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Let's send Sarah Palin first...
BEIJING (AP) - North Korea said Wednesday it will begin to allow in more
American tourists after years of heavy restrictions on visits to the isolate country, according a tour operator. The United States has never had diplomatic relations with North Korea since the Korean War ended in a truce, not a peace treaty. More recently, tensions have remained high over the North's nuclear program. Only about 2,000 tourists from the U.S. have visited since the country opened to Western tourism in 1987, according to the founder of a China-based tour group that says it has taken most of those visitors into the isolated country. But the Koryo Group, which specializes in North Korea tourism, said it received an e-mail from the state-run Korea International Travel Company on Wednesday afternoon saying the country will accept more American tourists this year. The message gave no explanation for the move and said more specific information would come later, the agency's founder, Nicholas Bonner, told The Associated Press. "This is a big, big change," he said. -- Where others have hearts, right-wingers carry tumors of rotten principles. |
Let's send Sarah Palin first...
"Harry" wrote in message m... BEIJING (AP) - North Korea said Wednesday it will begin to allow in more American tourists after years of heavy restrictions on visits to the isolate country, according a tour operator. The United States has never had diplomatic relations with North Korea since the Korean War ended in a truce, not a peace treaty. More recently, tensions have remained high over the North's nuclear program. Only about 2,000 tourists from the U.S. have visited since the country opened to Western tourism in 1987, according to the founder of a China-based tour group that says it has taken most of those visitors into the isolated country. But the Koryo Group, which specializes in North Korea tourism, said it received an e-mail from the state-run Korea International Travel Company on Wednesday afternoon saying the country will accept more American tourists this year. The message gave no explanation for the move and said more specific information would come later, the agency's founder, Nicholas Bonner, told The Associated Press. "This is a big, big change," he said. -- Where others have hearts, right-wingers carry tumors of rotten principles. Can she see North Korea from her house? |
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