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North Korea to send thousands to help rebuild Russia's Kursk region

North Korea to send thousands to help rebuild Russia's Kursk region

BBC News18-06-2025

North Korea will send thousands of workers to help rebuild Russia's war-torn Kursk region, Moscow's security chief has said. Russian Security Council Secretary Sergei Shoigu who is currently holding talks with North Korea's Kim Jong Un in its capital Pyongyang, described the deployment as "fraternal assistance", Russian state media reported.Neighbouring South Korea and Japan were quick to condemn the plan, with Seoul it saying it was a violation of UN sanctions on North Korea.For months concerns have swirled of deepening military collaboration between the two authoritarian states, amid reports of thousands of North Korean soldiers helping Russia fight its war on Ukraine.
On Wednesday, Russia's TASS news agency quoted Shoigu as saying North Korea would send a "division of builders, two military brigades [of] 5,000 people", as well as 1,000 deminers to help with the "restoration" of the Kursk region."This is a kind of fraternal assistance from the Korean people and leader Kim Jong Un to our country," Shoigu was quoted as saying, according to an AFP report. North Korean state media also added that the meeting saw both Kim and Shoigu discuss other "long-term plans". South Korea was quick to respond, with a foreign ministry official saying they had "grave concerns" over the "continuing illegal cooperation between North Korea and Russia", local media reported.Japan has also expressed worries over the cooperation. "We are seriously concerned about these developments as it will worsen the Ukrainian situation and affect the regional security environment surrounding Japan," Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi told reporters on Wednesday.In November last year, Russia and North Korea signed a mutual defence treaty, saying they would help each other in the event of "aggression" against either country, with Kim saying it took their relationship to a "new high level of alliance".
South Korean intelligence offficers say there are an estimated 15,000 North Koreans working in Russia under bilateral industrial cooperation programmes - a source of revenue for Pyongyang. Separately, Western officials had in January told the BBC that at least 1,000 of an estimated 11,000 North Korean troops in Russia had been killed in just three months. A Seoul lawmaker said in April that they believed there were about 4,700 North Korean casualties, including 600 deaths.Analysts have said that Pyongyang could be paid, or may be given access to Russian military technology in exchange for the troops.Both North Korea and Russia confirmed the presence of the North Korean troops in April - an admission that was condemned by South Korea and the US.At the time, Seoul described the deployment as "illegal", saying that it was in violation of the UN Charter and the UN Security Council resolutions.However, top Russian and North Korean officials have maintained regular contact as the war in Ukraine continues. When Shoigu visited Pyongyang earlier this month, Kim vowed to support Russia "unconditionally", including on "the Ukrainian issue", North Korean state media reported.Earlier in April, Russia also claimed it had regained full control of the western Kursk region - which has been denied by Ukraine.

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Russia's summer offensive is ‘fizzling out'
Russia's summer offensive is ‘fizzling out'

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Russia's summer offensive is ‘fizzling out'

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Ukraine war briefing: key eastern Ukrainian city under assault as Russia hails cooperation with North Korea
Ukraine war briefing: key eastern Ukrainian city under assault as Russia hails cooperation with North Korea

The Guardian

time3 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Ukraine war briefing: key eastern Ukrainian city under assault as Russia hails cooperation with North Korea

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Ukraine war briefing: key eastern Ukrainian city under assault as Russia hails cooperation with North Korea
Ukraine war briefing: key eastern Ukrainian city under assault as Russia hails cooperation with North Korea

The Guardian

time3 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Ukraine war briefing: key eastern Ukrainian city under assault as Russia hails cooperation with North Korea

Ukraine's top commander said on Saturday his forces faced a new onslaught against a key city on the eastern front of its war against Russia, while Moscow said it was making progress in another sector farther south-west. Russian troops are focused on capturing all of the Donetsk region in eastern Ukraine and the city of Kostiantynivka has been a major target. Ukrainian forces have for months defended the city against fierce assaults. Top Ukrainian commander Oleksandr Syrskyi, writing on Telegram, said the area around Kostiantynivka was gripped by heavy fighting. 'The enemy is surging towards Kostiantynivka, but apart from sustaining numerous losses, has achieved nothing,' Syrskyi said. 'The aggressor is trying to break through our defences and advance along three operating sectors.' Russia's defence ministry, in a report earlier in the day, said Moscow's forces had seized the village of Chervona Zirka – further south-west, near the administrative border of the Dnipropetrovsk region. Russia's slow advance through eastern Ukraine, with Moscow claiming a string of villages day after day, has resulted in destruction of major cities and infrastructure. Meanwhile Russia's culture minister, Olga Lyubimova, arrived in North Korea on Saturday with a 125-strong delegation of performers. Lyubimova, writing on the Telegram messaging app, said that thanks to agreements clinched between Russian president Vladimir Putin and North Korea leader Kim Jong-un, 'cooperation in the cultural sphere between our countries has reached unprecedented heights'. She said a series of concerts and lectures would take place in the North Korean capital in the coming days. Since Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Moscow and Pyongyang have drawn closer together, with the two leaders signing a treaty, including a mutual defence pact. After months of silence, North Korea and Russia disclosed the deployment of North Korean troops and the role they played in Moscow's offensive to evict Ukrainian troops from the Kursk region. Moscow has insisted that progress towards a settlement of the war depends on Ukraine recognising Moscow's control over four Ukrainian regions: Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson. Russian forces control about one-fifth of Ukraine's territory, but they do not fully hold any of the four regions. The Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, has said it is 'extremely important' for Kyiv to maintain friendly ties with neighbouring Poland, where the incoming nationalist leader Karol Nawrocki opposes Ukraine's Nato bid. Nawrocki won Poland's presidential election this month after a campaign in which he criticised Ukraine and accused Zelenskyy of 'indecent' behaviour towards his allies. Poland is one of Ukraine's closest allies and has served as a crucial logistics hub for western military aid to help Kyiv's war effort against Russia's now more than three-year-long invasion. Zelenskyy hosted outgoing Polish president Andrzej Duda in Kyiv on Saturday, ahead of Nawrocki's inauguration on 6 August. 'Poland is now preparing for the inauguration of its new president, (Karol) Nawrocki,' Zelenskyy told reporters alongside Duda. 'We will do everything in our power to ensure that relations between our countries only grow stronger.' Poland has taken in more than a million Ukrainians since Russia's invasion of the country began in 2022. But anti-Ukrainian sentiment has grown in recent years.

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