产品展示
  • 骆驼电瓶12V45AH适配长安面包车五菱宏光S轩逸思域十代汽车蓄电池
  • 汽车贴纸皮卡丘哆啦A梦汽车贴纸车门遮挡划痕嘻哈可爱痛车贴卡通
  • 生化危机车贴保护伞个性搞笑汽车贴纸遮划痕贴车身贴车门创意车饰
  • 汽车音响改装中音喇叭网罩3.5寸6.5寸铝合金低音网罩装饰保护罩
  • 适用长城风骏5引擎盖液压杆改装风骏6/7 c50 M4炫丽C30 H3 H5支撑
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

新闻中心

N. Korea's criticism of Yoon reflects sense of isolation, crisis: unification ministry

2024-06-06 21:32:59      点击:755

President Yoon Suk Yeol, right, addresses the 78th session of the U.N. General Assembly at the U.N. headquarters in New York, Sept. 20. Yonhap

North Korea's latest rebukes against South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol showed how the secretive regime feels isolated and a sense of crisis amid the international community's united front against Pyongyang, the unification ministry said Tuesday.

North Korea on Monday lambasted Yoon for making "hysterical" remarks after he warned against a possible arms deal between Pyongyang and Moscow in a U.N. General Assembly speech in the wake of the summit between North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

"North Korea has been expressing a sense of isolation and crisis at a time when the Yoon administration's state affairs stance -- freedom and solidarity -- has been gaining firm support from the international community, as shown in the outcome from the Camp David summit in August," a ministry official told reporters, referring to the talks among the leaders of South Korea, the United States and Japan.

Using vulgar remarks, the North described Yoon as having the disgraceful ill fame of the "political immature" and a "diplomatic idiot" in its latest state media report written by an individual, not by any government or party official.

It marked the first time that an unidentified North Korean individual has condemned Yoon in the country's state media reports since he took office in May 2022, according to the ministry.

The North has so far lambasted Yoon 19 times, mostly by Kim Yo-jong, the powerful sister of the North's leader. (Yonhap)

Solar eclipses were once extremely terrifying events, experts say
'In North Korea, nobody knows Harvard, but almost everyone knows Oxford’