N Korea, China resume train service after six year gap

Passenger wearing a face mask at Beijing station
The ‌Beijing-to-Pyongyang passenger train service was suspended amid the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. -EPA

Tickets for the first passenger train in six ‌years from Beijing to North Korea's capital Pyongyang have been sold out ahead of ‌its March 12 departure, an official ticketing office in Beijing says.

The ‌resumption of the rail service, suspended since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, revives a critical transport link between the largely isolated North Korea and its primary economic ally.

Tickets for the journey - restricted to travellers ‌holding business visas - ‌were purchased ⁠by entrepreneurs, government officials and reporters, according to ​the Beijing ticketing office.

Tickets were still available for the next service, scheduled for March 18.

China's railway authority said in a notice that Beijing-Pyongyang trains will operate four times a week in ⁠both directions on Monday, Wednesday, Thursday ‌and ​Saturday while Dandong-Pyongyang trains will run daily.

The resumption from March 12 will "further ​promote China-North Korea travel, ‌trade and economic co-operation, and people-to-people exchanges to enhance mutual well-being ​and friendship," the notice said.

North Korea remains closed to most foreign tourism, with limited exceptions largely for Russian tour groups under restricted arrangements, ​according ​to travel agencies organising trips ​to the country.

Before the pandemic, Chinese ‌visitors made up the largest share of foreign tourists to North Korea, the agencies said.

Tour organisers said on Monday that North Korea had cancelled next month's Pyongyang Marathon for unspecified reasons.

The race is one of ​the few events that has been open to international participants in ​the isolated state.