How a sanctions-busting smartphone business thrives in North Korea

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By Ju-min Park

SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea is evading U.N. sanctions to cash in on soaring domestic demand for smartphones, using low-cost hardware imports to generate significant income for the regime, according to defectors, experts and an analysis of North Korean-made phones.

Economists estimate as many as six million North Koreans - a quarter of the population - now have mobile phones, a critical tool for participating in an informal market economy that has become a key income source for many.

Reuters spoke to some 10 defectors and experts about the use of mobile devices in North Korea, as well as reviewing state media reports and advertisements for mobile devices, and examining two North Korean-branded smartphones.

The phones feature Taiwanese semiconductors, batteries made in China and a version of Google's open-source Android operating system, analysis of the North Korean phones revealed.

United Nations sanctions imposed in 2017 because of the North's weapons programmes prohibit imports of mobile phone hardware.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has endorsed wireless networks, some reportedly built with the help of China's Huawei Technologies, and local mobile phone brands through public speeches and a tour to a mobile phone factory reported by state media.

BIG OUTLAY

Basic North Korean phones typically cost between $100 and $400 at state stores or private markets, experts and defectors say. Subscriptions to mobile carriers are registered at the telecom ministry's stores.

Phones are typically sold with service plans that include 200 minutes of calling time. Prepaid plans cost about $13 dollars for 100 minutes, North Korean phone advertisements show.

While those prices are comparable to or higher than what mobile phone customers pay in other countries, North Koreans earn an average of about $100 per month, only about 4% of their southern neighbours, according to South Korean government data.

International brands such as Apple iPhones are not publicly on sale, but traders and wealthy North Koreans can buy them outside the country and use them with local SIM cards, defectors say.

North Korean phones can only be used to call domestic numbers and have some unique security features.

Downloading or transferring files is severely restricted. Reuters found a warning pop-up when installing an "unidentified programme" on the Pyongyang 2418 smartphone stating: "If you install illegal programmes, your phone can malfunction or data will get destroyed."

"North Korea puts algorithms and software in its mobile phones to keep data from being copied or transferred," said Lee Young-hwan, a South Korean software expert studying North Korean smartphones.