preparations for WWIHC Completed in DPRK
Pyongyang, March 10 (KCNA) -- Full preparations for the 2007 World Women's Ice Hockey Championships (B Class) to be opened in the DPRK on March 17 have been completed.
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DPRK Girls Football Team Beats Japanese Rival
Pyongyang, March 9 (KCNA) -- Preliminary round of group league matches of the First U-16 Asian Women's Soccer Championships is now under way in Kuala Lumpur among teams belonging to Groups A and B.
The DPRK team belonging to Group B trounced its Japanese rival 1:0 on March 8.
Korean girls will play its last match with the Thai eleven on March 10.
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North Korean Youth Football Team is Expected to Visit South Korea for Training
North Korean under-17 football team is expected to visit South Korea from March 20 to April 20, 2007 for training. They are likely to train in Jeju Island, Suwon, and Seoul, etc. The team will participate in the 2007 FIFA World Youth Championship, which is held in eight cities including Seoul from August 18 to September 9, 2007.
Their visit is the result of the invitation by the Inter-Korean Sports Exchange Association.
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US tourists set to invade North Korea.
Rare access for US citizens to visit the most spectacular human performance on earth- 100,000 performers in North Korea’s socialist realism spectacular
Press release from Koryo Tours in Beijing
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Koryo Tours newsletter
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Queensland keen on attracting young and wealthy Indian tourists
By eTN Staff writer
India is among priority countries as Queensland develops future profitable markets. On a tourism trade mission led by Queensland Tourism Minister Margaret Keech, the authorities made it clear that they are eyeing “young and wealthy Indian holidaymakers” to Queensland.
Keech said that visitor expenditure from India to Australia grew 23.6 percent for year ending September 2006 while 31 percent of Indian visitors to Australia visit Queensland.
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China vs India – the heavyweight championship of Asia
It’s no rumble in the jungle, but rest assured this battle will be watched with more interest and by many more people than any Ali versus Foreman fight ever was.
Not only are India and China expected to dominate the Asian travel market place, but
perhaps even the world if current trends are any indication.
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Buoyant India to Drive 10% Outbound Growth to 2009
By PATA COMMUNICATIONS
BANGKOK, THAILAND, February 28, 2007 – A strong, consumption-driven economy, a large and increasingly affluent middle class, and the on-going liberalisation of air transport will contribute to a 10 per cent annual growth in Indian outbound travellers to Asia Pacific over the next three years, according to a new report released last week.
Titled 'Total Tourism India', the 280-page report is a comprehensive, independent and authoritative analysis on India’s tourism sector released by the Pacific Asia Travel Association (PATA) and Visa International. The report reviews all aspects of India’s inbound, outbound and domestic tourism flows, and outlines a seven-point action plan to advance India’s tourism development in achieving the sector’s full potential.
PATA President and CEO Mr Peter de Jong said: “With India being one of the fastest growing markets in our region, the eyes of the travel industry are turning to this country of 1.1 billion residents, and its rapidly expanding middle class.“
The report shows that international outbound trips by resident nationals peaked at around 8.3 million in 2006. Close to three million arrivals were to Asia Pacific destinations, making India the region’s fourth largest source market behind China, Japan and Korea.
This is expected to rise to over 3.6 million in 2007 and then increase by more than 10 percent each year to 2009. The top five destinations by percentage growth to 2009 will be Macau, Papua New Guinea, China, Cambodia and Malaysia. For volume growth over the same period, the top five will be Singapore, China, Malaysia, Hong Kong and the USA.
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FEBRUARY 2007
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Tourists will soon be able to visit inner Kumgang
February 26, 2007 Hyundai Asan Co., an exclusive operator of tour packages between South and North Korea, said yesterday tourists will be allowed to travel to the inner part of scenic Mount Kumgang in the North, an area that has been off-limits, as early as April.
Assisted by the recent agreement on the North's nuclear issue , Hyundai and North Korea discussed the further opening of the mountain last week.
"The two sides have the same opinion about allowing tourists into inner Mount Kumgang," said a Hyundai Asan spokesman. "The tour will be possible around early April."
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Tours of N.K. peak pick up after a sluggish '06
In the wake of thawed North-South relations, Mt. Geumgang tourism business sees increasing numbers
Mt. Geumgang (Kumgang) tourism, which was in jeopardy last year due to decreased popularity in the face of North Korea's missile launches and nuclear test, has picked up again this year.
An official of Hyundai Asan - the company largely running the tours - said on February 22, "During the Lunar New Year, the number of visitors to the scenic North Korean mountain increased more than two times from last year's figures." Up to 855 tourists visited Mt. Geumgang this year during the Lunar New Year's holiday, compared with 418 last year and 530 in 2005.
{Kumgangsan]
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'PyeongChang Olympics Will Bring Peace'
By Yoon Won-sup
Staff Reporter
President Roh Moo-hyun
President Roh Moo-hyun said on Saturday that if the 2014 Winter Olympic Games take place in PyeongChang, Kangwon Province, Korea will make it a grand festival aimed at creating inter-Korean harmony and regional peace and prosperity.
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North Korea Is a New Summer Destination
By JENNIFER CONLIN
Published: February 18, 2007
Axis of Evil travelers take note, a British company, Steppes Travel (www.steppestravel.co.uk) is offering to take Americans to North Korea this summer and even secure them hard-to-obtain visas.
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Hyundai Asan Targets W300 Bil. in Sale on Mt. Kumgang Tours
Hyundai Asan, the company specializing in inter-Korean business cooperation, Monday marked its eighth anniversary.
The affiliate under the Hyundai Group, led by Hyun Jung-eun, the widow of Chung Mong-hun, the successor of the group founder Chung Ju-yung, said that this year it plans to attract 400,000 tourists to Mt. Kumgang, the North Korean scenic mountain on the East Coast.
Hyundai Asan also said that it also will push ahead with tours of Kaesong, a historic North Korean city near the inter-Korean border that is home to a South Korean-invested industrial complex, this year so as to meet its sales target of 300 billion won.
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North Korea Struggles in Winter Sports
By Kang Seung-woo
Staff Reporter
Former winter sports power North Korea is sinking, taking no medals at the Winter Asian Games, which ended Sunday.
The Stalinist state has not picked up a gold medal since the Sapporo Winter Asian Games in 1990, when it earned one gold, two silvers and five bronzes.
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JANUARY 2007
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China Projects Bullish Demand in 2007
China (PRC)'s tourism industry should see record revenues of CNY1 trillion (US$128.6 billion) in 2007, up 10% from 2006, if China National Tourism Administration (CNTA) projections prove correct. Foreigners are expected to contribute US$37 billion of that, also 10% more than 2006.
The mainland is expected to welcome 129 million inbound visitors in 2007, including 24 million foreigners, and host 1.5 billion domestic trips. China's more than 22 million foreign arrivals in 2006 was 10% higher than 2005.
Chinese travellers will make 37.4 million trips outside the mainland in 2007, up 10% from 2006, according to the CNTA. Fifteen new destinations were approved in 2006, bringing to 132 the number of destinations with Approved Destination Status (ADS). In 2006, 86 ADS destinations received Chinese tourist groups.
China is increasingly the focus of the North American hospitality industry. Industry leaders told the Americas Lodging Investment Summit (ALIS) they were rushing to maximise opportunities in the emerging mega-markets of China and India.
PATA is planning a Total Tourism China report for publication in 2008, the year Beijing will host the Olympics.
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Another Record Year for World Tourism
Madrid, 29 January 2007/eTN - With 842 million arrivals and a 4.5% growth rate, 2006 exceeded expectations as the tourism sector continued to enjoy above average results, making it a new record year for the industry. The latest UNWTO World Tourism Barometer figures suggest that 2007 will consolidate this performance and turn into the fourth year of sustained growth.
