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"What North Korea is trying to do now is to get rid of international isolation as soon as possible," said Fang Xiuyu, an analyst at the Center for Korean Studies at Fudan University in Shanghai. Not only is China, the North's main diplomatic protector but also the chief supplier of food and fuel of country dealing with cyclical food shortages. The United Nations says 6 million people
-- a quarter of North Korea's population -- need emergency food assistance. Kim's trip comes ahead of planned new economic development projects along the Chinese border. The idea is to facilitate Chinese trade and investment with North Korea through the paving of a road between the Chinese city of Hunchun and the North Korean port of Rajin, South Korea's Chosun Ilbo newspaper reported. A Chinese shipping line also sails regularly from Rajin to the South Korean port of Busan, where cargo is easily moved onward to Japan. Another project would see China develop North Korea's Hwanggumpyong island along their border, the paper reported. The projects would allow North Korea to profit as a broker for Chinese exports, but don't signify any further liberalization of the North's centrally planned economy, said Ian Davies, an Australian consultant who worked on a U.N. project to develop the area during the 1990s. Rajin is a relatively dynamic economic zone and offers China an alternative export conduit to South Korea and Japan to help relieve logjams at its main northeastern port of Dalian, Davies said.
[Associated
Press;
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