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N. Korea orders workers in China to donate cash for flood recovery efforts

North Korean authorities have ordered trading companies and workers in China to contribute cash for flood recovery efforts back home, a source in China told The Daily NK on Thursday, speaking anonymously. 

The task ultimately fell to North Korean workers at clothing factories, seafood companies and electronics plants throughout China.

Workers at one clothing factory in Dandong, Liaoning province, ended up giving almost their entire salary to the authorities except for 500 Chinese yuan in living expenses.

Workers at the factory receive salaries of 2,500 to 3,000 yuan, but they paid about 80% to the authorities this month as party funds, Socialist Women’s Union of Korea dues and flood recovery contributions.

The Daily NK reported earlier this month that North Korean workers in Russia were ordered to pay $70 in cash per person to support flood recovery efforts.

In Russia, workers were clearly instructed to pay $70 across the board, but workers in China were not given a clear sum.

Trading companies that manage the workers are paying the flood recovery contributions, so the sum workers pay likely differs depending on the factory that employs them.

Trading companies in China are competing to show loyalty to the North Korean regime by contributing their workers’ salaries to flood recovery efforts. While some companies might try to leave workers with slightly more than basic living expenses, most are expected to turn over nearly all of their employees’ earnings to the authorities. This practice leaves workers with only minimal amounts for food and essential costs, as companies feel compelled to participate in this loyalty-driven contribution system.

Opportunity for graft

Officials at some trading companies pocket some of the cash taken from workers when the authorities issue cross-the-board orders for cash payments, calling their graft “a task issued by Pyongyang.” 

This is to say, trading companies that manage 500 workers amass a fortune of 1 million Chinese yuan if they collect 2,000 yuan per person, and some of those companies use the opportunity to embezzle a bit of the cash.

Most North Korean workers in China responded to news of the contribution order by calling it “expected.” However, they also suspect company officials are pocketing some of the cash given the decision to “seize” their entire salary except for minimal living expenses.

“It would have been fine if the authorities told the workers exactly how much they should pay to support flood recovery costs,” the source told The Daily NK. “However, they tell the workers to pay as much as they  can without a set sum, so workers at the bottom just endure the burden without knowing how much they are actually paying for flood recovery. That makes workers very unhappy.”

Daily NK works with a network of sources in North Korea, China, and elsewhere. For security reasons, their identities remain anonymous.

Please send any comments or questions about this article to dailynkenglish@uni-media.net.

Read in Korean

September 04, 2024 at 12:15PM

by DailyNK(North Korean Media)

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