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UNWTO: China set to surpass Spain by 2010
By Yusof Sulaiman l eTN Asia
asianinfo.org
The latest forecast from United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) has projected that China is poised to surpass Spain as the world's second most popular destination after France.
"With its great tourist capacity it could surpass Spain by 2010," said UNWTO secretary-general Francesco Frangialli. "As well as sending millions of tourists abroad in recent years, China is set to receive more visitors."
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India steps up game to avoid complacency
By Satish Gupta
nepal-safari.com
MUMBAI, India (eTN) -- Sustaining its growth in the tourism industry, India witnessed an increment in foreign tourist arrivals from 3.92 million in 2005 to 4.43 million in 2006. Foreign exchange earnings from tourism have also shown a phenomenal growth from US$5730.86 million in 2005 to US$6569.34 million in 2006, achieving an increase of 14.6 percent, according to an official release from the Indian Ministry of Tourism (INM).
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Asia’s Travel Industry Charges into 2007
2006 was a special year in the evolution of the Asian travel industry. The region continued steaming along with record growth figures, surpassing all other major regions and forging a strong position in the global game.
However the big question is “will this momentum be carried over to 2007”? So far the
overwhelmingly popular answer has been “yes”!
For the most part inbound visitor numbers across the region rose dramatically. The few countries that did not were generally those suffering from exceptional circumstances such as terrorist bombings or natural disasters.
Hong Kong enjoyed an 8.1% visitor increase in 2006, and with the recent launch of low cost carrier Oasis Hong Kong, linking London and Hong Kong on a budget, look for this figure to climb even further in 2007. But Hong Kong was hardly the tip of the ice berg when you consider visitor increases for other nations ranged from 11.9% in South Korea, to 16.1% in the Philippines.
Following the Oasis Hong Kong lead, AirAsia and Jetstar have recently introduced low cost long haul routes of their own, and now suddenly the number of ingredients in the recipe has tripled. Look for demand for this style of budget long haul flying to give rise to further route openings in 2007, and consequently further increases to regional visitor numbers.
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Inter-Korean Tourism
Transparent Cash Flow Is Key for Peace Project
North Korea’s re-selection of Hyundai Asan as its partner for the Kaesong tourism project suggests much in future inter-Korean ties. Pyongyang had tried to break up Hyundai’s business monopoly in the North by playing it against another South Korean conglomerate, Lotte Group, but recently gave up in the face of Seoul’s adherence to original agreement. This is a rare example of the South’s principles winning over the North’s arbitrariness. We’d like to see similar cases in other areas, too.
[Diversion]
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N.Korea Denies Making Up With Hyundai
North Korea on Wednesday denied it has reconciled with Hyundai Asan, which was to operate package tours to the ancient city of Kaesong on the inter-Korean border, after inviting Lotte Tours instead. A spokesman for the Korean Asia-Pacific Peace Committee (KAPPC) told the official Korea Central News Agency that Pyongyang “has no formal agreement with Hyundai Asan over Kaesong tours” and never negotiated the issue with the South Korean firm. Government officials and Hyundai Asan staffers had earlier been quoted as saying North Korea was willing to settle the Kaesong tour issue with Hyundai Asan. Observers see the denial as North Korea’s attempt to gain an advantage over Asan, its long-term partner in tours to Mt.Kumgang, in negotiations.
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KAPPC on Its Stand on Tour of Kaesong
Pyongyang, January 24 (KCNA) -- A spokesman for the Korean Asia-Pacific Peace Committee (KAPPC) gave the following answer to a question put by KCNA Wednesday as regards south Korean media's misinformation about the issue of tour of Kaesong: South Korean media released misinformation that the KAPPC withdrew its policy of dealing with Lotte tourist business over the issue of tour of Kaesong and took the stand of dealing with Hyundai Asan over the tour of Kaesong.
In an effort to make this sound plausible the media reported that the KAPPC informed the former minister of Unification on a visit to the Kaesong Industrial Zone on December 8 last year of this and gave Hyundai Asan "a positive message over the issue of tour of Kaesong" at a meeting with it at Mt. Kumgang Resort.
This is a false report that does not deserve even a passing note. But the KAPPC is compelled to clarify its stand as they are engrossed in the smear campaign against the north.
The above-said misinformation released by south Korean media all at once cannot be interpreted otherwise than a mean diatribe made by the authorities in collusion with high fliers and tricksters of Hyundai Asan who stoop to any infamy to meet their business interests.
The KAPPC has remained true to the bilateral good faith, invariably considering national reconciliation and unity as the basic purpose of inter-Korean economic cooperation undertakings including the dealing with Hyundai Asan.
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Unification Ministry Not to Meddle in Kaesong Tour
By Lee Jin-woo
Staff Reporter
Unification Minister Lee Jae-joung
The Ministry of Unification has decided to stay away from a dispute between North Korea and Hyundai Asan over the long-delayed Kaesong tourism project, a top ministry official said Thursday.
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Inter-Korean Tourism
Transparent Cash Flow Is Key for Peace Project
North Korea’s re-selection of Hyundai Asan as its partner for the Kaesong tourism project suggests much in future inter-Korean ties. Pyongyang had tried to break up Hyundai’s business monopoly in the North by playing it against another South Korean conglomerate, Lotte Group, but recently gave up in the face of Seoul’s adherence to original agreement. This is a rare example of the South’s principles winning over the North’s arbitrariness. We’d like to see similar cases in other areas, too.
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Hyundai Asan Awarded N.Korea Tour Rights
North Korea has selected long-time business partner Hyundai Asan of South Korea to operate tours to Kaesong, an ancient city in North Korea, as initially agreed between the two parties.
The North had earlier considered changing the operator to South Korean travel agency Lotte Tours. With the recent decision, Hyundai Asan has begun preparing for working-level negotiations on the Kaesong project with the North.
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Chinese Allowed to Visit N.Korea via South
Chinese tourists can now visit the North Korean mountain resort of Kumgang via South Korea. China's state-run Xinhua news agency reported Saturday that China Youth Travel Service signed a contract with Hyundai Asan for the exclusive rights to bring Chinese tourists across the border to Mt. Kumgang.
This marks the first opportunity for Chinese tourists to visit the North via the South. Officials at the China Youth Travel said the first group of Chinese tourists will depart for the scenic mountain area from South Korea around next month's Lunar New Year holidays.
As China has not designated North Korea a tourist destination for its people, Chinese travelers could only visit a few sites in North Korea via Dandong, a Chinese border town in the Yalu River area. Those visits were limited to a restricted period and according to quotas assigned by Pyongyang.
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A dismal year at Kumgang, but tour firm still hopeful
January 22, 2007
Buses carrying tourists to the scenic Mount Kumgang resort entering North Korea via a road alongside the East Sea. By Kim Choon-sik
Last year was a nightmare for Hyundai Asan Co., the sole domestic operator of inter-Korean businesses. But the Hyundai Group affiliate sees brighter days ahead for its tourism program at Mount Kumgang, a scenic North Korean resort, this year, and is stepping up marketing efforts.
Earlier this month the company launched a radio ad campaign featuring a decades-old Korean children¡¯s song including the lyric, ¡°Let¡¯s go to Mount Kumgang.¡± The commercial does not identify Hyundai Asan as the tour operator, and Hyundai Asan said the broadcast was aimed at promoting the destination among tourists.
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N. Korea Picks Hyundai as Partner for Kaesong Tour
By Lee Jin-woo
Staff Reporter
North Korea has hinted that it is willing to start the long-delayed Kaesong tourism project with Hyundai Asan instead of Lotte, a Unification Ministry official said on Sunday.
``When former Unification Minister Lee Jong-seok visited the Kaesong industrial complex on Dec. 8, North Korean officials said they have finalized their decision to carry out the project with Hyundai,'' said the official on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the issue.
