Women in North Korea Allowed to Ride Bikes For First time in Nearly 20 Years

By Angus Walker, ITV News via NBC News

Women in North Korea Allowed to Ride Bikes For First time in Nearly 20 Years

August 17, 2012 Updated Aug 17, 2012 at 9:37 AM PDT

In perhaps another sign that North Korean society is changing, Chinese media reported Friday that women are being allowed to ride bicycles for the first time for years.

Cycling for women was banned in 1996 because the activity wasn't regarded as sufficiently feminine by the male-dominated North Korean regime.

The apparent relaxation came as Kim Jung Un's powerful uncle, Chang Song-Taek, was in Beijing signing new deals to open up special enterprise zones on the Chinese border with North Korea.

Such zones already exist but haven't been developed to any great scale. The Chinese have long been trying to convince the North Koreans to reform their stagnant state controlled economy in the same way China did 20 years ago.

It is not clear why the female bicycle ban was reversed, but it does appear as though the wheels of change in North Korea are turning.

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