North Koreans have reportedly been banned from eating hot dogs as part of a crackdown on Western culture infiltrating the hermit kingdom.
Dictator Kim Jong Un has declared that serving the sausage was an act of treason, The Sun reports, amid the rising popularity of a South Korean dish inspired by the US.
People caught selling or cooking hot dogs face the prospect of time in the country’s infamous labor camps, while Pyongyang has also decreed that divorcees could also be jailed.
As part of the regime’s efforts to quash capitalist culture among citizens, it has forbidden the sale of budae-jjigae – a dish imported from pro-Western neighbor South Korea.
The spicy Korean-American hotpot – which means “army base stew” – includes hot dogs or spam among it ingredients.
It was born from meats discarded by US soldiers based in the region during the Korean War of the 1950s, with hungry locals using the items to create stews.
The fusion fare is believed to have crossed the border into North Korea some time in 2017, decades after it was invented in the south.
Radio Free Asia (RFA) reported in November that authorities had now banned the dish, along with steamed rice cakes tteokbokki, also a popular street food in its neighboring nation.
A vendor in the northern province of Ryanggang told The Sun: “Sales of budae-jjigae in the market have stopped.
“The police and market management have said anyone caught selling it will be shut down.”
Reports also emerged in December of citizens claiming divorcees in North Korea faced one to six months in labor camps for their “crimes.”
Divorce is frowned upon in the communist nation as it is considered an anti-socialist act, with the government required to sign off on any legal separations.