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DECEMBER 2006
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DPRK Soccer Teams Prove Fruitful
Pyongyang, December 25 (KCNA) -- The DPRK has made a signal success in the football development this year. The DPRK team participated in the FIFA Under-20 Women's World Championship for the first time, but it made a great sensation in the football world with its well-arranged tactics, strong offensive, stubborn fighting spirit and collectivism.
It defeated all the strong teams from Europe, America and Asia, scoring eighteen goals, record in the history of the championship.
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North Korea Backs Bid by PyeongChang
By Moon Gwang-lip
Staff Reporter
In a letter soon to be sent to the International Olympic Committee, North Korea will officially support South Korea’s bid to hold the 2014 Winter Olympics, representatives of the host city, PyeongChang, announced.
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DPRK Women's Football Team Wins Gold Medal In 15th Asiad
Pyongyang, December 15 (KCNA) -- The DPRK team won the gold medal in the women's football tournament of the 15th Asiad. The DPRK team won all the matches it played in the preliminary round and semi-finals. And it defeated Japan 4:2 on penalties after drawing 0:0 in the first and second halves and even in extra time in the finals on Wednesday.
The DPRK team won the Asiad title in the wake of its victory in the 14th Asiad in 2002.
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North Korean women down Japan for gold
December 15, 2006 ? North Korea retained the Asian Games women's soccer title early yesterday with a 4-2 penalty kick shootout win over Japan.
The defending champions, Asia's highest-ranked team, enjoyed the better chances throughout the match and held their nerve at the end with goalkeeper Jon Myong-hui saving two Japan kicks.
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South, North Korea march together at opening ceremony of Doha Asiad
South and North Korean athletes marched together at the opening ceremony of the 15th Asian Games in Doha, Qatar, on Friday as Asia geared up for its greatest sporting event.
The two Koreas entered the 50,000-seat Khalifa Stadium under the single country name of "Korea" and flying the blue and white "unification flag," symbolizing unity and the Korean Peninsula.
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Two Koreas March Together During Asian Games Opening
Athletes from South and North Korea marched together into Khalifa Stadium in Doha, Qatar, during the gala opening ceremony of the 15th Asian Games on Friday.
They entered the stadium carrying a blue and white unification flag showing the Korean Peninsular.
They became the 16th team to enter the 50,000-seat stadium as the procession was arranged in alphabetical order.
The show of unity marked the eighth time that the two Koreas have joined hands in an international sports event.
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Developing DPRK Women's Football
Pyongyang, November 30 (KCNA) -- The history of women's football in the DPRK is not long. Since a measure was taken in Juche 74(1985) to organize women's football teams, teenage girls began to play football with a dream of displaying the honor of the country. It was the South Phyongan Provincial Sports Group (at that time) that organized the women's football team, the first of its kind in the country.
There was the first training football match of female footballers of the first generation at Kim Il Sung Stadium on May 19, 1986.
Recollecting those days, female footballer Kye Yong Sun, 35, told KCNA that the football teams, which came into being amid interests of the country, made match tours to accumulate experience and intensified training to compete with the world strong teams.
The DPRK women's football team displayed its ability to the full at the 7th Asian Women's Football Championship in 1988.
At the 13th Asian Women's Football Championship (2001), the DPRK team defeated all the opponents by manifesting the firm faith in sure victory, stubborn fighting sprit and a high degree of sports technique, thus wining the championship in the new century. This year the DPRK women's football team won all the six matches at the 3rd FIFA U-20 Women's World Championship to become the strongest in the world. Promising is the DPRK women's football team with a large number of reserves.
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NOVEMBER 2006
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Mun Jae Dok and DPRK Team Leave
Pyongyang, November 28 (KCNA) -- Chairman of the Korean Physical Culture and Sports Guidance Commission Mun Jae Dok who is chairman of the Olympic Committee of the DPRK and the DPRK team left here today to participate in the 15th Asian Games in Qatar.
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North Vows Support for PyeongChang Bid
By Moon Gwang-lip
Staff Reporter
On his return from a visit to Pyongyang, the top official from Kangwon Province said in Seoul on Tuesday that North Korea would support an effort by Kangwon city PyeongChang to play host to the 2014 Winter Olympics.
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DPRK Footballers Win at AFC Soccer Championship
Pyongyang, November 13 (KCNA) -- The DPRK team won at the AFC Under-19 Soccer Championship held in India. The DPRK team beat the Japanese 6:4 on 11m kick in the finals on November 12.
The Asian Football Confederation gave award for a fair play to the DPRK team and award for best player to Kim Kum Il.
The DPRK team is qualified to participate in the World under-20 Soccer Championship to be held in Canada in 2007.
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Pyongyang proposes joint sports team talks
November 17, 2006 ? North Korea has proposed holding talks with South Korea on ways of sending unified delegations to international sporting events, including the 2008 Beijing Olympics, the Unification Ministry said yesterday.
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Folk Street Built at Foot of Mt. Kyongam
Pyongyang, November 8 (KCNA) -- A folk street has been built at the foot of Mt. Kyongam in Sariwon City, North Hwanghae Province, the DPRK. The Kyongam Lake consists of three small lakes along which two roads stretch out 1,000-odd meters each. The city has constructed various shapes of the traditional buildings tinged with national character in the vast areas along the roads. The buildings of the street present an ancient picture for their varied colors and decorations in bold relief.
There are buildings with hip-saddle roofs including the Mokran Pavilion, Hana Pavilion, Kyongamsan Hotel and History Museum and a gate at an end of the street. A merrymaking ground covering more than 5,000 square meters has been built in the street with the Kyongam Pavilion, historical relic belonging to the 15th century, as its center. In the ground, people can conduct art activities and play sports and amusement games.
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North, South in Under-19 Football Semis
By Kang Seung-woo
Staff Reporter
South and North Korea advanced Monday to the semifinals of the Asian Football Confederation Youth Championship in India after defeating Australia 2-1 and Iraq 2-0, respectively, and making possible an all-Korean final.
South Korea’s under–19 squad, which aims to win the confederation trophy for the third in a row, now must beat Japan to reach the final. North Korea faces Jordan in the other semifinal match.
If the Korean sides face each other in the final, it will be second time. In 1990, two Koreas faced each other in the final in Indonesia and the South beat the North 4-3 in a penalty shootout.
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DPRK Footballers to Advance into Quarter-Finals at AFC under-19 Soccer Championship
Pyongyang, November 3 (KCNA) -- The DPRK team belonging to Group C of the AFC Under-19 Soccer Championship beat the Iranian team 5:0 and the Tajik team 1:0 and finished runner-up in the league matches to advance into quarter-finals.
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North Korean tourism overshadowed by its missiles
By Yusof Sulaiman l eTN Asia
phillyburbs.com
North Korean tourism is now a major issue between the two Koreas. Pyongyang has warned Seoul not to join the international move to slap sanctions on the North following UN sanctions over its October 9 nuclear test.
The tourism project at Mount Kumgang is one of a number of joint initiatives by the two Koreas to promote economic cooperation in the North, whose economy is dependent on tourism.
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GNP Campaign for Suspending Tour of Mt. Kumgang under Fire
Pyongyang, November 1 (KCNA) -- A spokesman for the Korea Asia-Pacific Peace Committee issued a statement Wednesday to accuse the Grand National Party of south Korea of kicking up a row demanding a halt to the tour of Mt. Kumgang. The statement said:
The GNP is becoming evermore undisguised in its moves to totally block the tour of Mt. Kumgang, a symbol of inter-Korean economic cooperation.
The GNP gentry at a press conference held on October 29 groundlessly asserted that there was a suspicion of the diversion of the payment for the tour of the mountain to the purpose of "arms race" and recklessly demanded a halt to the tour.
