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Monday, 15 February 2016

South Korea says North used Kaesong wages for weapons programmes

South Korea has claimed the North has used 70% of wages earned by workers at a jointly-run industrial complex for its weapons programme and luxury goods for the elite. Last week, Seoul suspended its operations at Kaesong following the North's recent rocket and nuclear tests to cut off the money supply.
A North Korean employee works in a factory of a South Korean company at the Joint Industrial Park in Kaesong industrial zone, a few miles inside North Korea from the heavily fortified border in this 19 December 2013 file photo.
Tens of thousands of North Koreans worked at the Kaesong complex
The North has called the shutdown "a declaration of war". Kaesong was one of the last points of co-operation between the two Koreas. The North reacted to the shutdown by expelling all South Koreans from the complex and freezing the assets of South Korean firms. It has also vowed to cut key communication hotlines with the South.
South Korean Unification Minister Hong Yong-pyo announces about the suspension of the Kaesong industrial complex operations at the government complex in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, 10 February 2016
Hong Yong-pyo is South Korea's unification minister
 The privately-run manufacturing zone saw thousands of North Koreans working for South Korean businesses, making clothing, textiles, car parts and semi-conductors.

Workers 'only given tickets'

On Sunday, the South's unification ministry said in a statement the wages, in US dollars, had been paid to the government instead of directly to the workers.
"Any foreign currency earned in North Korea is transferred to the Workers' Party, where the money is used to develop nuclear weapons or missiles, or to purchase luxury goods," said Hong Yong-pyo, the unification minister, in a televised interview, referring to Pyongyang's ruling communist party.
He added that 70% of the money was kept by Pyongyang while workers were given tickets to buy food and essential items, and local currency. The government cited "multiple channels" as its sources for these claims but did not divulge how it had arrived at the percentage.
The South estimates about 616bn Korean won (£350m, $508m) had been paid to the North over the years.
Mr Hong was quoted by Yonhap news agency as saying that the South did not suspend operations earlier at Kaesong because "the international community recognised its significance", and it shut it down this time because "North Korea was only going to intensify its weapons development, and we needed to make a decisive move to alleviate our people's security concerns".
On 7 February, North Korea conducted a long-range rocket launch. It came after the country's fourth nuclear test in January.

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