Quick access to main page (top) Direct access to main contents Quick access to main page (bottom)

Putin Won’t Sit Down with North Korean Foreign Minister, Kremlin Confirms

Daniel Kim Views  

Putin held a press conference in Kazan, Russia, on October 24. Kazan (Russia) / Reuters

The Kremlin spokesman announced on Tuesday that Russian President Vladimir Putin has no plans to meet with Choe Son Hui, North Korea’s Foreign Minister, who is currently visiting Russia.

TASS conveyed Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov’s statement: “No, the president does not have such a meeting on his schedule. “When asked about a potential meeting between Putin and Choe during a briefing, Peskov said, “No, the president does not have such a meeting on his schedule.”

Choe is set to visit Moscow the following day. TASS reported earlier that Choe departed Pyongyang the previous day, arriving in Vladivostok in Russia’s Far East, with plans to visit Moscow on October 30.

Moreover, the Russian news agency Sputnik announced that Choe will talk with Russian officials on Wednesday. However, details regarding which officials she will meet remain unknown.

Previously, according to North Korea’s Korean Central News Agency, Choe and her delegation left Pyongyang the day before for an official visit to Russia.

Speculation surrounding her visit suggests discussions may include the deployment of North Korean troops to Russia and possible plans for Kim Jong Un’s future visit.

Daniel Kim
content@viewusglobal.com

Comments0

300

Comments0

[WORLD] Latest Stories

  • China Targets U.S. Tech Industry with Rare Earth Export Freeze
  • Porsche Taycan GTS Breaks Guinness Record with 10.9-Mile Ice Drift
  • Africa's MPOX Variant Clade 1b Reaches France: Health Officials Take Action
  • LA Wildfires’ Economic Toll Hits $50 Billion, Doubling Early Estimates
  • Real Reason Trump Wants Greenland and the Panama Canal: Geopolitical Dominance
  • Biden Targets China, Russia with New Semiconductor Export Limits

You May Also Like

  • 1
    Will Korea-China summit rekindle hopes of K-culture comeback in China?

    LATEST 

  • 2
    Workers may soon be able to ignore late-night work messages

    LATEST 

  • 3
    International matchmakers under scrutiny over consumer harm

    LATEST 

  • 4
    Nearly 25 Islamic State fighters killed or captured in Syria, US military says

    LATEST 

  • 5
    Hanwha Life wins ISO certification for AI security

    LATEST 

Popular Now

  • 1
    Gov't to review 'all available legal measures' against Coupang

    LATEST 

  • 2
    What’s behind Danielle’s silence in ongoing dispute with Ador?

    LATEST 

  • 3
    Bullak jeongol, spicy hot pot where octopus meets bulgogi

    LATEST 

  • 4
    Porsche Korea donates W130m to children in need

    LATEST 

  • 5
    Korea readies biggest-ever business delegation for China diplomacy

    LATEST 

Must-Reads

  • 1
    Will Korea-China summit rekindle hopes of K-culture comeback in China?

    LATEST 

  • 2
    Workers may soon be able to ignore late-night work messages

    LATEST 

  • 3
    International matchmakers under scrutiny over consumer harm

    LATEST 

  • 4
    Nearly 25 Islamic State fighters killed or captured in Syria, US military says

    LATEST 

  • 5
    Hanwha Life wins ISO certification for AI security

    LATEST 

Popular Now

  • 1
    Gov't to review 'all available legal measures' against Coupang

    LATEST 

  • 2
    What’s behind Danielle’s silence in ongoing dispute with Ador?

    LATEST 

  • 3
    Bullak jeongol, spicy hot pot where octopus meets bulgogi

    LATEST 

  • 4
    Porsche Korea donates W130m to children in need

    LATEST 

  • 5
    Korea readies biggest-ever business delegation for China diplomacy

    LATEST 

Share it on...