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NK Opposes Changes on Kumgang Tours
SEOUL (Yonhap) _ North Korea on Wednesday said it would take ``stern measures'' against South Korea following any changes to a tourism program to the North's Mt. Kumgang, a South Korean project recently accused of funneling hard currency to the communist state.
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OCTOBER 2006
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At Hyundai Group, the North is a matter of money and blood
October 13, 2006 ? Hyun Jeong-eun, the Hyundai Group chairwoman, may face a serious problem soon: If tourist departures for the North Korean resort area of Mount Kumgang continue in their slump, should she end the operation? And if she does, what happens to the Hyundai Group's leading role in developing business ties with North Korea, including its exclusive right to conduct tours there for South Koreans?
Hyundai Asan, the group subsidiary that operates the tours, said yesterday that only 549 tourists traveled to the mountain area, now ablaze in fall colors. A day earlier, the number was 788. The company said that 4 percent of its travelers canceled on Monday, when the North announced that it had conducted a nuclear test; yesterday, 65 percent of those who had signed up for the trip cancelled.
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Home-stay Facilities Built in Mt. Chilbo
Pyongyang, October 11 (KCNA) -- Mt. Chilbo, one of the celebrated mountains in Korea, has turned into a tourist resort with the Inner Chilbo and Outer Chilbo Hotels and the home-stay facilities built in the Sea Chilbo. What attracts the eyes of tourists is the home-stay facilities. They are private dwelling houses where tourists can board and lodge along with the owners.
Twenty blocks have been constructed. They consist of one or two storied Korean style houses and two-storied European style houses, which can accommodate 40-100 tourists.
Each house has a bedroom, kitchen, bathroom and sanitary room for the owner, a bedroom, bathroom and sanitary room for guests, and a reception room where the owner and guests can enjoy meals and tea and cake.
There is in the center of the houses a restaurant for those who want only to lodge in the houses.
The buildings have been constructed near the sea swimming beach for the convenience of the tourists.
The buildings have Korean-style and European-style inner structures in accordance with their outer forms.
In the DPRK, foreign tourists lodged in private houses for the first time during the 13th World Festival of Youth and Students held in Pyongyang in Juche 78 (1989).
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Tourism implications of the North Korean nuclear test
By David Beirman
globalsecurity.org
The reported test of a nuclear bomb in North Korea this week should come as no surprise to the world. The North Korean regime has flagged its intentions to develop a nuclear weapons capability for well over a decade.
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Mt. Paektu Tour Impossible Before June
By Kim Yon-se
Staff Reporter
A tour to Mt. Paektu via North Korean territory for South Koreans has become virtually impossible this year even though Hyundai Asan, the inter-Korean tourism operator, has pushed the project for more than a year.
Should Hyundai Asan reach a final agreement with the North to open tours soon, bad weather conditions on the mountain will make it impossible for tourists to travel to Mt. Paektu, located on the border of the North and China.
``Because of early snowfall and chilly weather there, ordinary tourists are not allowed to climb Mt. Paektu after September,'' a spokeswoman of the Hyundai Group said yesterday.
Apart from political setbacks, involving the United States' unfavorable views toward inter-Korean businesses, the spokeswoman attributed the continuous delay to unfinished construction of a link between the mountain entrance and Mt. Paektu Airport
[Sanctions]
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"Grand Bull Prize" Winner
Pyongyang, October 2 (KCNA) -- The 4th National Korean Wrestling Tournament for "Grand Bull Prize" was closed on Monday amid interest of the people throughout the country. Pak Chun Min from Pyongyang was crowned with the "Grand Bull Prize."
He met with Ri Jo Won from North Phyongan Province at the final of the individual event without weight distinction held in the afternoon.
The final match between the two wrestlers, who were physically well prepared and had diverse skills, made the spectators feel a thrill.
When Pak Chun Min beat down his opponent by making best use of the latter's technique and weak points, the spectators burst forth cheers.
At the awarding ceremony, he was honored with the grand bull weighing nearly one ton, gold bell, gold medal and diploma.
Spectators put the floral garland around his neck and presented bouquets to him.
He expressed thanks to Kim Jong Il who values and encourages the folk traditions.
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Protocol for 2007 Sports Exchange between DPRK and China Signed
Pyongyang, September 28 (KCNA) -- A protocol for sports exchange for 2007 between the DPRK Physical Culture and Sports Guidance Commission and the General Administration of Sports of China was signed here Thursday. Present at the signing ceremony from the DPRK side were Kim Jang San, vice-chairman of the commission, and officials concerned and from the Chinese side members of the delegation of the general administration headed by its Vice-Minister Xiao Tian and Zhang Yongwen, cultural councilor of the Chinese embassy here.
The protocol was signed by Kim Jang San and Xiao Tian.
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SEPTEMBER 2006
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World Tourism Day Observed in DPRK
Pyongyang, September 27 (KCNA) -- Sept. 27 is the World Tourism Day. The World Tourism Organization (WTO) has advanced the slogan for the year "Tourism Enriches".
On the occasion of the day, Kim To Jun, director of the State General Bureau of Tourism, had an interview with KCNA. He said to the following effect:
A lot of countries are encouraging tourism on the principle of promoting the development of national economy, peace and prosperity, improving the people's health and respecting their freedom and human rights.
The DPRK, which has many tourist resorts famous in the world, has also directed proper attention to developing the sightseeing.
Hundreds of picturesque sites in Pyongyang, Kaesong, Nampho and other main cities and Mts. Paektu, Kumgang, Myohyang, Chilbo and Kuwol have been built as tourist resorts.
In recent years servicepersons and people of the country have discovered a lot of scenic spots such as Ullim Falls and Songam Cavern for more cultured future. And they have turned them into wonderful recreation and tourist resorts along with the existing ones.
The government devotes profound attention to developing tourism.
The bureau, in close contact with the WTO and other international organizations, has organized several working-level training courses on tourism and exchanged experience with Singapore, Malaysia and the like.
It, at the same time, is striving to improve the management of tourism.
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More Foreigners Can Tour Mt. Kumgang
By Kim Yon-se
Staff Reporter
Hyundai Asan will offer foreigners-only tour to Mt. Kumgang, North Korea, in cooperation with English-speaking tour operators from this weekend.
The inter-Korean tourism operator said the product will provide foreigners with more convenient trips as they have experienced communication problems when accompanying South Korean tourists due to a shortage of English-speaking guides.
Though the accumulated number of foreign tourists stood at 7,500 over the past eight years since the Mt. Kumgang tour began in November 1998, Korean tourists numbered 1.35 million.
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N.Korea's Dollar Profits from Asan Trips Soar 76 Percent
Hyundai Asan, which organizes package tours to North Korea's Mt. Kumgang, has seen the fee it pays Pyongyang per visitor grow a whopping 78.3 percent over the last two years. It paid US$33.75 a head in 2004 but $59.50 now.
Documents the Unification Ministry submitted to Grand National Party lawmaker Chin Young on Friday say Hyundai Asan agreed to pay an entrance fee to Mt.Kumgang according to the number of tour days as of July 1, 2004 and set the fee at $10 for a day trip, $25 for a two-day trip and $50 for a three-day trip. On May 1 last year, it agreed to raise it to $15 for a day trip, $35 for the two-day trip, and $70 for a three-day trip. On July 1 this year, after a fractious period in relations between Pyongyang and the firm, it agreed to another hike to $30 for the day trip, $48 for the two-day trip and $80 for the three-day trip.
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North Seeks New Partner for Golf Courses
By Lee Jin-woo
Staff Reporter
North Korea is seeking a new partner for golf course construction projects in the inter-Korean industrial complex to replace Hyundai, a Unification Ministry official said yesterday.
The North has already expressed its intention to choose Lotte as its partner for arranging tours of South Koreans to Kaesong, the capital of the Koryo Kingdom (918-1392) instead of Hyundai-Asan, the business arm of Hyundai Group that deals with North Korea.
