logo
North Korea to open beach resort as Kim bets on tourism

North Korea to open beach resort as Kim bets on tourism

BBC News27-06-2025
Some tour agencies are sceptical of Wonsan's appeal to foreigners. It is "unlikely to be a major draw for most Western tourists", Mr Beard says.
"Key sites like Pyongyang, the DMZ, and other brutalist or communist landmarks will continue to be the main highlights for international visitors once broader tourism resumes."
However, Elliott Davies, director of Uri Tours, says North Korea holds a "niche appeal" for travellers drawn to unconventional destinations.
"It's intriguing to experience something as familiar as a beach resort that's been shaped within the unique cultural context of North Korea."
KCNA described the Wonsan development as a "great, auspicious event of the whole country" and called it a "prelude to the new era" in tourism.
It was initially scheduled to open in October 2019, but ran into construction delays before the pandemic struck.
Kim attended a ceremony to celebrate its completion on 24 June, accompanied by his daughter, Kim Ju Ae, and wife Ri Sol Ju. It marked Ri's first public appearance since a New Year's Day event in 2024.
Russian ambassador Alexander Matsegora and embassy staff also attended.
Some tour operators expect the resort to be opened to Russian tourists, who are currently the only foreign nationals allowed into some parts of the country.
The resort's opening comes as North Korea and Russia strengthened their partnership in the face of sanctions from the West.
North Korea has sent troops to fight for Russia in its invasion of Ukraine.
On Thursday, the two countries also reopened a direct passenger train route between their capitals after a five-year suspension because of the pandemic.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hotel adds option to rent a pet companion during stay
Hotel adds option to rent a pet companion during stay

The Independent

time4 hours ago

  • The Independent

Hotel adds option to rent a pet companion during stay

A hotel in Wuhan, China, is offering guests the unique service of sharing their room with a trained dog for 499 yuan (£51) per night. The Country Garden Phoenix Hotel allows guests to choose from breeds such as golden retrievers, huskies, or West Highland terriers, providing companionship without the responsibilities of pet ownership. Launched in July, the service has quickly gained popularity, with over 300 guests signing up in the initial weeks, reflecting China's booming pet economy. The hotel employs 10 temperament-tested and trained dogs, some raised by the hotel, aiming to provide emotional comfort to guests and stimulation for the animals. This initiative highlights the significant growth in urban pet ownership in China, where pets now outnumber young children, leading to a surge in pet-related services.

‘The Thailand of Europe': foreigners live holiday dreams in Greece but locals priced out
‘The Thailand of Europe': foreigners live holiday dreams in Greece but locals priced out

The Guardian

time5 hours ago

  • The Guardian

‘The Thailand of Europe': foreigners live holiday dreams in Greece but locals priced out

