North Korean foreign minister makes rare Moscow visit amid diplomatic thaw

The visit comes ahead of planned nuclear summits between the North’s leader Kim Jong Un and the presidents of South Korea and the United States in the coming weeks.

world Updated: Apr 10, 2018 19:06 IST
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (R) and his North Korean counterpart Ri Yong Ho during a meeting in Moscow on Tuesday.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (R) and his North Korean counterpart Ri Yong Ho during a meeting in Moscow on Tuesday.(Reuters)

North Korea’s foreign minister held rare talks with his Russian counterpart in Moscow on Tuesday, as Pyongyang moves to improve strained ties with its neighbours.

Ri Yong Ho’s visit came ahead of planned nuclear summits between the North’s leader Kim Jong Un and the presidents of South Korea and United States in the coming weeks.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov welcomed Ri to Moscow on Tuesday morning, saying that “Russia is as inclined as ever to develop good neighbourly relations with North Korea”.

His North Korean counterpart said he hoped for further “development of relations”. After the meeting, Lavrov answered questions from journalists alone, saying the ministers “examined in some detail” the nuclear situation on the peninsula.

“The Russian side confirmed that we welcome gradual normalisation of the situation, an end to mutual threats and readiness for contact between the two Koreas as well as between North Korea and the US,” Lavrov said.

He said that upcoming talks should aim at denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula, but stipulated that Pyongyang must also receive “cast-iron guarantees” of its security. He added that he had accepted an invitation for a return visit to Pyongyang, without giving a date.

‘Covering its back’

Alexander Vorontsov, a specialist on the Koreas from Moscow’s Oriental Studies Institute, said it was “particularly important (for Pyongyang) to enlist support, including from Russia, to cover its back” before further summits.

Ri visited Beijing last week for talks with his Chinese counterpart, after North Korean leader Kim Jong Un made a landmark trip to Beijing last month.

The leader’s secretive three-day meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping in March was his first trip abroad since gaining power from his late father in 2011. China is North Korea’s main trading partner.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un made a landmark trip to Beijing last month, meeting Chinese premier Xi Jinping. (AP/File Photo)

The visit was seen as a gesture of reconciliation after months of high tensions over the North’s missile and nuclear programmes.

Kim is due to hold a summit with South Korea’s Moon Jae-in on April 27 in the Demilitarized Zone that divides the Korean peninsula, in only the third meeting of its kind.

A landmark meeting with US President Donald Trump is planned to follow — although no specific dates or venue have been set.

Easing out N Korean workforce

On Monday Ri met the head of Russia’s security council, Nikolai Patrushev, and on Thursday is set to meet the Kremlin’s envoy to far eastern Russia, Yury Trutnev, Russian news agencies reported.

Moscow has backed United Nations Security Council resolutions over Pyongyang’s nuclear and ballistic missile tests. But Russia still has relatively warm ties with North Korea, with which it shares a small land border. Moscow also provides Pyongyang with some food aid, which Lavrov said on Tuesday would continue.

North Korea currently has some 35,000 of its nationals working as labourers in far-eastern Russia, particularly in timber felling, agriculture and construction.

Russia, however, is phasing out this programme in accordance with a United Nations Security Council resolution and began to send them home in February, although it refused to send them all at once and they are working out their contracts.