The official said a South Korean company named Unico has been in consultations with North Korea's Asia Pacific Peace Committee since last year. The company signed a letter of intention with the committee, promising to pay $30 million to $40 million to rent 4.9 million square meters of land in the complex for 50 years to develop three golf clubs in December last year.
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DPRK Young Soccer Team Defeats Tajik Team
Pyongyang, September 15 (KCNA) -- The DPRK young football team defeated the Tajik team 3:0 in the semi-finals to advance to the finals of the U-17 Asian Championships now under way in Singapore since Sept. 3. The DPRK team will face the Japanese team in the finals on Sept. 17.
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Kim Jong Il's Field Guidance to Mt. Kumgang Resort
Pyongyang, September 14 (KCNA) -- General Secretary Kim Jong Il provided field guidance to Mt. Kumgang resort on his way of inspection of the front. Mt. Kumgang covers a vast area of 530 square kilometers extending 60 km from south to north and 40 km from east to west including Kosong, Kumgang and Thongchon counties of Kangwon Province. It is known as a famous mountain of Korea and a world-famous mountain from old times as it presents a myriad of diverse, majestic and spectacular scenery.
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Kim Jong-il Visits Mt. Kumgang
By Lee Jin-woo
Staff Reporter
North Korean leader Kim Jong-il recently made a visit to Mt. Kumgang, but the reclusive leader did not stop at a resort run by a South Korean company in the scenic area, the North's wire service reported Friday.
According to the North's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), Kim advised related officials to further develop the mountain and prevent possible natural disasters during his inspection. The news agency reported Kim went all the way to the top of ``Piro,'' the highest peak on the mountain at 1,639 meters.
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N. Korean U-17s Advance to Final
North Korea under-17 football squad reached the final of AFC Championship, beating Tajikistan 3-0 in the match held in Singapore
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Peace marathon: Participants in the Chorwon DMZ International Peace Marathon
start from a gateway in Chorwon, Kangwon Province, Sunday. The running event, organized by Chorwon County and Hankook Ilbo, a sister paper of The Korea Times, was held in the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ). [Photo]
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Young Korean Footballers Back from World Championship
Pyongyang, September 7 (KCNA) -- Young women footballers of the DPRK returned home Thursday after participating in the FIFA U-20 World Women's Championship held in Russia from August 17 to September 3. They defeated all the strong rivals and came first, thus greatly delighting the Korean people on the threshold of the 58th birthday of the DPRK
At least 100,000 Pyongyangites from all walks of life enthusiastically welcomed the players along the route from Ryonmot-dong, the gateway to the city, to Ryonghung Intersection, Kaeson Street, Sungri Street and Changjon Intersection.
Citizens turned out to the festively bedecked streets with bouquets, slogans, national flags and drums and gongs in hands and lavished their praises on the players, greatly excited to welcome them.
A lot of women artistes danced with fans and janggos to the tune of the band music, stirring up the festive atmosphere.
Citizens threw confetti over the players from verandas and windows of high-rise apartment houses, institutions and enterprises.
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AUGUST 2006
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DPRK Gymnasts Prove Successful at Asian Championships
Pyongyang, August 9 (KCNA) -- DPRK gymnasts captured three gold medals, three silver medals and four bronze medals at the 3rd Asian Gymnastic Championships held in India from July 30 to August 3. Ri Jong Song successfully carried out movements of highest technique in the men's floor exercises and pommel horse event to catch two gold medals and Hong Un Jong bagged a gold medal in the women's pommel horse event.
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DPRK Shooters Proved Successful
Pyongyang, August 8 (KCNA) -- DPRK shooters gave a good account of themselves at the 49th World Shooting Championships held in Zagreb, capital of Croatia, from July 23 to August 6. The championships drew sharpshooters from more than 100 countries.
Jo Yong Chol displayed high skill and scored 392 points in the youth event of 50m-running game target, catching a gold medal.
Jo Yong Chol, Pak Myong Won and Sim Chong Rim scored 1,156 points in the youth team event of 50m-running game target and took the first place.
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FIFA Rejects North-South Team
Federation International de Football Association announced Monday that South and North Korea cannot co-host the U-17 World Championship, which will be played in the South from Aug. 18 to Sept. 9, 2007.
At a press conference held at the headquarters of the Korea Football Association, Kim Dong-dae, secretary general of the organization committee, said that after talking with FIFA about the possibility of co-organizing the contest, the committee received a negative response because South Korea applied for it independently and an Organizing Association Agreement was signed on that basis.
After FIFA's opposition, the organization committee gave up the plan.
The general secretary said there is not much possibility of creating a united Korea team as North Korean youth football is at such a high level that the North does not want a united team.
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North sends upbeat note on inter-Korean projects
August 07, 2006 ? North Korea has reaffirmed its commitment toward inter-Korean economic cooperation projects, a South Korean operator of an inter-Korean business project said yesterday.
"We are confident that ongoing inter-Korean economic cooperation projects such as the Mount Kumgang tours will produce new meaningful results," the North's Asia Pacific Peace Committee said in a letter to Hyundai Asan Corporation, the operator of a tour program to Mount Kumgang.
The North sent the letter on Tuesday, marking the third anniversary on Friday of the death of Chung Mong-hun, the late chairman of Hyundai Asan, an arm of Hyundai Group in charge of various business projects in the communist country.
Mr. Chung committed suicide in 2003 after being interrogated by prosecutors about slush funds he allegedly provided to politicians to promote his company's North Korea business projects, including an inter-Korean industrial complex in the North Korean border town of Kaesong.
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DPRK Taekwon-Do Players Proved Successful
Pyongyang, August 4 (KCNA) -- DPRK players won the cup for the first prize in total points, the cup for men's group and the cup for women's group by winning 19 gold medals, one silver medal and 4 bronze medals and coming first in country standings at the 7th World Junior Taekwon-Do Championships. And Choe Song Il and Ri Un Hyang each bagged the cups for the individual best players in total points. The championships held in Bulgaria from July 26 to 30 brought together hundreds of ace Taekwon-Do players from 67 countries including the DPRK, Russia, Ukraine, the Czech Republic, Ireland, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Greece and Argentina.
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North Korea cancels mass games show due to floods
Reuters
Sunday, July 30, 2006; 11:19 PM
SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea has canceled its mass games spectacle, where it celebrates its military might and communist ideology, because of flooding that hit the impoverished country this month, a South Korean official said on Monday.
The 80-minute performances that are part rhythmic gymnastics floor show, part military parade and part circus act were scheduled to start on August 15 and run through mid-October.
"The Arirang mass games have been canceled," a Unification Ministry official said by telephone.
Leonid Petrov, who specializes in arranging tours to North Korea, said: "The official reasons named by the North Korean tourism authorities are the recent torrential rains and the planned joint military drill 'Ulchi Focus Lens', which will be performed by the U.S. and South Korean military forces."
Petrov said the mass games festival will be moved to April.
North Korea typically objects to the annual joint drills, but it has not previously canceled the mass games because of them.
[Joint US military] [Media]
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IOC to Send Official Representative to Second International Martial Arts Games
Pyongyang, July 31 (KCNA) -- The International Olympic Committee (IOC) recently made a decision to send an official representative to the Second International Martial Arts Games to be held in Pyongyang, the DPRK. President of the International Taekwon-Do Federation (ITF) Jang Ung, member of the IOC and president of the International Martial Arts Games Committee, is the official representative.
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DPRK Team Qualified for 5th World Women's Football Championships
Pyongyang, July 31 (KCNA) -- The 15th Asian Women's Football Championships were held in Australia from July 16 to 30. At the preliminaries the DPRK women's eleven beat Thai team 9:0 and Myanmar team 3:0 before drawing scoreless with the Australian team seeking the title of the championships. On July 24 it came first in Group B after trouncing the south Korean team 1:0 in the last match of preliminaries, thus becoming qualified for semi-finals.
