Passenger train services between China and North Korea will resume this week six years after their suspension due to the Covid-19 pandemic, rail authorities in Beijing confirmed on Tuesday.
Train journeys between the two countries were halted in 2020 as they imposed strict border closures to prevent the coronavirus from spreading.
While China has since fully reopened its borders, North Korea has proceeded more slowly, though direct flights and train services with Russia resumed last year.
But China Railway announced on Tuesday evening that regular train services between Beijing and Pyongyang would resume on Thursday.
The services will help in “promoting personnel exchanges, economic and trade cooperation and cultural exchanges between the two countries,” China Railway said.
Earlier on Tuesday, travel agents for an official ticketing booth in Beijing told AFP that anyone with a valid visa was now able to buy train tickets to the diplomatically isolated nation.
This would include Chinese people working and studying in North Korea, as well as North Koreans working, studying and visiting family abroad.
Another such ticketing booth in the Chinese border city of Dandong told AFP that sales would resume on Wednesday but tourists were not yet eligible to buy tickets.
“It’s great to see the international train service resuming,” Rowan Beard, tours manager at Young Pioneer Tours, told AFP.
He confirmed his company, one of several foreign-run firms that specialises in travel to North Korea, could also organise tickets from Thursday.
“While it isn’t initially intended for tourists, it will provide another travel option once tourism to North Korea eventually returns, serving as an alternative to flying,” Beard said.
The statement by China Railways said the trains would run in both directions between Beijing and Pyongyang every Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday.
Entry and exit procedures would be completed at the Dandong border crossing and at Sinuiju in North Korea, it said.
Tickets are currently available for offline purchase at several Chinese cities, the statement added.
Prior to the official announcement, South Korea’s Unification Ministry said in a statement that it expected the services to resume Thursday, adding: “we will continue to closely monitor related developments”.
– Close neighbours –
China’s foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said at a press conference before the announcement that “maintaining regular passenger train services is of great significance in facilitating people-to-people exchanges between the two sides”.
Despite periods of strained relations between China and North Korea over Pyongyang’s nuclear programme, the two neighbours have maintained close ties.
China is historically North Korea’s biggest backer and a crucial lifeline for its moribund economy, though Pyongyang has drawn closer to Russia since the start of the Ukraine war.
North Korea’s reclusive authorities have given mixed signals on whether further opening is on the cards.
On Monday, Koryo Tours said North Korea had cancelled an international marathon in its capital Pyongyang originally scheduled for early next month, citing an official statement with no explanation for the decision.
The cancellation was “unexpected”, the company said, adding it understood the decision had been “taken at a level above the organisers of the event itself”.
The marathon is the largest international sporting event in North Korea, offering visitors a rare chance to run through Pyongyang’s tightly controlled streets.

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