
North Korea bans foreign tourists from new coastal resort
The resort, promoted as 'North Korea's Waikiki' by South Korean media, features high-rise hotels and waterparks, with capacity for around 20,000 visitors. State media had earlier hinted at Russian tour groups arriving in the coming months, but the sudden restriction has raised questions.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has prioritized tourism development, calling the Wonsan project 'one of the greatest successes this year.' He also pledged to expand large-scale tourist zones quickly. Despite this, Seoul's unification ministry predicts limited international tourism due to flight constraints.
Kim recently hosted Lavrov in Wonsan, reaffirming full support for Russia's war in Ukraine. Lavrov praised the resort as a 'good tourist attraction,' suggesting it could appeal to Russians seeking new destinations.
Before Lavrov's visit, Russia announced twice-weekly flights between Moscow and Pyongyang, potentially easing travel restrictions in the future. - AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
37 minutes ago
- The Star
Seoul ends troubled private adoption as ministry takes full control
Adoption reform: A file photo showing social workers caring for babies at a community church in southern Seoul. — AFP THE nation is set to overhaul its adoption system by ending the decades-old practice of outsourcing adoptions to private agencies, which has led to widespread allegations of abuse. South Korea, Asia's fourth-largest economy and a global cultural powerhouse, sent more than 140,000 children overseas between 1955 and 1999. But an official enquiry concluded this year that the international adoption process had been riddled with irregularities, including 'fraudulent orphan registrations, identity tampering, and inadequate vetting of adoptive parents'. The rights of South Korean children had been violated, the landmark investigation by a truth commission found. The independent body established by the state called for an official apology and blamed the government for the issues, especially a failure to regulate adoption fees that effectively turned it into a profit-driven industry. South Korea will introduce a 'newly restructured public adoption system, under which the state and local governments take full responsibility for the entire adoption process,' South Korea's Ministry of Health and Welfare said. The change is a 'significant step towards ensuring the safety and promoting the rights of adopted children,' the ministry added. International adoption began after the Korean War as a way to remove mixed-race children, born to Korean mothers and American soldier fathers, from a country that emphasised ethnic homogeneity. It became big business in the 1970s to 1980s, bringing international adoption agencies millions of dollars as South Korea overcame post-war poverty and faced rapid and aggressive economic development. But the system failed children, the truth commission said in March, with a failure to follow 'proper legal consent procedures' for South Korean birth parents resulting in highly-publicised reports of lost children being put up for overseas adoption. Under the new system, key procedures – such as assessing prospective adoptive parents and matching them with children – will be deliberated by a ministry committee, in accordance with the principle of the 'best interests of the child'. Activists, however, say the measure should be merely a starting point and warn it is far from sufficient. 'The government should prioritise implementing the findings of the truth commission, issue an official apology, and work to help the tens of thousands of Koreans who were sent abroad for adoption, said writer Lisa Wool-rim Sjoblom, a Korean adoptee who grew up in Sweden. — AFP


The Star
an hour ago
- The Star
Parched oil capital drills for water
A man filling a drum with water in the Cardoncito 2 neighbourhood in the Antonio Borjas community in Maracaibo, Zulia state, Venezuela. In Venezuela's once prosperous oil capital, the electricity goes out for hours, there is no petrol and water is rationed for days at a time. — AFP IN Venezuela's oil capital of Maracaibo, a drilling frenzy has led to dozens of new wells – but the valuable liquid being pumped out is just water, not petroleum. In a symbol of the woes of Venezuela's crumbling economy, the once flourishing oil town of two million people is parched. Experts blame the nationwide shortage of drinking water on corruption and years of under-investment and mismanagement by national and local governments, resulting in frequent water cuts. The corroding infrastructure has led to schools, homes, businesses, churches and health centres all digging their own wells – at a huge expense. A private well costs between US$1,000 and US$6,000 (RM4,240 and RM25,480), a fortune in the sanctions-hit Caribbean country where the minimum monthly wage is around US$200 (RM849.50). As a result, homes that