Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/China–North_Korea_border> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 24 of
24
with 100 items per page.
- China–North_Korea_border abstract "The China–North Korea border (simplified Chinese: 中朝边境; traditional Chinese: 中朝邊境; pinyin: Zhōng Cháo Biānjìng; 조선민주주의인민공화국-중화인민공화국 국경) is the international border separating China and North Korea. The border is 1,420 kilometres (880 mi) long. The Yalu River, Baekdu Mountain, and the Tumen River divide the two countries.[citation needed]Unlike North Korea's border with Russia and the DMZ with South Korea, the China–North Korea border as of 2006 was relatively unguarded. North Korea's trade with China goes through the border. A lot of the China-North Korea trade goes through the Chinese city of Dandong, Liaoning, the largest city on the border. In 2006 Norimitsu Onishi of The New York Times said that the border was North Korea's "lifeline to the outside world."Many refugees from North Korea cross into China through the border. The Chinese government transferred responsibility for managing the border to the army from the police in 2003. The Chinese government has tried to manage the refugee stream so that it does not destabilize North Korea. In 2006 the Chinese built a Chinese–Korean border fence; it mostly exists in areas where the Yalu River has low riverbanks and is narrower.Chinese cell phone service extends 10 km (6 mi) into Korean territory, which has led to the development of a black market for Chinese cell phones in the border regions. International calls are strictly forbidden in North Korea, and violators put themselves at considerable peril to acquire such phones.During Peter Hessler's visit to Dandong, he noted that a common wedding day event for many Chinese couples involve renting boats, putting life preservers on over their wedding clothes, and going to the North Korean border to have wedding photos taken.".
- China–North_Korea_border thumbnail SinoKorea_Friendship_Bridge.jpg?width=300.
- China–North_Korea_border wikiPageID "37420686".
- China–North_Korea_border wikiPageRevisionID "575471383".
- China–North_Korea_border p "Zhōng Cháo Biānjìng".
- China–North_Korea_border s "中朝边境".
- China–North_Korea_border t "中朝邊境".
- China–North_Korea_border subject Category:China–North_Korea_border.
- China–North_Korea_border subject Category:Geography_of_North_Korea.
- China–North_Korea_border comment "The China–North Korea border (simplified Chinese: 中朝边境; traditional Chinese: 中朝邊境; pinyin: Zhōng Cháo Biānjìng; 조선민주주의인민공화국-중화인민공화국 국경) is the international border separating China and North Korea. The border is 1,420 kilometres (880 mi) long. The Yalu River, Baekdu Mountain, and the Tumen River divide the two countries.[citation needed]Unlike North Korea's border with Russia and the DMZ with South Korea, the China–North Korea border as of 2006 was relatively unguarded.".
- China–North_Korea_border label "China–North Korea border".
- China–North_Korea_border label "Fronteira China-Coreia do Norte".
- China–North_Korea_border label "Frontière entre la République populaire de Chine et la Corée du Nord".
- China–North_Korea_border label "Granica chińsko-koreańska".
- China–North_Korea_border label "中朝边界".
- China–North_Korea_border sameAs China%E2%80%93North_Korea_border.
- China–North_Korea_border sameAs Frontière_entre_la_République_populaire_de_Chine_et_la_Corée_du_Nord.
- China–North_Korea_border sameAs 조선민주주의인민공화국-중화인민공화국_국경.
- China–North_Korea_border sameAs Granica_chińsko-koreańska.
- China–North_Korea_border sameAs Fronteira_China-Coreia_do_Norte.
- China–North_Korea_border sameAs Q1060616.
- China–North_Korea_border sameAs Q1060616.
- China–North_Korea_border wasDerivedFrom China–North_Korea_border?oldid=575471383.
- China–North_Korea_border depiction SinoKorea_Friendship_Bridge.jpg.