-
Musk, already world's richest person, eyes $1 trillion fortune
-
US energy secretary's post saying US escorted tanker in Hormuz deleted
-
Peruvian literary great Alfredo Bryce Echenique dead at 87
-
After women players defect, Iran hints men will skip World Cup
-
Lossiemouth in 'league of her own' as she wins Champion Hurdle
-
UN warns Hormuz standstill will hit world's most vulnerable
-
Israelis dance on at Tel Aviv 'bunker party' as missiles fly
-
Oil crisis: Is world better placed than in 1973?
-
Trump administration does about face on autism treatment
-
Expats cling to Dubai's allure despite Iran's missiles
-
Oil plunges, stocks rise as Trump says Iran war over 'very soon'
-
Global energy body discusses releasing strategic oil reserves
-
UAE closes biggest oil refinery as Iran vows to choke off crude exports
-
Gunfire at US consulate in Toronto a 'national security incident': police
-
Spain's Ayuso takes Paris-Nice race lead after team time-trial
-
Oscar nominee Chalamet woos Chinese fans days before Best Actor bid
-
'Heated Rivalry' stars condemn 'hateful' fan engagement
-
How is Trump's 'freedom' war seen by those it aimed to help?
-
Egyptians feel Iran war shockwaves as fuel prices jump
-
Walker retires from international duty after 96 England caps
-
Borthwick makes one change as England seek to avoid worst Six Nations
-
Machida, Buriram advance in Asian Champions League
-
Vietnam to tap emergency fund to cool surging fuel prices
-
Chukwuemeka switches eligibility to Austria from England before World Cup
-
First group of Indonesians evacuated from Iran arrive home
-
UK trial opens against Sony over PlayStation video game prices
-
Leverkusen coach questions legality of Arsenal's set-piece tactics
-
Russia committed 'crimes against humanity' in deporting Ukrainian children: UN inquiry
-
Oil plunges, stocks steady as Trump says Iran war over 'very soon'
-
Journalists face restrictions, detention covering Mideast war
-
Ex-footballer Barton charged with assault near golf club
-
Real Madrid not inferior to Man City even without Mbappe: Arbeloa
-
Finland warns end of Ukraine war could bring more Russian spying
-
Japan survive Czech scare to stay unbeaten at World Baseball Classic
-
Italy buys rare Caravaggio portrait for 30 million euros
-
Luis Enrique confident PSG can raise game ahead of Chelsea showdown
-
Iran war sends prices in next door Turkmenistan soaring
-
'Home' at last: Ghana grants citizenship to 150 members of African diaspora
-
Japan upstarts Machida advance in Asian Champions League
-
EU chief, Macron say Mideast war exposes Europe energy vulnerability
-
In which Pooh turns 100: Hunny-loving bear marks a milestone
-
Volkswagen says to cut 50,000 jobs as profit slides
-
Oil plunges, stocks rally as Trump says Iran war over 'very soon'
-
Ig Nobel prizes moving to Europe because US 'unsafe' to visit
-
Greece hopes eco moorings will protect vital seagrass colonies
-
Iranian Kurds hunted by drones in Iraqi Kurdistan
-
In southeast Pakistan, Ramadan brings Hindus and Muslims closer
-
Red Cross launches Iran emergency appeal as needs soar
-
German exports drop in setback to fragile recovery
-
French AI startup AMI announces $1 bn raised in funding
North Korea's Kim tours hot tubs, BBQ joints at lavish new mountain resort
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and his daughter opened a lavish new mountain resort complete with "cosy" leisure spaces, barbecue restaurants and hot tubs, state media said Tuesday.
The new facility in Samjiyon in the country's mountainous north is an "attractive mountainous tourist resort and leisure ground for the people", Pyongyang's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) said.
Kim toured "bedrooms of hotels, cosy leisure spaces and commercial and public catering facilities", KCNA said.
Images in state media showed Kim accompanied by his daughter, who analysts say is called Ju-ae and is his likely heir, touring the hotels.
Among the facilities on show were both indoor and outdoor baths, as well as barbecue restaurants.
Kim even tested the firmness of the beds.
State media said he hailed the resort as "clear proof of the ever-growing ideal of our people and our state's potential for development".
And he declared the area to be an "innovative and highly civilized city representing the tourism culture of the country".
State media said the new facilities showed the North Korean people were the "most dignified" and have "nothing to envy in the world".
Not reported was what the fees would be for the average North Korean, who analysts say typically earns up to $3 a month in state-run factories.
- Boosting tourism -
Analysts agreed the new facilities were likely aimed at tourists from abroad.
"The main target demographic is foreigners," Peter Ward, a research fellow at the Sejong Institute in Seoul, told AFP.
But, he added, visits could also serve as rewards for "productive units" of workers.
Lim Eul-Chul, a professor at the Institute for Far Eastern Studies at Kyungnam University, said "large-scale group tourism could soon be accommodated via border regions with China".
"The five newly completed hotels could serve as core accommodation facilities," he said.
The North last year permitted Russian tourists to return for the first time since the pandemic and Western tour operators briefly returned in February this year. No Chinese tourists are known to have returned to the country.
Samjiyon carries potent symbolism in North Korean propaganda as it is a stone's throw away from Mount Paektu, the peninsula's highest mountain where official accounts say Kim's father, Kim Jong Il, was born.
Historians largely agree he was actually born in the Soviet Union.
Alongside the resort opening, Kim has in recent weeks toured a number of newly completed factories.
His ruling Korean Workers Party is expected hold its first congress in half a decade in early 2026, where policymakers will hash out economic plans for the next five years.
J.Sauter--VB