come with a ready-made well and generator – Venezuelans also live with recurring power cuts – sell for a premium. While water rationing has been in place in Venezuelan cities for years, the situation in Maracaibo has become critical, as pumping stations break down, old pipes leak and reservoirs run dry. No water came out of the taps in certain parts of the city for over a month at the start of this year. Manuel Palmar and six other families in the lower-middle-class neighbourhood of Ziruma saw the writing on the wall four years ago. They each paid US$2,500 to build a 12m-deep well, which can store up to about 80,000 litres of spring water each week. Now when Palmar turns on the tap, water gushes out for free. The water is not fit for drinking due to its high salinity – saltwater from the Caribbean Sea seeps into Lake Maracaibo, a coastal lake used as a freshwater source – but 'it's perfect for washing clothes and flushing toilets', he explained. 'It's a blessing!' the 34-year-old accountant said. There's a solution of sorts for every budget. Some residents fill 200-litre drums at official filling stations or communal taps for US$2-US$3 (RM8.40-RM12.70). Others order a water truck to fill their building's tank for between US$40 and US$60 (RM169.90 and RM254.80). Some even recycle the water produced by the tropical city's ubiquitous air conditioners or collect rainwater. But those are all quick fixes. Over the past six years, more and more residents have begun digging wells to guarantee their long-term supply for the future. Gabriel Delgado has built about 20 wells in Maracaibo, including at a heart disease clinic and four private schools. He also built one at his mother-in-law's home: a grey cement cylinder, one and a half metres in diameter, buried under metal sheeting and rocks. Cobwebs dangle just above the water level, but as soon as he activates the pump, water pours forth. It's crystal clear, unlike the yellowish liquid that flows from the city's taps during the rainy season, and Delgado eagerly sips it. Venezuelans must receive authorisation from health and environmental authorities before drilling a well, and they are required to provide water samples for testing to ensure it is fit for consumption once it's built. But not everyone bothers. Javier Otero, head of Maracaibo's municipal water department, said he had come across shallow artisanal wells built near sewers or polluted ravines. 'Some people drink water that is not potable, that is brackish,' he said. The municipality has built seven wells to supply Maracaibo's poorer neighbourhoods. — AFP


The Star
an hour ago
- The Star
Foreigners barred from beach resort after Russian diplomat's trip to site
THE Hermit Kingdom has suspended foreigners' access to a newly opened beach resort on its east coast, just days after Russia's top diplomat visited the area and vowed to help increase tourist flows to the isolated country. North Korea's National Tourism Administration said the Wonsan Kalma Coastal Tourist Area that began operations this month is temporarily not accepting foreign guests, without elaborating. The beach resort is one of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un's pet projects. Kim has a private mansion on the coast, and during construction of the facilities he often visited the site to oversee progress on a project that features about 7,000 guest rooms in luxury hotels and private villas, an outdoor waterpark and an airport, according to state media. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov visited the resort town during his recent North Korea trip in which he met with Kim on the leader's yacht. Lavrov said at a meeting with his North Korean counterpart in Wonsan that Russia will 'do everything' to expand the flow of Russian tourists to North Korea. Tourism is a key revenue source for the sanctions-hit Kim regime but the country has been allowing only a trickle of inbound tourists from Russia since it began easing its pandemic border restrictions. North Korean authorities keep close tabs on overseas visitors, who are usually required to stay at lodgings designated for use by foreigners and restricted in their movements in the country. It's not immediately clear why North Korea decided to restrict foreigners' access to the resort area, but some analysts say there's more work to be done on the project. 'The resort is undoubtedly open, but it's not quite finished yet,' the 38 North programme at the Stimson Center said, citing satellite imagery. 'One of the largest buildings at the resort, a hotel near the Kalmaegi Hotel, does not appear to be in use. There is little activity nearby and the rooftop pool has yet to be filled with water.' Lavrov's latest visit took place less than a month after Pyongyang agreed at a June meeting between Kim and Sergei Shoigu to send an additional 6,000 military workers to the Kursk region. Shoigu is Putin's top security aide and a former Russian defence minister. — Bloomberg