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10 Best place to visit in Kilju North Korea

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DPRK/North Korea: People Move to New Houses in South and North Hamgyong Provinces and Rason City

People Move to New Houses in South and North Hamgyong Provinces and Rason City

Pyongyang, November 30, 2020 (KCNA) -- New socialist villages appeared in northeastern coastal areas of the country that had been battered by terrible natural disasters.

New houses for thousands of families have been built in the disaster-stricken areas such as Sinpho and Tanchon cities, Riwon, Toksong and Pukchong counties in South Hamgyong Province, Chongjin and Kim Chaek cities, Orang and Kilju counties in North Hamgyong Province and Sonbong District in Rason City.

Ceremonies for moving to the new houses were held.

Speakers at the ceremonies warmly congratulated the residents on moving to new houses.

They stressed that the newly built cozy houses are associated with the great patriotic devotion made by Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un through his ceaseless journey for field guidance to bring happiness and welfare to the people.

Licenses for house were conveyed to the new house owners.

Some of them made speeches to represent their pledge to live up to the Supreme Leader's benevolence.

Then they began to move to the new houses.

They danced to cheerful music, being greatly excited to have new houses.

Officials visited the families that moved to the new houses and congratulated them.


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The Surreal and Very Real DMZ-Walking Into North Korea (With DMZ Facts/Figures)

My tour of the DMZ was perhaps the most surreal and fascinating part of my month long Asia trip. I took a USO tour through Koridoor Tours to Panmunjom, home of the JSA (Joint Security Area) in the DMZ (Demilitarized Zone) at the border of South and North Korea. We were given a briefing by a U.S. military officer who gave us the history of the hostilities between the two countries and warned us not to gesture toward any North Korean soldiers should we see any. We could see the U.N Command soldiers, including some ROK (Republic of Korea) soldiers from South Korea. Some of them put half of their bodies behind the buildings to protect themselves in case they were fired upon from the North. We entered the MAC (Military Armistice Building) Conference Room where the two sides meet when they have talks. In the middle of the room is a conference table-half the table is in South Korea, half in North Korea. Once I passed that halfway point, I was standing in North Korea which I did for about 5 minutes-very surreal. When I got back to my hotel in Seoul, I heard on the radio that North Korea would attack South Korea in a few days and those threats continued for weeks.

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