By Jeremy Laurence MOUNT KUMGANG, North Korea (Reuters) - A semblance of international free-market activity broke out on a dusty roadside in reclusive North Korea when about a dozen budding entrepreneurs from a struggling resort set up impromptu stalls. Spotting an opportunity to make some hard currency, the workers from the Mount Kumgang resort, now a ghost town, produced a range of wares from locally made wine, honey and jam to traditional dolls and a home-grown aphrodisiac. Read More...