产品展示
  • 别克昂科旗门槽垫改装专用内饰装饰汽车用品配件22款2022杯垫饰品
  • 法雷奥适配标致307尾灯总成 小嘴三厢尾灯罩汽车后尾灯 正品配件
  • 适用于现代领动后杠灯领动日行灯改装LED后雾灯流光尾灯改装配件
  • 奇联无线蓝牙音响网红抖音同款家用台式电脑迷你小型发光音箱低音炮手拿便携高音质汽车车载户外广场舞
  • 创意汽车贴纸骷髅头贴车门引擎盖改装贴个性车身划痕越野车贴拉花
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

汽车电瓶

'Egypt's Orascom stops service in N. Korea'

2024-06-15 06:04:29      点击:813
By Jun Ji-hye

Egyptian telecommunications giant Orascom stopped its service in North Korea early last month and is preparing for a full withdrawal from the country, according to media reports, Tuesday.

Local news agency Newsis quoted Japanese intelligence officials and industry sources as saying Orascom has decided to pull its network out of the North completely amid mounting pressure from the United States and the U.N. Security Council (UNSC).

The move comes as the international community works to impose harsher sanctions on the regime in Pyongyang in response to its repeated launches of ballistic missiles. In the latest in a series of military provocations, the North fired a Hwasong-15 intercontinental ballistic missile, Nov. 29, claiming it is capable of carrying a larger and more powerful nuclear warhead that can strike anywhere in the U.S. mainland.

The media report noted the Egyptian company has yet to officially announce its decision to withdraw from the North, as some procedures need more time to be handled smoothly.

In 2008, Orascom, in collaboration with Pyongyang, established Koryolink, the North's only 3G mobile phone network. The number of customers has reportedly reached 3.5 million. The Egyptian company holds a 75 percent stake, while the North has a 25 percent stake.

The business deal, authorized by Egyptian billionaire Naguib Sawiris, was part of Cairo's willingness to invest in the reclusive state, highlighting bilateral economic links.

The withdrawal is expected to deal a considerable blow to the North, given that Koryolink has been the largest telecommunication operator there.

The Egyptian telecom firm had previously indicated its willingness to continue its business in the North within the limits of U.N. sanctions, but is seen as giving up amid international pressure.

In September, Sawiris said during his interview with CNBC that his investments in the North were about $250 million, but claimed he stays out of politics there.

"I believe I've extended a good service to the innocent people of North Korea who are deprived from seeing their parents who live miles away or can't call their children when they come back from school," he was quoted as saying. "They're allowed to have the simplest services that everybody in the West has. It has nothing to do with politics."


Preparation underway to send 'army of beauties' to S. Korea
Here's George W. Bush trying his best to figure out how ponchos work at the inauguration