DANDONG, Liaoning Province: Any change? 
No, except the Yalu River is getting cooler by the day. 
 
 |  A group of DPRK residents fix tiles 
 on the roof of a house yesterday across the Yalu River. [China 
 Daily]
 | 
The response by 61-year-old retiree 
Chen Yicheng, who swims regularly along with his friends in the river, seemed to 
sum up the mood in this northeastern town on the border of the Democratic 
People's Republic of Korea (DPRK). 
Despite intense media coverage since the DPRK conducted a nuclear test last 
week, the contingent of foreign and domestic journalists in town, reports of 
sanctions and rumours of a chill in bilateral relations, life seems to be going 
on as normal although the test site is less than 150 kilometres away. 
Yesterday, tourists were strolling along the riverside avenue and riding on 
boats, swimmers were frolicking in the river before it gets too cold, and cargo 
trucks were rumbling across the Friendship Bridge that spans the Yalu River 
which marks the border between China and the DPRK. 
Outside the city, in places where the river narrows and the distance between 
the two countries is literally a stone's throw, a fence is being erected. 
Locals say the fence cement pillars about 2 metres high strung together with 
barbed wire has been recently completed but there was no visible security 
presence and few signs of tension. 
A PLA officer said the fence was erected to prevent people and livestock from 
crossing the border by mistake; and Lu Chao, with the Liaoning Provincial 
Academy of Social Sciences, said work on building the fence began in the early 
1990s. 
Dandong faces the DPRK city of Sinuiju across the river, and handles more 
then 80 per cent of China's trade with the DPRK. About 50,000 people, or more 
than a fifth of its population, are engaged in trade and related sectors. 
At the checkpoint, officials checked drivers' papers closely and opened 
trucks to look inside. "Inspections by Customs have been stricter since last 
week," said Lu. 
Wang Xin, an iron ore trader from Dalian, told China Daily that inspections 
are taking longer than usual "but we keep doing our business as before." 
She was waiting in a long line for clearance from Customs, which reportedly 
handles around 250 trucks a day. 
But a businessman surnamed Jin from Shenyang said he had put on hold a plan 
to open a toy factory in the DPRK. He emphasized that he would maintain an 
office there and wait for the situation to change. "I will go back if things 
return to normal." 
Across the river, life seemed unchanged, too. A group of villagers were seen 
fixing tiles on one of their homes.