Key Points

Kim Jong-un met Russia’s Culture Minister Olga Lyubimova to discuss expanding cultural cooperation. The visit marks the first anniversary of their strategic partnership treaty. Russian art performances featured military-themed backdrops, highlighting deepening ties. Kim’s daughter Ju-ae attended, reinforcing her role in diplomatic engagements.

Key Points: Kim Jong-un Meets Russian Culture Minister to Strengthen Ties

  • Kim Jong-un emphasizes cultural exchanges to strengthen North Korea-Russia ties
  • Russian art troupes perform with North Korean forces imagery as backdrop
  • Kim's daughter Ju-ae attends, signaling her diplomatic presence
  • Bilateral cultural agreement signed for 2025-27 cooperation
3 min read

North Korea's Kim Jong-un meets Russian culture minister

North Korea's Kim Jong-un discusses cultural cooperation with Russia's Olga Lyubimova, marking deeper bilateral ties amid growing diplomatic engagement.

"It is important for the cultural sector to guide the relations between the two countries. – Kim Jong-un via KCNA"

Seoul, June 30

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has met with Russia's Culture Minister Olga Lyubimova in Pyongyang and discussed ways to further deepen cooperation in culture and the arts, the North's state media reported on Monday.

The meeting took place on Sunday at the headquarters of the ruling party's Central Committee and was also attended by Russian Ambassador to North Korea Alexandr Matsegora, reports Yonhap, quoting the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA).

Leading a culture ministry delegation, Lyubimova arrived in Pyongyang on Saturday at the invitation of the North's culture ministry to mark the first anniversary of the countries' comprehensive strategic partnership treaty.

During the meeting, Kim appreciated the broad and in-depth exchanges and cooperation seen across various sectors since the treaty's signing, saying they have made tangible contributions to the mutual development and well-being of the two countries' peoples, the KCNA said.

Kim also noted that exchanges in culture and the arts play a great role in strengthening the foundation of the public mindsets of the two countries and firmly consolidating the ties of friendship, comradeship and mutual understanding between the two countries' peoples.

"It is important for the cultural sector to guide the relations between the two countries," the KCNA quoted him as saying. "It is necessary to further expand the exchange and cooperation in the field of culture and art to know well about each other's excellent cultural traditions and learn more."

The North Korean leader, in particular, highlighted Lyubimova's visit, accompanied by Russian art troupes, as an important opportunity to broaden the North Korean people's understanding of Russian culture, expressing "belief that the current visit would further raise the militant comradeship and feelings of friendship between the two countries."

The Russian culture minister said her visit came at a time when the "solidity and invincibility" of the North Korea-Russia friendship and solidarity are being demonstrated more clearly than ever, and bilateral cultural cooperation has reached its highest level ever, the KCNA reported.

The two also discussed future plans for bilateral cooperation and exchanges in the cultural sector, and watched performances staged by visiting Russian art troupes and North Korean artists, the news agency added.

Photos released by the KCNA showed that an image of North Korean forces deployed on the Russian side in the war against Ukraine was used as the stage's backdrop while Russian art troupes performed.

Another image showed the forces waving the North Korean and Russian national flags while North Korean artists sang.

Kim's daughter, known as Ju-ae, was seen next to him while the North Korean leader held a meeting with Lyubimova, marking her second presence at a major diplomatic event after accompanying him to an event at the Russian Embassy in Pyongyang in May.

Separately, North Korea's Culture Minister Sung Jong-gyu held a meeting with Lyubimova the previous day at the Mansudae Assembly Hall, where they discussed in-depth ways to deepen cultural cooperation and exchanges, according to the KCNA.

The two also signed an agreement on cultural cooperation between the two countries' culture ministries, effective from 2025-27.

The meetings came as Pyongyang and Moscow have deepened bilateral cooperation across various fields, including culture and the military, since the signing of the mutual defence treaty on June 19, 2024, in Pyongyang.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
Cultural exchanges are always good, but the military undertones in this meeting are concerning. Using war images as stage backdrop? Really? This doesn't look like pure cultural cooperation to me.
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Aryan P
As an Indian, I find it fascinating how different countries use culture as diplomatic tools. We've seen this with our own cultural diplomacy through yoga, Bollywood etc. But this NK-Russia partnership seems more strategic than cultural.
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Sarah B
The daughter's presence is interesting - seems like Kim is grooming her for leadership. Wonder if we're seeing the beginning of North Korea's first female leader? Would be historic if true!
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Vikram M
Russia is clearly trying to build an anti-West alliance. First China, now North Korea. India should be careful in balancing relations with all sides in this changing geopolitical landscape.
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Nisha Z
The cultural agreement from 2025-27 suggests this partnership is long-term. Hope the North Korean people actually benefit from this rather than it just being another tool for the regime to maintain control.

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