blogs  
 
yournews
   
Video Photos Finance Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
| |
 
  Home ›
 
Asia Pacific News

 

NKorea cracks down on women's pants
Posted: 24 July 2009 1609 hrs

  A policewoman directs traffic in Pyongyang
 
Photos  of

   
 


SEOUL : North Korean women face hard labor if they are caught wearing trousers rather than skirts, under the communist regime's latest crackdown on public morals, South Korean activists said Friday.

Offenders can be punished with hours of forced labor or fines of 700 won, almost a week's salary for the average worker, human rights group Good Friends said, citing its own sources within the isolated nation.

The Stalinist leadership's campaign is angering women who see skirts as less practical than trousers, Good Friends director Lee Seung-Yong said.

"Women are told to wear skirts in public places and in the streets, sparking complaints among them as they often have to work in tough conditions," he told AFP.

Disciplinary officials from students' bodies and women's organizations stand at street corners during the morning rush hour and lunch breaks, to keep watch for any women violating the pants ban, according to Good Friends.

Uriminzokkiri, an official North Korean website, noted on Monday that ruler Kim Jong-Il had issued a decree in 1986 urging women to wear traditional Korean attire.

"The Dear Leader has said national character shows up not only in language, etiquette and morals but in attire as well," the site said.

It quoted Kim as saying the country's traditional skirts and jackets are a "source of our (national) pride" and that women should be "actively encouraged" to wear them.

- AFP/vm

 


Other asiapacific News
Violence spreads across Maldives after "coup"
Myanmar moves towards ending media censorship
Afghan forces will be "good enough" to take over: US
US poised to withdraw 4,700 Marines from Japan
Pakistan PM appeals against court summons
Chemical leak in Yangtze river sparks panic
Indian state ministers resign over sex video
Budget homes key to boosting China's property market
Australia summons Syrian envoy over bloodshed
Gandhi election test in most populous Indian state
Video of Chinese boy crying in snow sparks uproar
Clashes in Maldives as ex-leader calls on successor to resign
Ai Weiwei to build London 2012 pavilion
New Maldives leader denies 'coup' charges
Maldives' Nasheed calls on new president to resign
New Maldives leader to form 'unity cabinet'
CIA chief to visit Seoul for N. Korea talks: report
US drone strike kills 10 in Pakistan
Scant hope for Philippine quake missing
US to send second ship to bolster Philippines

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions