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2008/11/06 20:57 KST
N. Korea clamps down on private markets

   SEOUL, Nov. 6 (Yonhap) -- North Korean authorities are clamping down on private markets that have cropped up across the country, citing concerns that such business activities can compromise centralized control, a local civic group said Thursday.

   Good Friends claimed in its recent newsletter that the government will allow private markets to operate only once a month beginning in 2009. Markets operate on the first, 11th and 21st days of the month at present.

   In North Korea's capital and largest city of Pyongyang, such measures have been implemented since October, said Good Friends.

   The Seoul-based relief group said North Korean authorities expressed concerns that merchants who make a living by selling goods at these markets could contest or circumvent decisions and rules made by the state.

   The markets have become an integral part of the local landscape, as they are used by many people to supplement their meager state rations.

   Quoting an anonymous North Korean official, the group said the government's ultimate goal is to shut down the markets altogether.

   yonngong@yna.co.kr
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