The DPRK team thus defeated the Japanese team 3:2 to be qualified for the 5th World Women's Football Championships to be held in China in 2007.
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Appropriate Measures against Partial Refereeing at Football Championships Demanded
Pyongyang, July 29 (KCNA) -- Kim Jong Su, secretary general of the Football Association of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Saturday sent a protest note to Poul Mony Samuel, first deputy secretary general of the Asian Football Confederation and the Organizing Committee of the 15th Asian Women's Football Championships in connection with the partial refereeing of the match between the DPRK and Chinese teams. The note recalled that there was a match between a DPRK team and a Chinese eleven, a semi-final of the championships, in Adelaide, Australia, on July 27 at which the former was declared to be beaten by the rival 0:1 due to the deliberate and undisguised partial refereeing
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JULY 2006
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N.Korean Players Mug Referee for Off-Side Call
Members of the North Korean women's football team resorted to kicking and other physical attacks on a referee in the Women's Asian Cup semi-final on Thursday. Three of the players were barred from Sunday's match for third place against Japan as a result. The Asian Football Confederation website on Friday announced North Korea's Sun Son-kyong and Sun Song-jung and Goalkeeper Han Hye-yong are barred from the final, with further disciplinary measures will be discussed by the AFC's Disciplinary Committee. However, the North Korean team as a whole seems to have escaped punishment for the fracas.
. The Chinese press conceded the violence was rooted in a clear mistake by the referee. During two minutes of extra time due to a second-half injury, North Korea scored a goal from the Chinese penalty area, but the line judge called the goal offside and the referee disallowed the goal. The slow-motion replay showed that to be a bad call, but the referee blew the whistle and called the game for China 1-0.
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DPRK Women Footballers Prove Successful
Pyongyang, July 25 (KCNA) -- The DPRK women's eleven came first in group qualifying matches for the 15th Asian Women's Football Championships, which is under way in Australia, starting on July 16. Two winners and two runners-up of matches held by groups A and B will advance into semi-finals of the championships.
The DPRK team beat the Thai team 9:0 and the Myanmar team 3:0 in group B matches. And it trounced the south Korean team 1:0 after drawing with the Australian team to be qualified for semi-finals.
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Pyongyang Wants Euro for Tours
By Kim Yon-se
Staff Reporter
North Korea recently demanded Hyundai Asan to use euros in payment for Mt. Kumgang tours, sources said on Wednesday. Payments are currently made in dollars.
Hyundai Asan, the operator of inter-Korean businesses, has remitted a portion of the fees it pays to the North in euros since February, according to sources. But a company spokesman neither confirmed nor denied this, a confidentiality clause in related contracts.
The tourism unit of Hyundai Group is paying $15 per visitor for a one-day trip, $35 for a two-day and $70 for a three-day trip to North Korea _ a total of about $1 million a month.
Asked whether the North's request is related to moves by the United States to put a stranglehold on Pyongyang's international cash flow, the spokesman only pointed out that North Korea changed its preferred currency for international settlements to the euro in 2002.
[Counterfeiting] [USD_Euro]
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Koreas to Meet in Women's Football
By Moon Gwang-lip
Staff Reporter
Park Eun-jung, right, of South Korea, vies with Myanmar's Htwe Than Than during the Asian Cup women's football tournament in Adelaide in Australia, Saturday, in this photo released by China's Xinhua News Agency. South Korea won 3-1. /AP-Yonhap
The South and North Korean women's national football teams will engage in a life-and-death struggle as the two sides meets today at a must-win encounter for qualification for next year's World Cup
The pre-game favorite is the North, who is stronger in terms of FIFA rankings and overall record. It marks seventh place in the world, 16 notches higher than the South. In seven previous showdowns, the North beat the South five times, losing one and drawing one.
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Two Koreas face off for World Cup place
July 24, 2006 ? Both Koreas will face off today in a battle to gain a spot at FIFA's Women's World Cup scheduled to kick off next year in China. Playing in Australia at the 2006 AFC Women's Championship, which functions as a qualifier for the World Cup, South Korea, with a 2-1 record, has to beat the North, which with two wins and a draw tops group B, in order to have any chance of going to Beijing. Australia is currently tied for first with the North.
For the Asian region, only the top two teams are assured a spot in the World Cup in addition to host, China. China, Chinese Taipei, Japan and Vietnam are Group A, while Australia, Thailand, Myanmar, South Korea and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea make up Group B. Since 1990, the South has lost five times and beat the North only once and drawn once in their history of encounters.
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North Stops Kaesong Tours
By Lee Jin-woo
Staff Reporter
North Korea has banned South Koreans from visiting Kaesong, a city near the inter-Korean industrial complex claiming it wants to replace Hyundai by Lotte as a new partner for arranging tours of South Koreans to the capital of the ancient Korean kingdom.
The Unification Ministry downplayed the shutdown, saying it is unreasonable to link the gridlock of the tourism project to the recent missile crisis.
``North Korea brought up the issue months ahead of the present disputes involving the missile launches on the Korean Peninsula,'' Kim Chun-sig of the ministry told reporters yesterday.
He said Pyongyang has asked the South three times since May to accept Lotte in place of Hyundai Asan, a North Korea-related business arm of Hyundai Group.
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N.Korea Digs In Heels Over Kaesong Tourism
Never one to forgive and forget, North Korea has kept South Koreans out of Kaesong since July 1, insisting that it will work with Lotte Tours instead of its long-time original partner Hyundai Asan on a Kaesong tourism project. The Unification Ministry said Friday the North has been asking the government to change its Kaesong tourism project partner from Hyundai Asan to Lotte Tours since May. Seoul demurred, saying it cannot be a party to contract violation, and Pyongyang has to deal directly with Hyundai Asan. On June 22, the North avenged itself with a letter to Unification Minister Lee Jeong-sook notifying him that South Koreans are now barred from the North Korean border city.
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Hyundai Asan Workers to Start Pulling Out from North Korea
In protest against South Korea's halt of humanitarian aid to the North, Pyongyang has notified Seoul to stop all construction work at Mount Kumgang. South Korean workers there will soon start pulling out.
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Trailing North in Football, South's Women in 3rd Place
By Kang Seung-woo
Staff Reporter
The South Korean women's national football team kept their hopes alive for qualification for the 2007 Women's World Cup in China with an 11-0 rout of Thailand, Wednesday, in the Asian Football Confederation qualifiers now under way in Adelaide, Australia. Thailand also suffered a 9-0 defeat against North Korea.
After losing 4-0 on Sunday to Australia, South Korea is now 1-1 in matches and ranks third out of five countries in Group B behind co-leaders North Korea and Australia, which have six points each.
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Bid Involves Effort to Enlist North Korea in 'Dream Program' for Sports Solidarity
By Moon Gwang-lip
Staff Reporter
Kim Jin-sun, governor of Kangwon Province, talks about the province's efforts to successfully bid for the 2014 Winter Olympics. / Courtesy of 2014 PyeongChang Olympic Winter Games Bid Committee
PyeongChang is encouraging North Korea to participate in its ``Dream Program,'' an annual event to promote winter sports to young people who have difficulty training in their own countries.
The PyeongChang 2014 Olympic Winter Games Bid Committee said Thursday its representatives will meet counterparts from the North perhaps as early as this month to confirm the North's participation in the program next year.
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Korea, Japan, China to Promote Tourism
SEOUL (Yonhap) _ Tourism ministers from South Korea, Japan, and China agreed Sunday to make efforts to raise the number of tourist visits among the three nations to 17 million in five years from the current 5 million, Japan's Kyodo News reported.
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JUNE 2006
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IOC Leader Asks 2 Koreas to Form 1 Team for 2008
SEOUL (Yonhap) _ International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge has urged South and North Korean leaders to form a unified team for the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, according to government and sports officials here on Friday.
