Citations:Chagang

English citations of Chagang

1952 1976 1997 2005 2010s
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  • [1949 April 24, “Economic - Government budget”, in Information from Foreign Documents or Radio Broadcasts[1], Central Intelligence Agency, sourced from Hwanghae Inminpo, published 2011, page 3:
    As for the provincial budgets for 1949, the estimated total amounts to 4,050,147,000 won, distributed among the provinces and Pyongyang as follows. []
    Chagang-do 189,252,000 []
    ]
  • 1952 April 13, “Food in North Korea: quantity, prices, controls”, in Information Report[2], Central Intelligence Agency, published 2001, page 3:
    Every month 241 tons of beef were purchased: 70 tons in South P'yǒngan Province, 30 tons in Hwanghae Province, 90 tons in North P'yongan Province, 50 tons in Chagang Province, and one ton in P'yǒngyang city.
  • 1976 May, Nena Vreeland, Rinn-Sup Shinn, “Industry”, in Area Handbook for North Korea[3], 2nd edition, →OCLC, page 282:
    In the late 1960s or early 1970s the Unbong hydroelectric plant was constructed at Chasong on the Yalu River in Chagang Province, with an installed generating capacity of 400,000 kilowatts.
  • 1997 October 19, Keith B. Richburg, “Beyond a Wall of Secrecy, Devastation”, in The Washington Post[4], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 15 September 2000, page A01[5]:
    Last week, U.S. Rep. Tony P. Hall (D-Ohio) and this correspondent were permitted an unusual look behind the regime's wall of secrecy, traveling into areas rarely seen by outsiders, and never by an American journalist. In addition to Hamhung, which we reached in an old Soviet-made helicopter, we also took a 3 1/2-hour drive north from Pyongyang on the country's main north-south highway into the rugged mountains of Chagang province to the small town of Tongsin, stopping briefly along the way in a slightly larger town, Huichon.
  • 2005 June 14, Tony Banbury, “Hungry, and getting desperate”, in The New York Times[6], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 19 November 2023, Opinion‎[7]:
    On a recent visit to North Korea, I was welcomed into a modest apartment by a family in Huichon city, Chagang Province. Its four members lived on a diet of government-supplied corn and acorns foraged in nearby woodland.
  • 2013, Charles K. Armstrong, “The Unfinished War, 1950-53”, in Tyranny of the Weak: North Korea and the World, 1950-1992[8], Cornell University Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 44:
    By this time, Kim had moved his headquarters to the vicinity of Kanggye, in the north central province of Chagang near the Chinese border. Mountainous and sparsely populated, Chagang was a new province, established in February 1949 "for the purpose of accelerating the exploitation of the inexhaustible underground as well as forestry resources which the province possesses," according to the North Korean media.
  • 2015 December 4, Eric Talmadge, “North Korea hunkers down for harsh winter”, in AP News[9], archived from the original on 02 September 2023[10]:
    Darlene Tymo, the WFP’s country director in North Korea, said that although official statistics from the North Korean government are not out yet, the main harvest of the year is believed to have been worse than last year and that could mean especially remote and impoverished areas — particularly the mountainous provinces of Chagang and Ryanggang along the border with China — could be looking at a harsher than usual winter ahead.
  • 2017, Daniel Tudor, quoting Je Son Lee, “Pyongyang vs. the Rest”, in Ask a North Korean: Defectors Talk about their Lives inside the World's Most Secretive Nation[11], Tuttle Publishing, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 101:
    Chagang Province was not that far away from my province, but they spoke with a very different accent. People in my hometown sound very abrupt and stern. But people in Chagang Province speak very gently, which makes people feel comfortable.