Rason
This article is about the North Korean city.
For the Australian politician, see
Hector Rason.
For his ministry, see
Rason Ministry.
Rason (formerly Rajin-SÅnbong; Korean pronunciation: [ɾasÊ°ÊŒn, ɾadÊ‘in sÊ°ÊŒnboÅ‹]) is a North Korean city and ice-free port[2] in the Sea of Japan (East Sea of Korea) in the North Pacific Ocean on the northeast tip of North Korea. It is in the Kwanbuk region and location of the Rason Special Economic Zone.
In South Korean pronunciation, the initial "R" of the name is pronounced as "L," as per standard Korean phonology. In 2000 the name was shortened from "Rajin-SÅnbong" to "Rason". During the 1930s, the Japanese called it Rashin; at that time it was an important port at the end of a railroad line. It was liberated by the Red Army on 14 August 1945.
Before 1991, Rason was used by the Soviet Union as an alternative warm water port in case Vladivostok was unavailable.[3] From 1993 to 2004, it was administered separately from North HamgyÅng as the Directly Governed City (Chikhalsi) of Rason. Prior to 1993 and from 2004 to 2009, the city had been part of the North HamgyÅng Province. Since 2010, the city is a "Special City", again breaking from provincial control but different to its older designation as a "Directly Governed City".[4] It is unclear what this means in practice.
Rason borders Jilin province of China and Khasansky District in Primorsky Krai of Russia.[2] China is making investments in the port as it gives it access to the Sea of Japan.[2][5] In July 2011, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) gave a green light to the China's domestic trade cargo to be shipped via its port of Rajin from northeast to east China.[6] Coal is shipped from nearby Chinese mines to Shanghai.[2] There is a casino by the sea which caters to Chinese visitors.[7]
Administrative divisions
Rason is divided into one district (kuyÅk) and one county (kun).[8]
Rajin-guyÅk (ë¼ì§„구ì—; ç¾…æ´¥å€åŸŸ)
- Anhwa-dong (안화ë™)
- Anju-dong (안주ë™)
- ChigyÅng-dong (지경ë™)
- ChunghyÅn-dong (중현ë™)
- Ch'angp'yÅng-dong (ì°½í‰ë™)
- Ch'Ånggye-dong (ì²ê³„ë™)
- HahyÅn-dong (하현ë™)
- Haebang-dong (í•´ë°©ë™)
- Kwangok-tong (관곡ë™)
- Namsan-dong (남산ë™)
- TongmyÅng-dong (ë™ëª…ë™)
- SanghyÅn-dong (ìƒí˜„ë™)
- Sin'an-dong (ì‹ ì•ˆë™)
- Sinhae-dong (ì‹ í•´ë™)
- SinhÅng-dong (ì‹ í¥ë™)
- Songp'yÅng-dong (송í‰ë™)
- YÅkchÅn-dong (ì—ì „ë™)
- YuhyÅn-dong (ìœ í˜„ë™)
- Much'ang-ri (무창리)
- Huch'ang-ri (후창리)
- SÅnbong-Åp (ì„ ë´‰ì/先鋒邑)
- Tuman'gang-rodongjagu (ë‘만강로ë™ìžêµ¬/豆滿江勞動者å€)
- Ungsang-rodongjagu (ì›…ìƒë¡œë™ìžêµ¬/雄尙勞動者å€)
- Chosal-li (조산리/é€ å±±é‡Œ)
- Hahoe-ri (하회리/下檜里)
- HayÅp'yÅng-ri (하여í‰ë¦¬/下æ±åªé‡Œ)
- HongÅi-ri (í™ì˜ë¦¬/洪儀里)
- Kulp'o-ri (êµ´í¬ë¦¬/屈浦里)
- Paekhang-ri (백학리/白鶴里)
- Pup'o-ri (부í¬ë¦¬/駙浦里)
- Sahoe-ri (사회리/四會里)
- Uam-ri (우암리/牛岩里)
- WÅnjÅng-ri (ì›ì •ë¦¬/元汀里)
Transport
- Rail
Rajin Station is on the Pyongra Line.
See also
References
Further reading
- Dormels, Rainer. North Korea's Cities: Industrial facilities, internal structures and typification. Jimoondang, 2014. ISBN 978-89-6297-167-5
External links
Coordinates: 42°20′40″N 130°23′04″E / 42.34444°N 130.38444°E / 42.34444; 130.38444