News News
Contact us
  • Customer service number:64321087
  • Commercial service telephone:13918059423
  • Technical service telephone:13918059423
  • Contact person: Mr. Cui 
  • Service email:shxtb@163.com
  • Address: room 107, building 8, no. 100, guilin road, xuhui district, Shanghai

Firm in Japan could have transferred rare earth tech to North Korea

The date of: 2018-11-01
viewed: 3

Source:

Oct. 29 (UPI) -- A company based in Japan might have transferred rare earth extraction technology to North Korea before it disbanded in 2007, according to a Japanese press report.

The Sankei Shimbun reported Monday the trading firm was based in Tokyo and was established under the General Association of Korean Residents in Japan, or Chongryon.

The firm, International Trading, may have worked with a Korean-Japanese scientist at Tokyo University of Technology to transfer know-how to North Korea through a "merged business."

The company was founded in 1987 and disbanded 20 years later. Sources who spoke to the Sankei said it is unclear whether International Trading had ceased operations entirely..

According to documents obtained by the Japanese newspaper, International Trading jointly invested about $20 million with North Korea's Ryongaksan Trading Co. to launch the Korea International Chemical Joint Venture Co., which was the target of United Nations Security Council sanctions in 2016 -- in connection to military procurements.

The Sankei reported International Trading came under suspicion in the course of U.N. and Japanese government investigations and that it would be difficult to confirm whether rare earth extraction technology was transferred to North Korea.

Japanese financial authorities have confirmed the existence of a frozen account connected to the company, but no local laws could penalize the firm's agents, according to the report.

North Korea is under the heaviest sanctions in its history, but some defectors in the South say embargoes will not lead to North Korea collapse.

South Korean news service CBS No Cut News reported Monday Park Ye-young, a defector who left the North in 2002, said North Korea's markets have strengthened the regime, and sanctions hurt the most vulnerable North Koreans.

Park was speaking at a parliamentary audit on Monday.


Hot News / Related to recommend
  • 2024 - 09 - 06
    Click on the number of times: 0
    source:TOHOKU UNIVERSITYResearchers at Tohoku University have successfully increased the capacity, lifetime durability, and cost-effectiveness of a capacitor in their pursuit of a more power-efficient...
  • 2024 - 09 - 05
    Click on the number of times: 0
    source:MININGCritical Metals Corp. (Nasdaq: CRML), coming off its acquisition of a controlling stake in the Tanbreez rare earth project in Greenland, has kicked off diamond drilling program with a vie...
  • 2024 - 09 - 04
    Click on the number of times: 0
    source:SMALL CAPS has scored a “hat trick” with all three completed drill holes at its 100%-owned Havilah project in NSW intersecting significant sulphide mineralisation.Diamond drill hole HVD003...
  • 2024 - 09 - 03
    Click on the number of times: 0
    source:phys.orgHealthy lighting technology is receiving increasingly widespread attention. Traditional solid-state lighting sources utilize photoluminescence down conversion technology to realize idea...
  • Copyright ©Copyright 2018 2020 Shanghai rare earth association All Rights Reserved Shanghai ICP NO.2020034223
    the host:Shanghai Association of Rare Earth the guide:Shanghai Development and Application Office of Rare Earth the organizer:Shanghai rare earth industry promotion center
    犀牛云提供云计算服务