On June 7, Rogge sent letters to both South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun and North Korean leader Kim Jong-il to the effect that he will do his best to help them field a single team for the quadrennial global sports event, they said.
It marks the first time for the IOC president to ask the leaders of the two Koreas to cooperate in forming a unified team for the Olympic Games.
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AFC Gives Short Course to Football Coaches
Pyongyang, June 8 (KCNA) -- A short course for football coaches was held at May Day Stadium in Pyongyang, DPRK, under the management of the Asian Football Confederation. The course was attended by football coaches of various sports groups and football teachers of juvenile sports schools across the country.
It dealt with issues of principle to be observed by coaches in football training and games and guiding methods of training.
Also lectures on psychology, physiology and nutrition were given at the course.
The participants in the course will obtain the B-class football coach qualification of the AFC.
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North Korea Issues World Cup Stamps
SEOUL (Yonhap) _ North Korea has published four kinds of stamps in commemoration of the 18th World Cup finals in Germany, according to the (North) Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on June 6.
The stamps show football players from different countries who distinguished themselves in previous world soccer championships, the KCNA said.
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IVF Short Course for Referees Held
Pyongyang, June 7 (KCNA) -- A short course for volleyball referees was held in Pyongyang under the sponsorship of the International Volleyball Federation (IVF). Participated in there were couches of sports groups, teachers of juvenile sports schools and researchers of the Institute for Sports Science in the DPRK.
The short course was held, divided into theoretical and practical ones. It dealt with various issues to be applied to volleyball matches in the period from Juche95 (2006) to Juche97 (2008). They included the rules and refereeing gestures, principles that referees should observe before, during and after games, duty of recorders, activities of officials in organizing and operating games.
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FIFA should boot North from Cup play
June 07, 2006 ? In this year's World Cup, North Korea failed to qualify. But there will be a day when it does, and then FIFA will have to make a decision. The right one, I hope. Should the North be allowed to participate in a world event despite its poor record on human rights? The decision should be easy.
What if a unified inter-Korean team was to play at the World Cup? What would FIFA do, then? There is little doubt Seoul would bill the inter-Korean team as a sign of peace on the Korean Peninsula that should be embraced by the whole world.
Already the countries are preparing to launch a joint inter-Korean team for the Beijing Olympics in 2008. In the past, joint entrances by inter-Korean teams at international sports events have been hailed as a step forward in inter-Korean relations.
But at what cost? Whenever I watch North Korean athletes, I always think of the privileges these athletes must have gotten. Food is said to be short in the North, especially in the countryside. Yet, the North Korean athletes are fed relatively well
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MAY 2006
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N. Koreans to Watch World Cup Games
By Kim Hyun-cheol
Staff Reporter
The World Cup fever appears to have spread to North Korea. Officials in Pyongyang have asked the South Korean government for cooperation in receiving television broadcasts from World Cup games in Germany, the Ministry of Unification announced Tuesday.
The North Korean Central Broadcasting Commission made an official request to the Korean Broadcasting Commission (KBC) in the South in late April, said Yang Chang-seok, spokesman at the ministry, in a briefing.
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Taekwondo Masters Try to Reunite Koreas
By BURT HERMAN
The Associated Press
Friday, May 26, 2006; 3:00 PM
PYONGYANG, North Korea -- With a smile and strong hands, Korean-American taekwondo grandmaster Woo Jin Jung shatters pine boards in hopes of breaking another solid barrier _ the 53 years of division between North and South on the Korean peninsula.
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Proposal for Restoring Tradition of "Seoul-Pyongyang Football Matches" Favored
Pyongyang, May 19 (KCNA) -- Kang Kum Sil, Seoul mayoral candidate from the Uri Party of south Korea, formally proposed the issue of restoring the tradition of "Seoul-Pyongyang Football Matches" shortly ago. Sim Kyong Ok, vice-chairperson of the Pyongyang City People's Committee, answered the question put by KCNA on May 14 in this regard. Hailing the proposal as a good offer suited to the June 15 era of reunification, she noted:
The "Seoul-Pyongyang Football Matches" began in 1929. It had been a long tradition for the Korean people to hold such matches demonstrating the spirit and dignity of the Korean nation in token of their resistance against the Japanese imperialists' colonial rule. Much upset by this, the Japanese imperialists suspended the football games in 1933 in a bid to tone down the anti-Japanese sentiment.
The Korean people, however, did not abandon this national tradition despite the Japanese imperialists' suppression. In 1946, the year after the liberation of the country, they restored their national tradition and held a football match with splendor in Seoul in March.
However, the U.S. troops occupied south Korea, dividing Korea into the north and the south and blocking free visits between them. This has prevented the "Seoul-Pyongyang Football Matches" from taking place for 60 years since 1946 and, accordingly, this tradition is recorded in history as a mere thing of the past.
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Inner Parts of Mt. Kumgang to Open
By Kim Rahn
Staff Reporter
Tours to Mt. Kumgang in North Korea will be expanded around July or August, following the exploration of unopened areas of the scenic mountain by the tour operator Hyundai Asan at the end of this month.
Hyundai Asan said on Friday that the two Koreas will jointly explore areas around Mt. Kumgang from May 27 in preparation for pilot trips there in the summer
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40th Anniversary of ITF Marked
Pyongyang, May 18 (KCNA) -- A function marking the 40th anniversary of the International Taekwon-Do Federation took place at the Taekwon-Do Hall here Thursday. The ITF was founded by Choe Hong Hui who was its organizer and first president on March 22, 1966 for the purpose of disseminating worldwide Taekwon-Do, the martial art of the Korean nation. It has grown strong to be an international organization having under it at least 120 national associations in various countries of the world that group tens of millions of Taekwon-Do players.
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Title of "World-crass Gymnast" Awarded to Gymnasts of DPRK
The International Gymnastics Federation decided to confer the honorary title "World-class Gymnast" on female gymnasts Kang Yun Mi and Pyon Kwang Sun, the KCNA reported on March 9.
Kang Yun Mi belongs to the Pyongyang City Sports Group and Pyon Kwang Sun is with the Kigwancha Sports Group of the DPRK.
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2nd International Martial Arts Games to Be Held
The 2nd International Martial Arts Games will be held from August 22 to 29 in Pyongyang, according to a report of the KCNA on March 13.
amid great expectation and interest of the Korean people and martial art players.
The event will be attended by players from the DPRK and tens of countries. The games will include Taekwon-Do, wushu, Karate, Paduk(go) and Sirum(Korean wrestling) and demonstration and exhibition of national martial arts of the various countries.
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Things Not Allowed at Mt. Kumgang
By Seo Dong-shin
Staff Reporter
MT. KUMGANG, North Korea _ Unification Minister Lee Jong-seok's visit here over the weekend on the occasion of the Isang Yun concert revealed a few anecdotes illustrative of current inter-Korean relations.
In his first trip to the scenic mountain resort since taking office in February, Lee made an inspection of newly emerged or sites under construction, some of which were unthinkable in the Cold War era like the South-North joint farms in North Korean villages and the construction site of a golf course looking over picturesque scenery.
But during the minister's visit to the construction site of new buildings designed to host future reunion rounds of separated families from the two Koreas, the director of the construction work came up with an anecdote reminiscent of the ongoing tensions between the two Koreas.
``We South Korean workers, are staying here without our families who remain in the South,'' the director from Hyundai Asan, the South Korean company that operates the resort area for mainly South Korean tourists, said apologetically during a briefing on the construction.
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MARCH 2006
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Koreas expand projects in tourism and culture
March 29, 2006 ? Government agencies are getting more aggressive in integrating North Korean elements into their cultural programs. They are developing tour packages that include destinations in the North and the South, and exhibiting historical artifacts from the North.
