
China has announced that its flag carrier, Air China, will resume direct flights to North Korea after a six-year pause, following the restoration of passenger train services between Beijing and Pyongyang.
This marks a significant step toward reopening North Korea, one of the world's most isolated nations, to the world.
Transport links between the two capitals had been suspended since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020, when Pyongyang implemented a very strict border closure.
While North Korean carrier Air Koryo already resumed flights to Beijing in 2023 and allowed Russian tour groups to visit in 2024, the return of China's air and railways are seen as a major economic milestone, as China has for decades been the main trading partner and a key source of diplomatic and economic backing for the country of 26 million people.
Before the pandemic, there were an estimated 300,000 foreign visitors in 2019, according to South Korea's Institute for International Economic Policy, and Chinese visitors accounted for 90% of all tourists to North Korea. Therefore, the long delay in resuming regular travel had surprised many regional observers.
"The reopening of these borders has been driven primarily by Pyongyang's timeline, which challenges the outdated assumption that Beijing dictates terms to a dependent client state," Seong-Hyon Lee, a visiting scholar at the Harvard University Asia Centre, explains.
Related
Nuclear ambitions complicated the relationship
Despite being Pyongyang’s primary ally, Beijing has frequently voiced disapproval over the North's persistent missile tests and nuclear ambitions. This aspect created a bumpy relationship with Pyongyang, with analysts saying that a nuclear-armed North Korea has often been something of a liability.
The diplomatic normalisation was highlighted last September, when Kim Jong Un attended a massive military parade in Beijing alongside Russian President Vladimir Putin. This was Kim's first appearance at a Chinese military display.
Lim Eul-chul, a North Korea expert at South Korea's Kyungnam University, argues that the war in Iran, in particular, increased "the need for closer coordination between the two nations".
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Native Americans had dice and games of probability long before other cultures, study finds - 2
Flash flooding causes highways to close to and from Eilat - 3
NASA releases stunning first images of Earth taken by the Artemis II astronauts - 4
Fundamental Home Exercise center Hardware: Amplify Your Exercises - 5
Step by step instructions to Show Children the Significance of Appropriate Handshaking
SpaceX launches Italian Earth-observing satellite to orbit on the 1st mission of 2026 (video)
Want to make America healthy again? Stop fueling climate change
Influencers are selling a delusional fantasy of being postpartum. Why is it so easy to believe?
Former Peruvian President Pedro Castillo sentenced for conspiracy
The most effective method to Pick the Right Old Consideration Administration: Key Contemplations
French rapper Gims placed under investigation for 'aggravated money laundering'
Book excerpt: "Eat Your Ice Cream" by Ezekiel J. Emanuel, M.D.
A Russian fighting for Ukraine conned the Kremlin out of $500,000 by faking his own death
WHO issues guidance on GLP-1 drugs for obesity













