박보람
| 2026-06-05 16:47:52
(4th LD) N Korea-China
(4th LD) China's Xi to visit N. Korea next week for 1st time since 2019
(ATTN: UPDATES with remarks from a South Korean presidential official in last para)
By Woo Jae-yeon
SEOUL, June 5 (Yonhap) -- Chinese President Xi Jinping will make a state visit to North Korea next week, Pyongyang's state media said Friday, a rare trip that will likely highlight the countries' efforts to strengthen their ties.
Xi will visit Pyongyang on Monday and Tuesday at the invitation of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported, without providing further details.
China also confirmed the visit, with a spokesperson for the international department of the ruling party's central committee making the announcement, according to Xinhua News Agency.
It will mark Xi's first visit to North Korea in nearly seven years.
Xi last traveled to Pyongyang on June 20-21, 2019, his first state visit to the reclusive North since taking office in late 2012. At that time, he had summit talks with North Korean leader Kim.
The two leaders last met in September, when Kim took a trip to Beijing for the 80th anniversary of China's Victory Day, where he and Russian President Vladimir Putin attended a military parade alongside Xi.
Kim, for his part, has visited Beijing five times to meet Xi since taking power after the death of his father, Kim Jong-il, in December 2011.
The upcoming Kim-Xi meeting comes as military ties between Pyongyang and Moscow continue to deepen. Last month, North Korean troops marched alongside Russian forces in Moscow's Victory Day parade for the first time, which commemorates the Soviet Union's victory over Germany in World War II.
For Beijing, the visit is a chance to reaffirm its influence over the Korean Peninsula as Pyongyang presses ahead with expanding its military and nuclear capabilities.
Just a day before Pyongyang and Beijing announced the upcoming visit, the KCNA reported Kim had visited what the North described as a newly operational nuclear site, vowing to expand its nuclear capabilities "at an exponential rate."
He said the country's "weapons-grade nuclear material production capacity more than doubled" over the past five years.
The declaration was in keeping with policy set at a key party congress in February, when Pyongyang reaffirmed its "irreversible" nuclear-armed state status and pledged to further build up its deterrent under a five-year military modernization plan.
The visit also carries symbolic weight. This year marks the 65th anniversary of the Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation and Mutual Assistance between Pyongyang and Beijing, giving both sides added reasons to reaffirm their alliance.
For Xi, the Pyongyang trip is the latest in his string of recent high-stakes summits.
Having already met with U.S. President Donald Trump and Putin last month, Xi is expected to arrive in Pyongyang with a clearer picture of where the major powers stand on Korean Peninsula affairs, offering a potential opening to restart the stalled diplomacy among Pyongyang, Washington and Seoul.
The signals from those summits, however, point in different directions.
A White House fact sheet following the Trump-Xi meeting said the two presidents "confirmed their shared goal to denuclearize North Korea."
The Xi-Putin summit struck a different note, with a joint statement that opposed sanctions and military pressure on Pyongyang, without mentioning denuclearization.
Seoul's foreign ministry said it hoped the visit "contributes to peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula," and that Beijing would "play a constructive role" in Korean affairs. The unification ministry added it hoped Xi's visit would help bring about peaceful coexistence on the peninsula.
An official from Seoul's presidential office soon echoed the view, saying that South Korea maintains "close communication with China on Korean Peninsula issues" and "expects China to play a constructive role in such issues."
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