North Korea is a bucket list location for a whole lot of people who want to visit every country in the world (their longing to go undoubtedly increased after seeing that video tour of the Hotel Koryo, in Pyongyang). And now, after nearly 5 years, some of them will be able to.
Opening to tourists
It’s been announced this coming December that North Korea plans to allow tourists again. Well, to at least part of the country, anyway. It will be the first time the secluded country will have allowed visitors (save for a small group of Russian tourists who got a private tour this past February. Oh, and Vladimir Putin this past June) since they effectively closed their doors to everyone when the pandemic hit in 2020.
Showing off their “socialist utopia”
Even before the pandemic, North Korea had been busy building what it called a “socialist utopia” in Samjiyon, a city in northeastern North Korea. According to The Washington Post in December 2019, North Korean propaganda claims the town is a “model of a highly civilized mountain city,” complete with apartments, hotels, ski resorts, etc.
Anyway, Koryo Tours and KTG Tours have both announced that they will host group tours of Samjiyon.
“Having waited for over 4 years to make this announcement, Koryo Tours is very excited for the opening of North Korean tourism once again,” the Beijing-based company said on its website.
“Exact dates to be confirmed,” KTG Tours wrote on Facebook. “So far just Samjiyon has been officially confirmed but we think that Pyongyang and other places will open too!!!”
My fellow Americans, don’t pack your bags yet
Koryo Tours told the BBC that North Korean authorities were allowing tourists from any country to join the trips, except for South Korea. But before anyone from the U.S. starts making plans, don’t get too excited. The United States bans its citizens from traveling to North Korea, unless they have special permission by the Secretary of State (as per the State Department).
Meanwhile, North Korean Leader Kim Jong Un fired or demoted some senior officials this past July, for their “irresponsible” handling of his flagship Samjiyon project. So it’s not surprising that some analysts aren’t so certain any of this will actually happen, in part because the city isn’t actually yet complete.
“I will believe it when I see it,” Chad O’Carroll, CEO of US-based analysis firm Korea Risk Group, told the BBC. “For now, I am quite skeptical we will see any real movement in December.
“If it does get completed in time, I can imagine only Russian tourists and possibly Chinese visiting in any real numbers at first,” O’Carroll said. “Unless [the Democratic Republic of Korea] offers direct Samjiyon flights to a neutral connection country like Mongolia.”
It’ll be…interesting?…to see what happens of all this.
Want to comment on this post? Great! Read this first to help ensure it gets approved.
Want to sponsor a post, write something for Your Mileage May Vary, or put ads on our site? Click here for more info.
Like this post? Please share it! We have plenty more just like it and would love it if you decided to hang around and sign up to get emailed notifications of when we post.
Whether you’ve read our articles before or this is the first time you’re stopping by, we’re really glad you’re here and hope you come back to visit again!
This post first appeared on Your Mileage May Vary
5 comments
I do not want to visit the great socialist paradise of the DPRK.
Which is a good thing, because you can’t. That being said, there are Americans who do (and also can’t). So there ya go.
As an American, I am curious about the DPRK (in spite of loathing it’s political system) and would visit…..in theory. However, after what happened to Otto Warmbier, that would be a foolish thing to do. The more I’ve read his story, the more it appears that he was singled out simply for his nationality. And this has happened to Americans in Russia, Venezuela and (to a lesser extent) China. I don’t care to roll the dice as this type of potential danger is not something that you can control once you’re within their borders.
Love the picture in tandem with the headline.
LOL, thanks. Took me a while to find one that (A) I wanted and (B) I could use 😉