North Korea loosens mobile restrictions as it courts Chinese investment

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A picture of North Korea's city of Hyesan.
FILE PHOTO: Hyesan, Ryanggang province, in August 2013. (Daily NK)

North Korea appears to be easing mobile phone restrictions on Chinese nationals entering the country for business, a move observers inside the country are linking to Pyongyang’s broader push to attract North Korea Chinese investment along its northern border.

A Daily NK source in Ryanggang province reported Monday that Chinese businesspeople visiting Hyesan have been seen freely using their Chinese mobile phones on the streets without restriction. “In the past, it was nearly impossible to bring a Chinese phone across the border,” the source said. “But now you can easily spot Chinese people making calls in Chinese on the streets of Hyesan.”

The change is made possible by geography. Hyesan sits directly on the border with China, and Chinese cellular signals from nearby towers reach into the city, allowing Chinese handsets to function without roaming agreements or local SIM cards.

North Korean authorities have long cracked down on Chinese mobile phone use as a means of blocking outside information from entering the country. The jangmadang (informal market) economy that developed in the 1990s gave rise to a class of traders who rely on cross-border communication, and Chinese phones have historically served as a key conduit for both information and commerce. Pyongyang has treated unauthorized phone use as a serious offense, subjecting violators to interrogation and punishment.

Until recently, that crackdown applied to visiting Chinese nationals as well. Those wishing to contact family or associates back home had been required to use expensive international phone services rather than their own devices.

Chinese investment in North Korea: scouts tour Hyesan factory sites

The source said Chinese businesspeople have been active in Hyesan since March, touring potential factory sites and commercial properties to assess investment opportunities. Local people have connected the phone policy shift to this broader economic outreach. “A few years ago, Chinese investors talked about building tile factories and other facilities in Hyesan, but nothing came of it,” the source said. “This year, the state is actively showing it wants foreign investors, including allowing them to use their phones, and more Chinese people are showing interest.”

Hyesan residents are welcoming the trend, though cautiously. “People are saying that with Chinese visitors coming and going more often, trade will pick up, and if that happens, life will get better for us too,” the source said. “In border areas, markets only really move when exchange with China is alive. People here badly want Chinese visits and investment to get going in earnest.”

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