产品展示
  • 风帆蓄电池12V48AH/6-QW-48/五菱之光荣光扬光鸿途切诺基原装电瓶
  • 汽车家用低音炮15寸10寸12寸喇叭无源箱开孔蜂窝箱音箱空箱炮箱体
  • 汽车电瓶充电器全自动智能修复12v24v家用轿车蓄电池金蝉A4充电机
  • 大众17-22款途观L专用座椅防踢垫内饰改装防踢板装饰汽车配件用品
  • 大众朗行仪表台避光垫汽车内饰装饰用品配件中控台改装防滑防晒垫
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

新闻中心

Pyongyang's state security ministry asks military to cooperate in government

2024-06-15 03:09:40      点击:729
By Yi Whan-woo

North Korea's Ministry of State Security has ordered military units on the North-China border to facilitate government-run smuggling, according to sources familiar with Pyongyang.

They said the ministry, which reports directly to North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, is breaking the country's laws as part of efforts to raise cash for the ruling Workers' Party and ultimately, Kim.

They speculated that the party has been lacking cash since China began supporting international sanctions aimed to put economic pressure on the North.

"A senior ministry official recently visited military units in Ryanggang Province (in the country's north) and ordered them to help with smuggling involving government-run trading companies," a source said last week. "Among the companies were ones run by Office 39 and the Mirim Shipping Co."

Office 39 is the party's secretive organization responsible for generating revenue for Kim, while the Mirim Shipping Co. has been blacklisted by the U.N. Security Council for funding Pyongyang's nuclear and ballistic missile programs.

Another source speculated that Kim himself was behind the smuggling, saying "the ministry's order would have been impossible without his instruction."

The military units in Ryanggang Province are usually tasked with cracking down on smuggling and preventing people from fleeing the impoverished regime.

"Now the soldiers are driving trucks to transport smuggled goods and are also protecting smugglers, because otherwise, their lives would be at risk," a third source said.

A fourth source said the ministry is encouraging those who have relatives in China to travel there and bring in foreign currencies when they return _ a measure believed to be aimed at countering international efforts to restrict North Korea from sending workers abroad. The wages of those sent overseas are pocketed by the Kim regime for the country's nuclear weapons development.

"The ministry officials publicly ask those who are capable of bringing in foreign currencies through their relatives in China to travel as often as possible," the source said.


Little brother can't help but echo his sister's frustrations
Here's George W. Bush trying his best to figure out how ponchos work at the inauguration