Summer nights at Dandong’s waterfront can be quite surreal. The evening starts early. About half an hour before the sun sets the Chinese border city begins a transformation into a bizarre Pyongyang themed mini-Las Vegas.
All in Yalu
Summer nights at Dandong’s waterfront can be quite surreal. The evening starts early. About half an hour before the sun sets the Chinese border city begins a transformation into a bizarre Pyongyang themed mini-Las Vegas.
Only the narrow Yalu and Tumen rivers separate neighbors China and North Korea. The river banks are so close to each other that people can easily see across the border, and into each other’s lives.
Dandong, in China’s northeast Liaoning Province is a city of rumors and spies. Locals remark “Sometimes in Dandong, you just feel what’s going on.” Dandong is the closest you can get to North Korea without actually visiting.
Situated on the Yalu River border with China, most of the inhabitants of North Korea’s city of Sinuiju are privileged to, but mostly trusted not to, wander into China. North Korean businesspeople, traders, workers, and agents continuously cross the Yalu into Dandong, a colorful and increasingly cosmopolitan Chinese city.
Warm weather encourages Chinese locals to picnic while they relax on the Yalu River border of North Korea and China. All looks serene at this particularly scenic stretch of the river. However, the smokestacks on the opposite North Korean riverbank serve a sinister purpose.