Pyongyang briefly reports Kim's New Year's greetings to Xi and other leaders

North Korea's state media provided restrained coverage of leader Kim Jong-un's New Year's messages to Chinese President Xi Jinping and other foreign leaders, contrasting sharply with detailed reports of recent Russia exchanges amid deepening Moscow ties.

North Korea's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported on Sunday that Kim Jong-un sent New Year's messages to leaders of China, Vietnam, Singapore, Tajikistan, and Azerbaijan. The dispatch to Xi referred to him only by title and his wife anonymously, without details.

This brevity contrasts with earlier KCNA coverage of exchanges with Russia. In December, detailed accounts highlighted letters between Kim and President Vladimir Putin, where Kim called Russia ties a 'precious common asset' and Putin praised North Korean troops' 'heroic' role in Ukraine—coverage detailed in prior reporting.

Earlier this month, KCNA also noted a New Year's message from Xi and his wife to Kim, again without specifics. The approach signals Pyongyang's balancing of strengthening Moscow alliances with traditional Beijing relations, though implications remain unclear absent details.

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A delegation led by a senior official from Russia's state-run media group Rossiya Segodnya has arrived in Pyongyang. North Korea's state media KCNA reported on Tuesday that the group, headed by first deputy editor-in-chief Sergei Kochetkov, reached the capital the previous day and was welcomed by KCNA officials and staff from the Russian Embassy. The visit occurs amid deepening ties between Pyongyang and Moscow, with potential discussions on media cooperation.

 

 

 

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