North Korea opening a tourist site on its east coast next week that's key to its tourism hopes
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North Korea next week will open a signature tourist site on its east coast that it called a prelude to a new era in its tourism industry, though there is no word on when the country will fully reopen its borders to foreign visitors.
The Wonsan-Kalma coastal tourist zone has hotels and other accommodations for nearly 20,000 guests who can swim in the sea, play sports and other recreation activities and eat at restaurants and cafeterias on site, state media said.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un toured the site and cut the inaugural tape at a lavish ceremony Tuesday, the official Korean Central News Agency reported Thursday. He said its construction would be recorded as 'one of the greatest successes this year' and called the site 'the proud first step' toward realizing the government's policy of developing tourism, according to KCNA.
The Wonsan-Kalma zone will begin service for domestic tourists next Tuesday, KCNA said. But it didn't say when it will start receiving foreign tourists.
Kim has been pushing to make the country a tourism hub as part of efforts to revive the ailing economy, and the Wonsan-Kalma zone is one of his most talked-about tourism projects. KCNA reported North Korea will confirm plans to build large tourist sites in other parts of the country, too.
But North Korea hasn't fully lifted the travel curbs, including a ban on foreign tourists, that were imposed at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Starting from February 2024, North Korea has been accepting Russian tourists amid the booming military and other partnerships between the two countries, but Chinese group tours, which made up more than 90% of visitors before the pandemic, remain stalled.
In February this year, a small group of international tourists visited the country for the first time in five years, but tourist agencies said in March that their tours to North Korea were paused.
Hashtags

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

Wall Street Journal
12 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
AB Foods' Bioethanol Business to Begin Wind-Down Consultation With U.K. Workers
Associated British Foods said its bioethanol business Vivergo would begin a consultation with employees as part of its wind-down, despite live talks with the U.K. government. The London-listed company said Thursday that the commercial viability of Vivergo had been undermined by the U.K.'s trade deal with the U.S., which allowed tariff-free U.S. ethanol into the U.K.


New York Times
14 minutes ago
- New York Times
A Photo Gone Wrong in the Uffizi Worries Europe's Museums
It's another summer of European selfie snafus. On Saturday, a visitor to the Uffizi Galleries in Florence, Italy, stepped backward into a painting while trying to pose like its subject, Ferdinando de' Medici, a 17th-century grand prince and patron of the arts. For the Uffizi's director, that was the last straw, and he isn't alone in his frustration. This spring, in the Palazzo Maffei in Verona, Italy, a visitor broke a chair covered in Swarovski crystals. This, too, was the result of a snapshot gone wrong: A man apparently waited for the guards to leave before posing, in an ill-fated attempt at squatting. And this month, the staff at the Louvre Museum in Paris went on an unauthorized strike to protest, in part, overcrowding and the headaches caused by selfie-taking tourists. 'The problem of visitors who come to museums to make memes or take selfies for social media is rampant,' Simone Verde, the Uffizi's director, said in a statement. Europe's museums are struggling to cope with the problematic side of their large-scale appeal and protect their collections from summer visitors who flock to their galleries to make social media content and cool down in rare continental air-conditioning, whether or not they gain a deeper knowledge of art and culture. The recent episodes, at the start of the high tourist season, have called attention to a longstanding problem: too many tourists toting too many phones. Museums have not been able to find a foolproof compromise, despite their best efforts. 'This problem, with tourists damaging artwork, is something that is increasingly happening,' said Marina Novelli, the director of the Sustainable Travel and Tourism Advanced Research Center at Nottingham University in England. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
China Opens First Offshore Gold Vault in Hong Kong
(Bloomberg) -- The Shanghai Gold Exchange has expanded outside mainland China for the first time, with the rollout of two new contracts and a bullion vault in Hong Kong. US Renters Face Storm of Rising Costs US State Budget Wounds Intensify From Trump, DOGE Policy Shifts Commuters Are Caught in Johannesburg's Taxi Feuds as Transit Lags Mapping the Architectural History of New York's Chinatown The launch serves a number of purposes, from broadening the Shanghai bourse's international reach, to strengthening China's clout in commodity and currency markets and Hong Kong's status as a financial center. Trading will be conducted in yuan and settled by cash or physical delivery, including to the new vault operated by Bank of China Ltd.'s Hong Kong unit, the SGE said in a statement. The two contracts covering different purity levels will debut on Thursday. To attract traders, the exchange said it'll waive fees at the vault through the end of the year. As the world's top producer and consumer of gold, China wants to wield greater influence in pricing the commodity. The denomination of the SGE's new contracts is particularly important given Beijing's ambition to reduce reliance on the US dollar and promote wider use of the yuan in international trade. 'The buying and selling of gold at the new vault will also significantly improve the transaction volume of offshore yuan,' said Doris Bao, the founder of Gold Harvest Consulting. 'The vault also means that China can now import gold in yuan rather than dollars,' further supporting de-dollarization, said Bao, who is also a consultant for London Bullion Market Association. The SGE was established in 2002 by the People's Bank of China as the country's primary platform for trading bullion. In 2014, it set up the International Board to allow foreigners to participate directly in China's market. That effort is now accelerating for other commodities. The Shanghai Futures Exchange, the country's top venue for trading raw materials, recently unveiled a proposal to enhance access to overseas investors. Although the SGE is the single largest exchange for physical gold, London remains the market's undisputed center. Other hubs including Singapore are also trying to wrest some of the action away from the centuries-old UK market. Interest has only grown after the precious metal staged a massive rally to record levels, with prices more than doubling since the turn of the decade. Much of gold's appeal is its reputation as a reliable store of value, and China's central bank has been a major buyer over the past three years, in part to diversify reserves away from the dollar. Hong Kong, meanwhile, is a well-established banking center that's seeking to keep pace with the expansion of other financial hubs in the region. The former British colony has a plan to bolster its presence in commodities, from warehousing to trading and logistical services across markets, including bullion. 'It'll bring, if anything, more comfort for new players to enter the game,' said Joshua Rotbart the founder and managing partner at gold dealer J. Rotbart & Co. However, there are still some questions that could pose potential hurdles for the exchange to become truly global, he said. 'Limiting the access to the Hong Kong facility, in the same manner international players are limited in terms of being able to operate in the mainland, will definitely undermine the project,' Rotbart said. --With assistance from Alfred Cang. (Updates with quotes from the fifth paragraph) Inside Gap's Last-Ditch, Tariff-Addled Turnaround Push How to Steal a House Luxury Counterfeiters Keep Outsmarting the Makers of $10,000 Handbags Apple Test-Drives Big-Screen Movie Strategy With F1 Ken Griffin on Trump, Harvard and Why Novice Investors Won't Beat the Pros ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Sign in to access your portfolio