
North Korea plans to send military workers to Russia
North Korea has already sent thousands of troops and a vast amount of conventional weapons to back Russia's war against Ukraine. In April, Pyongyang and Moscow said that their soldiers fought together to repel a Ukrainian incursion into Russia's Kursk border region, though Ukraine has insisted it still has troops present there.
During a visit to Pyongyang, Russian Security Council Secretary Sergei Shoigu said that North Korea will dispatch 1,000 deminers as well as 5,000 military construction workers to the Kursk region, according to Russian state news agency RIA Novosti.
'Following the expulsion of invaders from Russian soil, we've agreed to continue our constructive cooperation, with the Korean side providing assistance in the restoration of the Kursk region,' Shoigu said, according to RIA Novosti. 'This is a kind of brotherly aid being sent by the Korean people and their leader, Kim Jong Un, to our country.'
Another Russian state news agency, Tass, said that Shoigu met with Kim. North Korea's state media hasn't reported about the meeting.
RIA Novosti quoted Shoigu as saying that Moscow and Pyongyang decided to erect memorials in both countries in honor of North Korean soldiers who died while fighting in the Kursk region.
North Korea and Russia have never disclosed how many North Korean troops have been sent to Russia and how many of them were killed. But according to South Korean, US and Ukraine assessments, about 15,000 North Korean soldiers have been deployed to Russia. South Korea's spy agency said in April that about 600 North Korean soldiers died on the Russia-Ukraine battlefronts.
It was Shoigu's second visit to North Korea this month. In his earlier Pyongyang trip, Kim told him that North Korea would 'unconditionally support' Russia's war against Ukraine, according to North Korea's state media.
The deepening ties between North Korea and Russia have raised worries among the US, South Korea and their partners that Russian President Vladimir Putin may in return provide Kim with much-needed sophisticated technologies that can help advance his nuclear and missile programs.
Associated Press
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Dubai Eye
10 hours ago
- Dubai Eye
Ukraine urges investigation into alleged Russian chemical weapons use
Ukraine asked the global chemical weapons watchdog in The Hague on Tuesday to investigate the alleged use of banned toxic munitions by Russia against its forces. A request to establish an investigation was submitted by Kyiv to the governing body of the organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW). It followed Dutch and German intelligence agencies on Friday saying they had evidence of widespread use of illegal weapons by Russia along the frontline. The OPCW created a similar team in 2018 to examine accusations of chemical weapons use in Syria. The Investigation and Identification Team found that Syrian government forces and Islamic State militants had used banned chemical weapons in the civil war that began in March 2011. The United States first accused Russia in May last year of using chloropicrin, a chemical compound more toxic than riot control agents and first used by Germany during World War One. The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), a disarmament agency in The Hague with 193 member states, said last year that initial accusations levelled by both countries at each other were "insufficiently substantiated". Both sides have denied using chemical weapons in the conflict, which escalated when Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022. "Ukraine hereby requests the Director-General of the OPCW to take steps towards establishing an independent and impartial mechanism (to) investigate cases of alleged use of chemical weapons in Ukraine," a copy of the request shared with Reuters said. It asked that the mechanism be empowered to "collect additional evidence and identify perpetrators, organisers, sponsors of such use." It was submitted at the beginning of four days of closed-door meetings by the 41-country Executive Council of the OPCW. The disarmament body had no immediate comment on the request. At least three Ukrainian deaths have been tied to chemical weapons use, the Dutch Military Intelligence Agency said, while more than 2,500 people injured on the battlefield reported chemical weapons-related symptoms to Ukrainian health authorities. On Monday, Britain targeted two Russian individuals and one Russian entity as part of its chemical weapons sanctions regime, in its latest effort to punish Moscow for the war in Ukraine.


Dubai Eye
18 hours ago
- Dubai Eye
Trump says US will send more weapons to Ukraine
President Donald Trump said on Monday the US would send more weapons to Ukraine, primarily defensive ones, to help the war-torn country defend itself against intensifying Russian advances. Washington's decision to halt some weapons shipments to Kyiv prompted it to warn the move would crimp its ability to fend off Russia's air strikes and battlefield advances, while drawing criticism from Democrats and some of Trump's fellow Republicans. "They're getting hit very hard now," Trump told reporters at the White House at the start of a dinner with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. On Friday, Trump had told reporters Ukraine would need Patriot missiles to defend itself, but he did not mention them again specifically on Monday. The Pentagon statement gave no details on the weapons to be shipped to Ukraine. After a telephone call with Trump on Friday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said he had agreed to work on increasing Kyiv's capability to "defend the sky" as Russian attacks escalated. The leaders had discussed joint defence production, purchases and investments, he added. Ukraine has been asking Washington to sell it more Patriot missiles and systems that it sees as key to defending its cities from intensifying Russian air strikes. Germany said it was in talks on buying Patriot air defence systems for Ukraine to bridge the gap.


Al Etihad
a day ago
- Al Etihad
Trump slaps allies Japan, South Korea with 25% tariffs
7 July 2025 21:04 Washington (AFP)US President Donald Trump said on Monday he was slapping 25% tariffs on Japan and South Korea, in his first letters to trading partners ahead of a deadline to reach a deal with had said at the weekend that starting from Monday he would send a first batch of up to 15 letters to countries informing them that he would reimpose harsh levies that he had postponed in near-identically worded letters to the Japanese and South Korean leaders, Trump said the tariffs would apply from August 1 because their trading relationships with Washington were "unfortunately, far from Reciprocal."Trump warned the countries, both key US allies in East Asia, of an escalation if they responded to the new US he also said he was ready to modify levies "downwards" if Japan and South Korea changed their trade Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said Sunday that he "won't easily compromise" in trade talks with originally announced sweeping tariffs on world economies on what he called "Liberation Day" on April 2, claiming the United States was being "ripped off."Amid market turmoil, Trump then suspended the initial tariffs for 90 days, a deadline that expires on the Trump administration has said that the duties will not "boomerang" back until August 1, apparently extending the deadline despite denials from the Trump administration has signaled hopes of striking dozens of deals by early July -- at one point boasting of "90 deals in 90 days" -- there have been limited results so has unveiled pacts with only Britain and Vietnam, while the United States and China agreed to temporarily lower tariff levels on each other's products that earlier reached three-digits. 'Change their tune' Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said there would be a number of deals coming up."We are going to have several announcements in the next 48 hours," Bessent told CNBC in an interview Monday."We've had a lot of people change their tune in terms of negotiations. So my mailbox was full last night with a lot of new offers, a lot of new proposals," Bessent was no immediate response from the White House on whether Trump would formally extend the Wednesday deadline for the tariffs to snap about Trump's letters, Bessent said these would inform partners of the tariff rate their products face when trading with the United States, unless they want to "come back and try to negotiate."Bessent told CNBC Monday that he would "be meeting with my Chinese counterpart sometime in the next couple of weeks."The two sides have so far held high-level talks in Geneva and Washington and Beijing's pause on tit-for-tat tariffs is due to expire in mid-August. On whether he was disappointed in the number of trade deals achieved so far, Trump's trade adviser Peter Navarro maintained that he is "happy with the progress we've had.""Every country that we run a major deficit with is fully engaged," he told CNBC on has also threatened another 10% tariff on countries aligning themselves with the emerging BRICS nations, accusing them of "Anti-American policies" after they slammed his duties at a now, partners are still rushing to avert Trump's tariffs altogether. The European Commission said that EU chief Ursula von der Leyen had a "good exchange" with Trump on trade when the pair spoke Sunday.