logo
North Korea plans to send military construction workers and deminers to Russia

North Korea plans to send military construction workers and deminers to Russia

CTV News4 days ago

SEOUL, South Korea -- North Korea will send thousands of military construction workers and deminers to support reconstruction work in Russia's Kursk region, a top Russian official said Tuesday, the latest sign of expanding cooperation between the two nations.
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, U.S. 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 U.S., 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.
The two countries, both in confrontations with the U.S. and its allies, have sharply grown closer to each other in recent years. In 2024, Kim and Putin signed a landmark defence treaty that requires each side to provide aid if the other is attacked.
In its closed-door briefing to lawmakers, South Korea's National Intelligence Service said that Russia had given North Korea air defence missiles, electronic warfare equipment, drones and technology for spy satellite launches. The NIS said that 15,000 North Korean laborers have also been sent to Russia under bilateral industrial cooperation programs, according to lawmakers who attended the briefing.
------
By Hyung-jin Kim, Kim Tong-hyung And Katie Marie Davies
Katie Marie Davies reported from Manchester, England. Dasha Litvinova contributed to this report from Tallinn, Estonia.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ukraine received at least 20 bodies of Russian soldiers in recent exchanges, Zelenskyy says
Ukraine received at least 20 bodies of Russian soldiers in recent exchanges, Zelenskyy says

CTV News

time10 hours ago

  • CTV News

Ukraine received at least 20 bodies of Russian soldiers in recent exchanges, Zelenskyy says

Freed Ukrainian soldiers arriving after a POW exchange with Russia walk past Ukrainians holding photos of their missing relatives in the Chernyhiv region, Ukraine, Friday, June 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Dan Bashakov) KYIV, Ukraine — Ukraine's president said that Russia repatriated at least 20 of its own dead soldiers in recent exchanges with Ukraine, describing it as a result of Moscow's disorganization in carrying out large swaps of wounded POWs and remains of troops. Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that an Israeli citizen was among the dead Ukraine had received in recent exchanges. He spoke to journalists on Friday but his comments were embargoed until Saturday. Officials did not disclose the identities of the bodies. 'They threw the corpses of their citizens at us. This is their attitude toward war, toward their soldiers. And this is already documented. Sometimes these bodies even have Russian passports,' he said. He said the Russian side insisted the dead were all Ukrainians. Journalists were shown a Russian passport and ID belonging to one of the 20 dead Russians. According to the document, the man came from the Moscow region. Zelenskyy doubts Putin wants peace The exchanges of the dead and wounded soldiers are the only tangible result of direct peace talks in Istanbul. In June, Ukraine and Russia agreed to exchange the bodies of fallen soldiers in a 6,000-for-6,000 format during the second round of negotiations. Ukraine was concerned that the number was too high and that the sides did not have enough time for forensic examinations and checking the identities of the dead. Zelenskyy said he suspected Russia's plan was to play along with peace talks to appease the U.S. and stave off more sanctions but without ending the war that Russian President Vladimir Putin believes he is winning. He said that because of this, Ukraine would be 'in a really difficult situation' of deciding whether to continue the talks in Istanbul. Impact of Iran-Israel war on Ukraine Zelenskyy said Ukraine was against Iran acquiring nuclear weapons, because of its military partnership with Russia, but stopped short of expressing explicit support for Israel's strikes. He repeated that the new war in the Middle East will affect Ukraine indirectly. 'Iran gave the Russians everything to kill us. They gave them martyrs, they gave them missiles, and they gave them licenses. The fact that their production capacities have now become weaker is (a) positive for us. But at certain points it may already be too late,' he said, also citing Russia's military cooperation with North Korea. Russia has modified Iran-made Shahed drones and has used them, often hundreds at a time, in barrages targeting Ukraine. Zelenskyy said 39 Russian companies were involved in the production of Oreshnik, an intermediate-range ballistic missile capable of carrying a nuclear warhead. He said 21 of them are not under sanctions. 'And therefore it is absolutely incomprehensible why sanctions should not be imposed urgently,' he said. Russia attacked Ukraine with the missile in November, marking a serious escalation in the war and Russia's capabilities. Ukraine looks to Europe to boost domestic weapons Zelenskyy dispelled reports that Patriots air defense systems were destroyed in recent Russian drone and missile barrages. He also said Ukraine has started using domestically produced interceptors to shoot down Shahed drones and is seeking financing from Germany to ramp up the weapon's production. He added he sent signals to Western partners asking them to give up 0.25 per cent of their GDP to support Ukraine's local defense industry. Zelenskyy said it's likely he would attend a NATO summit later this week, but that he would make a final decision on Monday. Though Zelenskyy did not meet Trump who had left early the Group of Seven summit in Canada last week, Ukraine's Economy Minister Yulia Svyrydenko and the head of the president's office, Andriy Yermak, gave U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent a list of weapons Ukraine is hoping to purchase. 'We will wait feedback,' Zelenskyy said, adding the package of weapons included Patriot systems. The weapons package would be among the topics Zelenskyy plans to discuss with Trump in their next meeting, he added, as well as the issue of sanctions. 'Frankly, it seems to me that we need to talk about a new breath in the diplomatic track,' he said. 'We need greater certainty and greater pressure from the world on Putin.' Samya Kullab, The Associated Press