From a booth facing the ferries moored at Piraeus, Tassos Papadopoulos cuts tickets for passengers heading to the isles of the Saronic Gulf. It's 5pm on a hot summer's day and through the sun-streaked haze he takes in the cars and trucks lining up to cross the steel ramp into the hold of the Aegina-bound vessel. Last year the queues were much longer. 'People aren't travelling it seems,' he says with a shrug. 'The weekend traffic is heavier but ticket sales are down by, I'd say, 50%.' Shimmering within view of the hills beneath the Acropolis, the Argo-Saronic isles are popular precisely because of their proximity to Athens. In 2024 Aegina attracted more than 2 million visitors, many budget-conscious Greeks drawn by the island's affordable ferry fares. 'This time, last August, all the loungers over there were taken by 10am,' says Konstantinos Tsantas, who runs a watersports business on shores framed by the jagged outline of the Peloponnese beyond. 'This year they're empty. I know watersports people all over the country and they all say the same: that business is down. And to think, Aegina is comparatively cheap.' 2025 will be remembered as the year Greeks decided to forfeit their annual pilgrimage to the beach. Immortalised by singers and songwriters, poets and cinematographers, the carefree joys of summer have, for many, fallen prey to the harsh reality of making ends meet. 'Our studies show that one in two Greeks will not go on holiday this year,' says Takis Kalofonos, chief financial adviser at EEKE, the union of working consumers of Greece. 'Whereas 10 years ago people would take 20 or even 30 days off, this summer it's less than a week. The Cyclades and islands further out are a distant dream for many Greeks. Who can pay €450 on boat tickets, which is what it would cost a family of four with a car, when the average salary is €1,342 a month?' The great August retreat – often centred on the religious festival of the Dormition of the Virgin Mary on 15 August – has for many been whittled down to days spent with family or friends in villages on the mainland. 'I'd love to spend time in Amorgos but getting to an island so far away is just out of bounds,' said Ismini Balale, who is 28 and struggling to survive on a retail sector salary of €850 a month. 'I can't cough up €200 a night for a room. All my friends are in the same position, and we all have postgraduate degrees. We're taking a few days off, here and there, this summer.' The European Statistics agency, Eurostat, recently endorsed EEKE's findings, announcing that 46% of Greeks – 19% higher than the rest of the EU – were unable to afford a one-week holiday last year. In Athens, August has given way to once unimaginable scenes: the public transport system is bursting; traffic in the city centre has barely thinned; seats at open-air cinemas are sold out and bars and fast food eateries are teeming with young Greeks who have been unable to get away. 'They talk about our country's economic recovery but none of those positive indices affect people like me,' says Balale. 'And I don't think this government much cares.' Sign up to This is Europe The most pressing stories and debates for Europeans – from identity to economics to the environment after newsletter promotion Paradoxically, it is partly because Greece is such a perfect place for holidays that Greeks are increasingly unable to afford them. The arrival of 36 million travellers last year – nearly four times the resident population – has ensured the Mediterranean country is one of the top 10 go-to places globally. The sector brought an estimated €21.7bn in revenue in 2024, helping Athens reduce its gargantuan public debt load from 180% of GDP, at the height of the nation's excoriating debt crisis, to 153.6%. But while tourism is the engine of the Greek economy, providing at least one in five jobs, success has also resulted in soaring prices. Wages, by contrast, have remained stagnant, outpaced by inflation rates that have far outstripped other EU countries, prompting a steep rise in the cost of living. Those who do manage to put money aside say increasingly they find it cheaper to holiday abroad than within Greece. An Alco poll in June revealed rocketing accommodation costs, ferry fares and restaurant prices as the main impediments to travel. 'Greeks are being priced out from enjoying what was a cultural and religious tradition, the August holiday,' says Prof Christos Pitelis, an expert on industrial economics and the tourism and hospitality sector at the University of Southampton. 'Dwindling disposable incomes make this an experience many simply cannot afford.' With the middle class hit hardest by austerity measures that were the price of the bankrupt Greek economy's rescue by international creditors a decade ago, the prime minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, has said relief measures are on the way. His centre-right government has pledged to bring down taxes and raise the average monthly wage to €1,500 by 2027. But it is not lost on Greeks that while foreign visitors can savour the natural beauty and other joys of their country, such pleasures for them have become a bittersweet memory. 'We are the Thailand of Europe; we provide services for others to enjoy,' says Aris Apikian, taking in the passing tourists outside the carpet shop where he works in central Athens. 'While foreigners live their dreams in Greece, we experience the sharp end of everything that is wrong with it. Who wants to go on holiday when they're told energy bills, you name it, are about to rise? I think the penny is beginning to drop, now that we cannot afford to take even a week off, that it's us Greeks, who are the real losers.'

Tourist in Cornwall fined for parking in former parking space
Tourist in Cornwall fined for parking in former parking space

BBC News

time7 hours ago

  • BBC News

Tourist in Cornwall fined for parking in former parking space

A man who was on holiday in Cornwall said it was a "sad day for tourism" after he was fined for parking somewhere which he later found out was no longer a parking Down, from Wiltshire, said there were no signs warning motorists a number of spaces in Cornwall Council-owned Cawsand car park were no longer in use despite lined boxes still council recently relined spaces in the 139-space car park on the Rame Peninsula but did not reinstate about seven spaces.A spokesperson for the local authority said: "Anyone in this position [of being fined] is encouraged to follow the representation process outlined on the back of their notice." Mr Down, who has been visiting Cawsand for more than 20 years, returned on holiday and parked in one of the redundant parking spaces on Sunday, the Local Democracy Reporting Service said he returned to find a £50 fixed penalty notice on his car, which would be reduced to £25 if he paid within 14 days. He said: "It's a sad day for tourism in Cawsand when council parking wardens hand out tickets for not parking in a parking space. "Clearly I was along with many others."There were six or seven other people who parked in similar spaces in the car park who all said if you turn up and see what looks like a parking space with white lines, it's a parking space."He said he had appealed the Ewert, Cornwall Council Labour councillor for the area, said she was aware the car park had been relined."It's causing some confusion," she said, adding she suspected those affected would have a good chance of having their fines overturned. A Cornwall Council spokesperson said: "Several parking bays were intentionally not reinstated to ensure that vehicles can move freely around the site. "We are aware that some of the older markings may still be visible - although they are faded compared to the new lines - and are taking steps to make it clear that these are no longer designated parking spaces."We will review any representation from motorists who believe they may have had a notice issued to them on this basis. "Anyone in this position is encouraged to follow the representation process outlined on the back of their notice."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store