产品展示
  • 适用于17-22款大众途昂车窗亮条途观L车身饰条门边装饰条改装配件
  • 瓦尔塔蓄电池45安雅阁骐达思域雨燕逍客阳光轩逸瑞纳天语汽车电瓶
  • 21款起亚智跑ace汽车用品内饰配件改装中控仪表台防晒避光垫19/18
  • 个性若有战召必回爱国车贴 退伍军人老兵部队文字网红反光车贴纸
  • 汽车音响 车载功放 4声道大功率12V四路功放推车门喇叭无源低音炮
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

新闻中心

N. Korea to close its embassy in Uganda: report

2024-06-06 19:41:48      点击:372

Uganda's President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni, center, and North Korea's Ambassador to Kampala, Jong Tong-hak, left, pose for a photo at State House, Entebbe, as Jong, the outgoing envoy, paid a courtesy call to him, in this Oct. 24 photo from Museveni's X, formerly known as Twitter. Yonhap

North Korea plans to close its embassy in Uganda as part of efforts to raise the operating efficiency of the country's organizations abroad, a Ugandan media report has said.

North Korea's Ambassador to Uganda, Jong Tong-hak, announced the plan during his courtesy call to Uganda's President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni, Ugandan newsmagazine, The Independent, reported Tuesday.

Jong "informed him that North Korea has taken a strategic measure to reduce the number of embassies in Africa, Uganda inclusive in order to increase the efficiency of the country's external institutions," the report said.

North Korea's embassy in Equatorial Guinea will handle the country's diplomatic affairs with Uganda, it added.

The exact reason behind the North's planned embassy closure in Uganda is not known, but it could be related to economic difficulties caused by prolonged global sanctions on North Korea's nuclear and missile programs.

In 2016, North Korea withdrew its military officers from Uganda after Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni pledged to cut all military ties with North Korea in a surprise announcement during summit talks with then South Korean President Park Geun-hye.

Museveni has visited Pyongyang three times and met with North Korea's founder Kim Il-Sung, the late grandfather of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.

North Korea and Uganda set up a diplomatic relationship in 1963, but they re-established it in July 1972, eight years after cutting ties in 1964 for an unknown reason.

Pyongyang has been strengthening its ties with Uganda and other African nations as it faces diplomatic isolation under multiple United Nations Security Council sanctions.

North Korea's close relations with some African countries date back to the days of Kim Il-sung, who was active in establishing friendly ties with African nations amid the Non-Aligned Movement against imperialism in the late 20th century. (Yonhap)

N. Korea holds cabinet plenary meeting to discuss economic plans
North Korean smugglers disguised under Pacific island flags