Rason

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See also: rason, Rasŏn, and Räson

English[edit]

Proper noun[edit]

Rason

  1. Alternative form of Rasŏn
    • 2008, Robert Willoughby, “Northernmost Corner”, in North Korea (Bradt Travel Guides)‎[1], 2nd edition, →ISBN, →OCLC, →OL, page 186:
      Two-thirds of the region’s 150,000 people inhabit Rajin and Sonbong, many working in Rajin’s port, Sonbong’s oil processing refineries and the iron, magnesium and ceramics industries on the cities’ outskirts. As such, it’s been promoted less for tourists than for businessmen, but even then the zone’s development is taking time, and the Rajin and Sonbong zone, collectively known as Rason, encloses an area of forested hills and wetlands, lakes and the Tuman River delta with an abundance of wildlife.[...]At the northern end of Rason is a series of shallow lagoons, including Korea’s largest, the metre-deep, 41km-round Lagoon Sonbong.
    • 2012 August 13, Choe Sang-hun, “North Korea Reported to Be Pursuing Industrial Project With China”, in The New York Times[2], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on August 14, 2012, Asia Pacific‎[3]:
      North Korea also opened a free-trade zone in Rason, at its northeastern corner, in the 1990s.
    • 2013 September 24, James Pearson, “European cyclists descend on North Korean port town”, in John O'Callaghan, Robert Birsel, editors, Reuters[4], archived from the original on 06 February 2024, Sports:
      Rajin is one of two towns that make up the Rajin-Songbon, or Rason, special economic zone in the northeast corner of North Korea. Both Russia and China have access to Rajin as a port and have invested in updating infrastructure.
      The cycling race follows Sunday's completion of a Russian-operated train line that links Rason with the Russian Far East town of Khasan, part of a more ambitious plan to build a railway from Europe to Asia.
      First designated a special economic zone in the mid 1990s, Rason is popular among ethnic Korean Chinese businessmen looking to set up small factories and take advantage of cheap labour.
    • 2015 October 15, Anna Fifield, “A remote corner of China wants access to the sea. The obstacle is North Korea.”, in The Washington Post[5], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on October 17, 2015, Asia & Pacific‎[6]:
      While North Korea is promoting the area — Rajin and the neighboring city of Sonbong are together known as Rason — as a special economic zone, previous efforts at opening have not gone far. []
      North Korea established Rason as a free-trade zone in 1991, modeled on zones that had powered the export-led explosion of growth in China. []
      A Washington Post reporter saw several trucks with Rason license plates entering China at the Quanhe border crossing near Hunchun. But being able to ship Chinese products out in the other direction, through Rajin port, would provide a huge boost to the region, proponents say. []
      “The problem is still Rason and getting to it,” said Cathcart, who has written reports about the region. “The relationship between China and North Korea with regards to the use of Rason is still problematic. It’s not unfettered access.”