23 May, 2012 AsiaNews.it Twitter AsiaNews.it Facebook         

Help AsiaNews | About us | P.I.M.E. | | Newsletter




Voli Low Cost Roma
Voli Milano




mediazioni e arbitrati, risoluzione alternativa delle controversie e servizi di mediazione e arbitrato

e-mail this to a friend printable version


» 10/27/2009 16:01
CHINA – NORTH KOREA
Beijing “erases” trade figures with Pyongyang
by Joseph Yun Li-sun
China hides trade data with North Korea to avoid harming improving relations as Pyongyang’s Communist regime comes close to collapse.

Beijing (AsiaNews) – Mainland China has stopped publicly issuing trade data about North Korea. Required to do so by law, Chinese authorities opted to put the potentially sensitive numbers about its wary neighbour under the rubric ‘Other Asia not elsewhere specified,’ which makes it impossible to know the real figures. The change may help Beijing avoid potentially damaging issues with North Korea, as the two countries seek improved ties after they were negatively affected by Pyongyang’s nuclear tests.

For the second straight month, destination and origin statistics of China's imports and exports for September issued by the Trade Ministry on Monday gave no separate figures for the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. This is the first time this has happened since the two countries established diplomatic relations 60 years ago.

Trade between the two usually involves coal, crude oil, oil products and cereals. Analysts and officials from the two governments usually rely on trade data to show the good relations between the two neighbours. Political leaders could thus use these data to avoid discussing cooling diplomatic relations.

North Korea relies essentially on China and South Korea. With an economy mismanaged by Kim Il-sung and his son Kim Jong-il, the country survives by hanging on a thin line thrown by China and South Korea that includes food aid and energy supplies. Political and humanitarian considerations are the main reasons for assistance by Pyongyang’s neighbours.

With the election of Lee Myung-bak to the presidency of South Korea, Seoul took on a hard-line position. Aid shipments to the North have virtually stopped.

The South Korean government wants the Stalinist regime in the North to carry out real reform if it wants a preferential economic treatment.

Beijing has partly adopted the same stance. Upset by North Korea’s nuclear tests in October 2006, it cut oil shipments to its neighbours. However, it is unclear whether the stoppage was a calculated move or due to more prosaic problems.

Cooler Sino-North Korean relations lasted through 2007 and most of 2008. During this same period, Pyongyang threatened the world with its nuclear tests.

At the start of this year, North Korea’s economy came close to collapse, a situation made worse by draught and flooding.

During Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao’s recent visit to Pyongyang, Kim Jong-il embraced the Chinese leader and tried to patch differences. The dictator also announced that his country would return to the ‘six-nation talks’, which his government had declared dead just six months ago. He also said that his country was open to inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency.

In making this shift, the regime is showing that it wants to re-open the door to China to get economic aid.

Last year, trade between the mainland and North Korea reached US$ 2.79 billion, up 41.3 per cent on 2007. But in the first nine months of this year, bilateral trade slipped to US$ 1.85 billion.

China especially cut crude oil shipments to the North, whilst increasing rice supplies.


e-mail this to a friend printable version

See also
07/20/2005 JAPAN – NORTH KOREA
Tokyo to demand total nuclear power ban on Pyongyang
07/19/2006 NORTH KOREA
Pyongyang orders mobilisation
05/11/2005 CHINA – NORTH KOREA
Beijing calling for restraint
07/26/2005 NORTH KOREA – SOUTH KOREA
Some signs of flexibility between the United States and North Korea in Beijing
12/21/2010 KOREA
A chance for peace on the Korean Peninsula

Editor's choices
VATICAN - CHINA
"Porta Fidei": the Pope's Apostolic Letter for the Year of Faith now in ChineseA tool to renew the "joy" and " enthusiasm of our encounter with Christ", written shortly before the World Day of Prayer for the Church in China (May 24). The Day and "Porta Fidei" emphasize the importance of understanding the faith and to witness it in public, in unity with the pope.
VATICAN
Pope calls on Chinese Catholics to be faithful to Church and consistent in their faithAt the Regina Caeli, Benedict XVI says that with the ascension, Jesus "has separated from us." A remembrance for victims of attack on Brindisi school and the earthquake in Emilia. An encouragement for the pro-life movement.
CHINA
Chen Guangcheng and Beijing's failure to reform
by Willy Wo-Lap LamIndividuals activists are not China's real challenge, social stability and keeping the Communist Party in power are. Chinese leaders run the risk however of losing control of the huge, expensive and ever-expanding security apparatus they are building. As illustrated by the Bo Xilai case, this could lead to unexpected and disastrous consequences. Here is the analysis of one of the foremost experts of modern China.

Dossier
by Gheddo P. Fazzini G.
pp. 336
by Buono Giuseppe, Pelosi Patrizia
pp. 432
by Giulio Aleni / (a cura di) Gianni Criveller
pp. 176
by Lazzarotto Angelo S.
pp. 528
by Bernardo Cervellera
pp. 240
Copyright © 2003 AsiaNews C.F. 00889190153 All rights reserved. Content on this site is made available for personal, non-commercial use only. You may not reproduce, republish, sell or otherwise distribute the content or any modified or altered versions of it without the express written permission of the editor. Photos on AsiaNews.it are largely taken from the internet and thus considered to be in the public domain. Anyone contrary to their publication need only contact the editorial office which will immediately proceed to remove the photos.