North Korea is building a
"world class" ski resort on Masik hill in Wonsan with a range of ski
runs and a hotel, according to the North Korean state news agency.
Located in Kangwon
Province, Masik hill is 2,520 feet (768 meters) high and typically
receives heavy snowfall from early November through early March.
Construction underway
A series of photos of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un speaking with his staff in front of the ski resort site was released this week.
The accompanying news
report from the state-run Korean Central News Agency said the young
leader dropped by to get a firsthand report on the progress of
construction.
"He was greatly satisfied
to learn that soldier-builders have constructed a skiing area on
mountain ranges covering hundreds of thousands of square meters,
including primary, intermediate and advanced courses with almost 110,000
meters (68.3 miles) in total length and 40-120 meters (131-394 feet) in
width," said the KCNA report.
The new resort will be accessible from the Pyongyang-Wonsan tourist motorway and will feature a hotel, heliport and "cableway."
Kim, who was partly educated in Switzerland, appears to be familiar with ski resort operations.
"He said it is necessary
to build not only rest places, but first aid stations at starting,
middle and final points of the courses, and establish an automatic
cableway monitoring system for a real time watch so as to take measures
to prevent accidents," said the report.
According to the report,
Kim also emphasized environmental conservation: "He underlined the need
to preserve the ecological environment and prevent pollution while
building the skiing ground."
Would you go?
According to a tour agency specializing in North Korean travel, the new resort will be open to foreign tourists.
"We've known of the
plans for this development for a couple of years -- work only began
recently though and I've seen the basic plans just last week," said
Simon Cockerell, general manager of Beijing-based Koryo Tours.
Cockerell returned last week from the first Western tour of the North Korean border town of Sinuiju.
No opening date has been given for the opening of the resort.
South Korean media covered the news of the resort in critical fashion.
"The fact that North
Korea is spending exorbitant amounts of money building a ski resort
while its people and even its military don't have enough to eat shows
that this is just a move to advertise the image of Kim Jong Un as a
leader who cares about his people," an anonymous North Korean defector
told NK News, a South Korea-based media company specializing in North
Korean news.
The defector also said
that existing ski infrastructure in North Korea is used exclusively for
military purposes, and that there's a high likelihood this will also be
the case with the new resort.
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