North Korea too poor to fund embassy in Australia

PETER PARKS/AFP/Getty Images If you took the FP Quiz in our November/December 2007 issue, you would know that 23 countries maintain embassies in North Korea. But in how many countries does the Hermit Kingdom maintain an embassy? According to the listings for North Korea on the Embassy Information Web site, the answer is currently 56. ...

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596955_northkorea_08.jpg

PETER PARKS/AFP/Getty Images

PETER PARKS/AFP/Getty Images

If you took the FP Quiz in our November/December 2007 issue, you would know that 23 countries maintain embassies in North Korea. But in how many countries does the Hermit Kingdom maintain an embassy? According to the listings for North Korea on the Embassy Information Web site, the answer is currently 56. Ask that same question at end of this month, however, and the answer will drop to 55.

North Korea’s embassy in Australia is slated to close at the end of January because the country can no longer afford it. North Korea’s most senior diplomat in Australia, Pak Myong Guk, blamed the high cost of the recent flooding in North Korea for the closure, and said that “When our financial situation is… resolved, then I think our embassy will be re-established again here in Canberra.”

It’s a plausible reason, but as an Aussie, my instinct is to wonder: Why Australia? Why not, say, Austria, given the relative strength of the euro? In any case, I’m surprised that North Korea is in financial trouble. With all the business opportunities offered by the country, you would think the won would be rolling in.

Prerna Mankad is a researcher at Foreign Policy.

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