Seoul: Pyongyang used money from joint factories for weapons

epa05154065 South Korean workers of the Kaesong industrial complex move their load near the border checkpoints at the Military Demarcation Line (MDL) near the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) in Gyeonggi province, South Korea, 11 February 2016. South Korea began removing its citizens from a jointly run industrial park on the border with North Korea, a news report said, in response to Pyongyang's recent nuclear test and rocket launch, which have further strained tensions on the Korean peninsula.  EPA/JEON HEON-KYUN

Seoul / AP

North Korea channeled about 70 percent of the money it received for workers at the now-shuttered Kaesong industrial park into its weapons programs and to buy luxury goods for the impoverished nation’s tiny elite, South Korea said on Sunday.
The jointly run park, just outside the North Korean city of Kaesong and about 50 kilometers (35 miles) from Seoul, employed some 54,000 North Koreans who worked for over 120 South Korean companies, most of them small and medium-sized manufacturers. Seoul closed the park last week in retaliation for Pyongyang’s recent rocket launch.
In a statement issued Sunday, South Korea’s Unification Ministry said that about 70 percent of the 616 billion won ($560 million) paid to the North since the park was established in 2004 was used to develop nuclear weapons, missiles and for the luxury goods.
It did not detail how it arrived at that percentage.
Pyongyang was able to divert the money because the workers in Kaesong were not paid indirectly. Instead, US dollars were paid to the North Korean government, which siphoned off most of the money and paid only what it wanted to the employees in North Korean currency and store vouchers, the statement said. Pyongyang responded to Seoul’s closure by announcing a military takeover of the complex and seizing everything that the companies’ South Korean managers were forced to leave behind.
The last major symbol of inter-Korean cooperation began during an era of relatively good cross-border relations, combining cheap North Korean labor with the capital and technology of wealthy South Korea. But Seoul is desperate to pressure Pyongyang after its nuclear test earlier this year, followed weeks later by a Feb. 7 rocket launch, which was condemned by the rest of the world as a test of banned missile technology. While the Kaesong closure will hurt North Korea, it is not critical to that nation’s economy.

Pyongyang gets the vast majority of its earnings from trade with China.
The last time the park closed was in 2013, when North Korea withdrew its workers amid escalating tension in the wake of North Korea’s third nuclear test. The park reopened after about five months.

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