November8, 2006:
North Korea is having a serious problem with police, troops and border
guards stationed near China. It's all about corruption, and a breakdown of
order along the border. For several years now, there has been a problem with
North Korean troops going into China to steal, and sometimes rob people as
well, and then scoot across the border with their loot. As long as you tip the
border guard, getting through is no problem.
In
some cases, the stealing takes place on the North Korean side, with the goods
then taken to China for sale. Construction materials are a favorite item,
before, or after, they are built into something. Another popular target for
thieves is metal of any kind, as China has become a major worldwide magnet for
scrap. However, this has become a major problem in North Korea, where the
thieves take power transmission lines. This is easy to do, as there is no power
for many hours of the day, or several days at a time. Even the North Korean
heroin production, a valuable source of foreign currency, gets plundered. This
is notable, because heroin and counterfeiting (mostly U.S. hundred dollar
bills) are closely guarded projects. But not closely guarded enough, for not
only is there a growing drug addiction problem in North Korea, but those phony
hundred dollar bills are used as currency (at a discount, as everyone knows
they are fake.)
If
you know what to look for, you can sometimes see charcoal powered North Korean
trucks hauling booty across the border. The charcoal powered trucks, something
not used in the West since World War II, give off some smoke, as their engine
burns charcoal to produce a flammable gas to power the engine. These vehicles
don't move very fast, either, but are common in North Korea (for both military
and civilian use).
The
North Korean government has been trying to crack down on the corruption along
the border, but many of "enforcers" sent north from the capital are either
threatened, or bribed, into ineffectiveness. Military and police discipline
along the border is not completely out of control. There's an understanding
that "foreign spies" (usually Chinese) will still be hunted down (and sometimes
held for an unofficial ransom). Unofficial (those who have not bribed the cops)
crooks are also at risk, as the outlaw troops don't want any civilian
competition.
China
is alarmed at this collapse of discipline in North Korea, if only because of
the crimes committed by North Korean troops in China. But there's also the
prospect of even more North Korean outlaws coming into China, if the North Korean
government completely collapses. To try and deal with that, China has been
sending thousands of additional troops and police to the border areas every
month. This has been going on for at least two years. The Chinese government is
less concerned about North Korean missiles and nukes, than they are with rogue
North Korea police and soldiers.