The Korea National Tourism Organization said yesterday that it was offering a 10-day tour of attractions in both the North and South.
"We're mainly promoting to affluent Russian tourists, but the tourism packages are open to everyone," said Lim Jong-woo, a tourism agency official.
The packages cost an average of $3,000 for a 10-day trip; sightseers can depart from Beijing, China, or Vladivostok, Russia. They first travel to Pyongyang, Mount Kumgang and Kaesong in North Korea and return to their starting point. They then travel to Seoul, Gyeongju and other sites in South Korea. There is no travel across the Demilitarized Zone.
Also yesterday, the National Museum of Korea announced that it would stage a special exhibition of North Korean artifacts in June. This will be the first time North Korean cultural assets will be displayed here through a government agreement.
At a press conference yesterday, the museum's curator, Lee Kun-moo, said 65 artifacts from the Stone Age through the Joseon Dynasty would be exhibited. Twenty-five paintings will also be on display.
"The artifacts will be transported by land from Pyongyang through Mount Kumgang," Mr. Lee said, "where they will be unpacked and examined by North and South Korean authorities. They will then be moved to Seoul."
He said many of the artifacts will be new to South Koreans; even their photographs have not been displayed here before.
by Wohn Dong-hee
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NK Threatens South Over Tourism Business
North Korea Tuesday warned the South of the possibility of stopping the vivists of Southern tourists to the North.
According to the North's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), Rodong Shimmun said in an editorial that the South Korean government will not benefit from souring relations between the two Koreas, which it attributed to the annual joint military drills of South Korea and its ally United States that started last Saturday.
The North has recently been stepping up its aggressive rhetoric against the weeklong ROK-US joint military exercises
[Joint US military] [Spin] [Media]
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What Japanese Tourists Have Left
By Kim Ki-tae
Staff Reporter
Since the 1990s, Japanese women have associated South Korea less with war and poverty and, instead, have begun to rush to the peninsula for cheap and safe shopping sprees. The file photo shows two Japanese tourists posing with Korean national flags with a group of Korean traditional performers in Insa-dong, central Seoul. /Korea Times file
In the 1980s, Japanese females feared visiting South Korea. For them, the former colony was just too poor, full of violent demonstrations and hostile to Japan to travel around. Worse, the peninsula bore a high risk of war with the even more hostile North.
The majority of Japanese tourists to South Korea at that time were middle-aged males in search of sex tourism in this ``cheap'' nation, or older groups who were born in South Korea during colonization and wanted to see their hometowns once again before their deaths. The nature of this tourism made relations between them and their hosts subordinate, post-colonial.
In a new book ``Foreign Culture in Us,'' coauthor Moon Ok-pyo notes that concepts on Korea among the Japanese have drastically changed, especially since the 1990s. According to the anthropology professor at the Academy of Korean Studies, South Korea has shaken off its gloomy and dangerous images among the Japanese and begun to be recognized as a close, inexpensive, and safe holiday destination.
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Promising Female Footballer
Pyongyang, March 22 (KCNA) -- FIFA (International Football Federation) made public the lists of ten best football players (men and women) of the year 2005 in October last year. Among the women players is Ho Sun Hui of the DPRK.
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Inter-Korean Travel Jumps This Year
SEOUL (Yonhap) _ The number of South and North Koreans traveling between the rival countries increased nearly 90 percent in the first two months of the year, the Unification Ministry said Thursday.
The number rose to 12,849, an 89.3 percent increase from that of the same period last year, Vice Unification Minister Shin Un-sang said at a regular news briefing.
The number of travelers crossing the inter-Korean border in February almost doubled to 7,129 from 3,423 a year ago, according to the vice minister.
"The figure can be said to be proof of increased exchange and cooperation between the North and South," Shin said.
The number of visitors, mostly businesspeople, between the rival Koreas reached its highest level of more than 88,000 last year, while more than 320,000 South Koreans traveled to the North's scenic Mount Geumgang resort, according to the ministry.
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International Figure Skating Festival Held in Pyongyang
Four-times World Champion Participates in Festival
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Inter-Korean Travel Jumps This Year
SEOUL (Yonhap) _ The number of South and North Koreans traveling between the rival countries increased nearly 90 percent in the first two months of the year, the Unification Ministry said Thursday.
The number rose to 12,849, an 89.3 percent increase from that of the same period last year, Vice Unification Minister Shin Un-sang said at a regular news briefing.
The number of travelers crossing the inter-Korean border in February almost doubled to 7,129 from 3,423 a year ago, according to the vice minister.
"The figure can be said to be proof of increased exchange and cooperation between the North and South," Shin said.
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Kumgang adopts identification cards
March 02, 2006 ? Paper identification of tourist visiting Mount Kumkang will be replaced with electronic identification cards, the size of a credit card, starting this month, Hyundai Asan Corp. said yesterday.
With the adoption of the electronic card, the long waits and inconvenience that tourists visiting North Korea have experienced will be reduced by up to 30 percent, the South Korean company said.
The card will be initially provided to tourists staying in North Korea for three days and later will be gradually applied to two-day visitors.
The company said that although the cards are currently limited to identifying the tourist and buying a few North Korean products, it would later be developed into a "master card" that will allow tourists to use all the facilities within the Kumkang tourist site.
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Kim Jong Il Sends Wedding Table to Kye Sun Hui
Pyongyang, February 28 (KCNA) -- A wedding table sent by leader Kim Jong Il was Monday conveyed to triple world judo champion Kye Sun Hui who is a judoist of the Moranbong Sports Group and bridegroom Kim Chol, a coach of the Rimyongsu Sports Group. Kye Sun Hui won the first gold medal in the 48 kg division of women's judo at the 26th Olympic Games in Juche 85 (1996).
She also won women's judo gold medals at the world judo championships in 2001, 2003 and 2005 to hold triple world judo champion, thus obtaining 10 gold medals in international matches.
She won the "Kim Il Sung Prize" and was awarded the titles of Labour Hero and People's Sportswoman.
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North Korean judoka marries
North Korean judoka marries: Kye Sun-hi, second from right, a North Korean judoka, receives a prize granted by leader Kim Jong-il in Pyongyang Monday as her husband Kim Chol, right, looks on. Kye, 26, won a gold medal in the women's 48-kilogram category at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics and also won three World Championships including last year's.
[photo]
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JANUARY 2006
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Chairman of Asian Football Confederation Here
Pyongyang, January 29 (KCNA) -- Chairman of the Asian Football Confederation Mohamed Hammam Saad Al-Abdulla and his party arrived here today. They were greeted at the airport by Minister of Foreign Trade Rim Kyong Man who is chairman of the DPRK Football Association, Vice-Chairman of the Physical Culture and Sports Guidance Commission Jong In Chol, and officials concerned.
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APPLICATIONS NOW AVAILABLE FOR DEEP 2006
(DPRK Exposure and Education Program)
NOTE: Deadline February 14th, 2006 (postmarked)
Please respond to the email address below if you wish to apply.
This year marks the 5th year of DEEP, which is an exposure program to our
northern motherland. The program was developed by Nodutdol for Korean
Community Development (NDD), a New York-based organization, as part of our
efforts toward peace and reunification. This program works in parallel to its
counterpart, KEEP, which visits the southern part of our motherland. DEEP
will be an opportunity for participants, generally English- speaking 1.5 and
2nd generation Koreans in the U.S. to 1) learn about north Korean society, 2)
help build relationships with people in the DPRK and 3) upon return, to share
with the American public what they have learned.
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South spends double as North paves Paektu
January 21, 2006 ? The Unification Ministry is again facing criticism over its laxness toward North Korea, after announcing yesterday it would provide 4.8 billion won ($4.8 million) to repair and complete a project on Mount Paektu on which it has already spent 4.98 billion won. Of that, 2 billion won is to repair faulty construction by North Korean workers, carried ou