World
Syria's Assad to become first head of state to visit NKorea
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad plans to make a state visit to North Korea, the North's state news agency says.Syrian President Bashar al-Assad plans to make a state visit to North Korea, reported BCC quoting North Korea's state news agency.
It would be the first time North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has hosted a head of state since assuming power in 2011. He has undertaken a flurry of diplomatic activity recently, meeting China's president in May, and is expected to attend a summit with Donald Trump this month.
Meanwhile, Syria, an ally of the North, has made no comment on the reported plan.
The two countries have been accused of co-operating on chemical weapons. But both nations deny the accusations.
According to the BBC report, no date for the visit was mentioned by the North Korea's KCNA news agency.
The BCC has reported that the KCNA quoted President Assad as saying on Wednesday: "I am going to visit [North Korea] and meet Kim Jong-un." His comments reportedly came as he received the credentials of North Korean ambassador Mun Jong-nam. Syrian President Assad was also quoted as saying that he was sure Kim would "achieve the final victory and realise the reunification of Korea without fail".
As per the report, North Korea established diplomatic relations with Syria in 1966 and sent troops and weapons during the Arab-Israeli war in October 1973.
A UN report leaked in February accused the North of making 40 shipments to Syria between 2012 and 2017 of materials including acid-resistant tiles, valves and pipes that could be used to make chemical weapons.
Since the North signalled at the start of this year that it was open to a rapprochement with the South, with which it is still technically at war, North Korean leader Kim has met Chinese President Xi Jinping, South Korea's Moon Jae-in and has floated a summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin this year.
But it is the meeting in Singapore on 12 June with President Trump that is the most high-profile and which has the most at stake, with the US demanding the full denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula and the North seeking to ease crippling sanctions.