Working as a Lawyer in Pyongyang
by Brendon Carr
I must admit: Part of me hungers for the adventure aspect of being out on a barren frontier, where life is desolate and hard. For this reason, I’ve always been more attracted to by the prospect of a smelly-sock train ride across Mongolia, Manchuria, Siberia, Crapistan or Trashcanistan than hitting the five-star resorts of Bali or Singapore. But then I’m also a weenie when it comes to scary food—your Uncle B wants to boldly go to parts unknown, then find the McDonald’s there. (Did I mention that Singapore is awesome? They have Long John Silver’s!)
Anyway, because of this buccaneering spirit, the prospect of working as a foreign lawyer in Pyongyang has been on my list since I’ve been a lawyer.
Michael Hay, a foreign legal consultant in Seoul since 1990, actually did this—striking out from “Big Four” firm Bae Kim & Lee in 2001 to focus on being a full-time North Korea consultant. He established KoreaStrategic Inc. as a consultancy (its domain lapsed in June 2006, though), then with a splash announced the formation of Hay, Kalb & Associates as the first foreign/North Korean joint venture law firm in Pyongyang. The Hay, Kalb website, too, disappeared sometime in 2005, and I lost touch with Mike Hay around the same time. I remain curious to know about his adventure up North; I’m sure it’s been fascinating. However, he was always extremely tight-lipped about what he was doing there. Other than that he was focusing on North Korea “full-time, all the time” it was hard to get any specifics out of him.
There are two other law firms advertising their services and office presence in North Korea: Italy’s Birindelli e Associati (now Chiomenti after being acquired) and Singapore’s Kelvin Chia Partnership.
But today I found that the International Financial Law Review’s IFLR Legalwire, to which I hadn’t previously subscribed, recently (May 2008) reported on Birindelli partner Sara Marchetta’s experiences in Pyongyang. It’s fascinating stuff, published in two parts—go read Part 1 and Part 2. The article gave the impression that Hay, Kalb was still trading, which is promising, but Marchetta says that Birindelli kept no expatriate lawyer there year-round, because there were only four or five clients a year needing legal services, mostly in resource-extraction and processing ventures.
That’s a pretty discouraging level of business; I hope the rent for those offices in Pyongyang is inexpensive. No wonder there’s no McDonald’s in Pyongyang yet! Looks like it may be Singapore for me just yet.
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Korea Law Blog is brought to you by Brendon Carr, an American lawyer working as a foreign legal consultant for more than 10 years in Seoul. (Brendon is not admitted as an attorney in Korea. But you knew that.)