Tag: Korean

  • North Korea’s Kim says nuclear deterrent crucial

    North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said that Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons guarantee its safety, state media reported Tuesday, signalling once again that it will not give up its arsenal. Kim was addressing a conference of veterans on the 67th anniversary of the 1953 armistice that ended Korean War hostilities, the official Korean Central News Agency said.

    Up to three million Koreans died in the three-year conflict, in which the armistice has never been replaced with a peace treaty, leaving North and South technically still at war.

    “Thanks to our reliable and effective self-defensive nuclear deterrent, there will no longer be such word as war on this land,” Kim was quoted as saying by the KCNA.

    “Our national security and future will be firmly guaranteed forever,” he added.

    Pyongyang insists that it needs its nuclear arsenal to deter against a possible US invasion.

    It has spent decades developing it and is internationally isolated as a result, subject to multiple United Nations Security Council sanctions over its banned weapons programmes.

    Inter-Korean relations have been in deep freeze for months, following the collapse of a summit in Hanoi between Kim and US President Donald Trump last year.

    That nuclear negotiation foundered on what the North would be willing to give up in exchange for a loosening of sanctions.

    Kim declared in December an end to moratoriums on nuclear and ballistic missile tests, and Pyongyang has repeatedly said it has no intention to continue talks unless Washington drops what it describes as “hostile” policies towards the North.

    Source: AFP NEWS AGENCY

  • Coronavirus: Foreigners leave North Korea on first commercial flight for weeks

    Around 60 foreigners who were quarantined for weeks in the North Korean capital, Pyongyang, have finally left the country.

    The Air Koryo flight to Vladivostok is the first commercial flight to leave North Korea in over a month, said specialist news site NK News.

    Flight KOR271 landed in the far-eastern Russian city on Monday morning.

    The embassy staff who left had been confined to their compounds for weeks during February and early March.

    North Korea quarantined hundreds of foreigners in the capital in an attempt to stop the coronavirus from breaking out.

    Russian ambassador Alexander Matsegora described the conditions as “morally crushing”.

    There have been no reported cases of coronavirus in North Korea, though some experts have cast doubt on this.

    North Korea borders China, where the virus emerged, and South Korea, where there has been a major outbreak.

    Flight KOR271 left Pyongyang at 08:40 local time on Monday (23:40 on Sunday) and arrived in Vladivostok at 10:47, said flight tracking site FlightAware.

    At least 60 diplomats and embassy staff were thought to be on the flight. It’s not known how or when they will return to their home countries.

    The British ambassador to North Korea tweeted early on Monday that he was “sad to say farewell to colleagues from [the] Germany Embassy and French Office”.

    Colin Crooks added that other embassies were closing temporarily but that the British embassy would remain open.

    He also tweeted pictures showing two white minivans taking staff to the airport.

    North Korea had previously quarantined around 380 foreigners – mostly diplomats and staff in Pyongyang – in their compounds for at least 30 days.

    It lifted the restrictions last week after more than a month.

    Swedish ambassador Joachim Bergstrom reacting by tweeting a selfie with the caption: “I have never been happier standing on Kim ll Sung Square.”

    However, foreigners’ interactions with locals were still restricted, said NK News, as they were not allowed to visit restaurants, shops, gyms and hotels in the city.

    There are concerns that North Korea, which is subject to international sanctions, lacks the health infrastructure to test and treat those infected.

    The number of infections worldwide is more than 107,000, with about 3,600 deaths.

    Source: bbc.com