North Korea hosts Russian officials to expand trade, investment

The visit is the latest since North Korean leader Kim Jong-un visited Russia in September to discuss deepening military cooperation.

By Staff Reporter
Oleg Kozhemyako, governor of the Russian far eastern region of Primorsky shakes hands with the North Korean External Economic Relations Minister Yun Jong ho as they meet for talks on economic co-operation, in Pyongyang. / Photo: KCNA via Reuters / Reuters

A North Korean minister has met with the governor of the Russian region bordering the two countries to discuss boosting regional economic cooperation, state media KCNA reported the latest exchange between the neighbouring states.

The talks between North Korea's External Economic Relations Minister Yun Jong Ho and Oleg Kozhemyako, governor of the Russian far eastern region of Primorsky, focused on "elevating economic co-operation to a higher level," it said on Wednesday.

The KCNA report also said the trade and economic working groups of the two sides signed an agreement but it did not provide details of that, or the meeting between the officials.

Primorsky is also known informally as Primorye.

The meeting comes as South Korea's spy agency said on Tuesday there had been signs that North Korea was moving to deploy workers to Russia, according to the Yonhap news agency.

Any country employing North Korean workers who earn wages would be violating UN Security Council sanctions aimed at curbing Pyongyang's banned weapons programmes on grounds the earnings can be channeled to finance the projects.

"This is the first visit after a long break caused by the pandemic," Kozhemyako said on his Telegram channel. "Our delegation’s programme includes many meetings to develop humanitarian ties between Primorye and the DPRK. First of all, in the field of culture, tourism and sports."

Deepening military co-operation

In November, Kozhemyako told the Russian TASS state news agency that Primorye was ready to consider the possibility of providing part of its agricultural land for farming by North Korean farmers.

Kozhemyako's visit marks the latest in a flurry of bilateral visits since North Korean leader Kim Jong-un visited Russia in September and met President Vladimir Putin to discuss deepening military co-operation.

That pledge came in the backdrop of what US officials said was evidence of arms trade between the North and Russia, which is expending vast amounts of munitions in its war with Ukraine.

North Korea's premier Kim Tok Hun met with Russia's natural resources minister Alexander Kozlov last month and held talks in a "friendly atmosphere," Pyongyang's state media reported at that time.

A delegation led by the North Korean culture minister a lso traveled to Saint Petersburg during the same month to attend the St Petersburg International Cultural Forum.

In October, a North Korean Ministry of Physical Culture and Sports delegation participated in the International Sports Forum in the Russian city of Perm.