NP View: Farewell to Iran's terrorist regime
NP View: Farewell to Iran's terrorist regime

National Post

time17 hours ago

  • National Post

NP View: Farewell to Iran's terrorist regime

The long list of crimes committed by the Islamic Republic of Iran's leaders is so extensive, even Hollywood would reject them as too unbelievable to be the villains in a movie. Israel is making the world a safer place by preemptively striking the regime's nuclear program and military infrastructure. Now, all nations that believe in freedom and security must support Israel and push for regime change in Tehran. Article content Article content Iran has long posed an existential threat to Israel. In 2005, then-Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad called for the Jewish state to be 'wiped off the map.' In 2018, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei called it a 'cancerous tumour' that must be 'removed and eradicated.' And in 2020, an image posted to his website advocated for a 'final solution' in Israel, referring to the Nazi genocide against the Jews. Article content Article content Article content All the while, the regime has been developing weapons capable of carrying out its genocidal intents. Iran has long been enriching uranium to 60 per cent, far above what is needed for civilian purposes and a short step away from the 90 per cent enrichment needed to create an atom bomb. An International Atomic Energy Agency report released late last month found that Iran had stockpiled enough enriched uranium to build nine nuclear bombs, and chastised the regime for attempting to hide parts of its nuclear program from inspectors. But the threat posed by Iran extends far beyond Israel. As it has for many years, in its latest ' Country Reports on Terrorism,' the U.S. State Department called Iran the world's 'leading state sponsor of terrorism.' In 2023, noted the State Department, 'Iran continued supporting acts of terrorism through its proxies and partner groups — such as Hezbollah, Ansar Allah (commonly referred to as the Houthis), Hamas and al-Ashtar Brigades — in Bahrain, Iraq, Lebanon, Palestine, Syria and Yemen.' Article content Iran was the chief benefactor of Hamas, the terror group responsible for the October 7 massacre, the deadliest day for Jews since the Holocaust. Following the terror attack, the Iran-backed Houthis spent over a year attacking commercial ships transiting the Red Sea, while Hezbollah, another Iranian proxy, launched repeated attacks against Israel from its base in Lebanon. Meanwhile, according to the State Department, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has supported terrorist 'recruitment, financing and plotting across Africa, Asia, Europe and the Americas.' Article content Article content The Islamic Republic of Iran is a regime that was founded in blood and violations of international law. During the Iranian revolution in 1979, 66 American diplomats and civilians working at the U.S. Embassy were taken hostage, many of whom were held for over a year. Yet Iran's contempt for international norms did not stop at its borders. In 1992, an Iranian-linked group claimed responsibility for bombing the Israeli Embassy in Argentina. Two years later, an explosion destroyed a Jewish centre in Buenos Aires. Iran is widely believed to have been responsible.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store