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North Korea
ChinaDiplomacy

North Korea ‘feels the heat’ from China’s renewed coal bans

Signs of a growing divide between communist neighbours as Beijing tightens sanctions against Pyongyang, analysts say

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A cargo ship is loaded with coal during the opening ceremony of a new dock at the North Korean port of Rajinin 2014. Coal is estimated to take up as much as 40 per cent of North Korea’s exports to China. Photo: Reuters
Shi Jiangtao

Pyongyang’s broadside against Beijing over China’s decision last week to suspend imports of North Korean coal this year has yet again laid bare a growing division between the two communist allies.

State-controlled Korean Central News Agency, which has largely kept quiet over the past week, finally broke the embarrassing silence and slammed Beijing for colluding with “hostile forces in conspiracies to bring down” the North Korean regime.

Such outbursts, according to diplomatic observers, are an unmistakable sign that the heat has been felt in Pyongyang.

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Beijing’s belated move to tighten international sanctions on the unruly North Korean leader Kim Jong-un followed a United Nations resolution in November.

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Although it was not the first time Beijing had taken steps to punish Pyongyang by cutting imports of coal, the country’s single biggest export and source of hard currency, it was widely seen as one of the toughest by far, signalling Beijing’s growing unease with its neighbour’s nuclear weapons programme.

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