Arab Times

Asia Kim enjoys limousine gifted by Putin

-

SEOUL, South Korea, March 16, (AP): North Korean leader Kim Jong Un used a Russian luxury limousine gifted by President Vladimir Putin, Kim’s sister said Saturday, praising the car’s “special function” and the two countries’ deepening bilateral ties.

In February, Putin sent Kim a highend Aurus Senat limousine, which he had shown to the North Korean leader when they met for a summit in Russia in September. Observers said the shipment violated a United Nations resolution aimed at pressuring the North to give up its nuclear weapons program by banning the supply of luxury items to North Korea.

In a statement carried by state media, Kim’s sister and senior official, Kim Yo Jong, said that her brother used that limousine for the first time during an open event Friday.

“The special function of the private car is perfect and can be thoroughly trusted,” Kim Yo Jong said, without specifying. “Kim Jong Un’s using of the private car sent by the president of the Russian Federation as a gift is a clear proof of (North Korea)-Russia friendship, which is developing in a comprehens­ive way on a new high stage.”

Inaugurati­on

According to Russian state media, Aurus was the first Russian luxury car brand, and it’s been used in motorcades of top officials since Putin first used an Aurus limousine during his inaugurati­on ceremony in 2018.

Kim Jong Un, 40, possess a collection of foreign-made luxury cars believed to have been smuggled into his country. During his Russia visit, he traveled between meeting sites in a Maybach limousine that was brought with him on one of his special train carriages. Other limousines he’s reportedly used include a Mercedes May bach S600 Pullman Guard and a Maybach S62.

Over the past year, North Korea and Russia have sharply boosted their military and other cooperatio­n as they face separate confrontat­ions with the West - North Korea for its advancing nuclear program and Russia for its invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

Drawing the biggest outside concerns was North Korea’s purported shipments of convention­al weapons to support Russia’s war with Ukraine to receive high-tech Russian weapons technologi­es and other support.

Sanctions

Russia, together with China, have repeatedly blocked the United States and its partners’ attempts to impose fresh U.N. sanctions on North Korea over its barrage of banned ballistic missile tests.

North Korea’s state media separately reported Saturday that Kim Jong Un guided his troops conducting parachutin­g training the previous day. It’s unclear if Friday’s training was the same event in which Kim rode in the Russian limousine.

The parachutin­g training was the latest in a series of military drills that Kim has supervised in recent days, likely in response to the annual 11-day South Korean-U.S. military exercises that ended Thursday. Kim views his rivals’ exercises as an invasion rehearsal.

After watching Friday’s training, Kim ordered his military to conduct future training more intensivel­y and make full preparatio­n for a war, according to the North’s official Korean Central News Agency. Kim made similar demands after he guided other recent drills involving tanks, long-range artillery guns and combat soldiers.

Also:

HONG KONG: A Hong Kong court sentenced 12 people Saturday to prison over the storming of the city’s legislativ­e council building at the height of the anti-government protests in 2019.

Hundreds of protesters swarmed into the legislatur­e the night of July 1, 2019 the 22nd anniversar­y of the former British colony’s return to China - defacing pictures and smashing furniture. Some spray-painted slogans in the chamber and painted over the territory’s emblem on a wall before vacating the site as riot police cleared surroundin­g streets with tear gas before moving inside.

The 12 defendants, including former student leader Althea Suen, actor

Gregory Wong, and activists Ventus Lau and Owen Chow, were previously convicted for rioting. Some of them were also found guilty of other related charges.

Judge Li Chi-ho handed down jail terms ranging between 4 1/2 years and 6 years and 10 months, depending on the degree of their involvemen­t and mitigating factors. Li said the legislatur­e holds a unique constituti­onal status and the nature of the event was serious, with a far-reaching impact. The acts of the protesters were “targeting the city’s government,” he said.

The case also involved two reporters who were previously acquitted of the rioting charge but were convicted for unlawful entry into the legislatur­e. One was fined 1,500 Hong Kong dollars ($192) and the other 1,000 Hong Kong dollars ($128), Li said.

After the sentences were handed down, some supporters of the defendants cried in the courtroom and many others waved at the accused. Some chanted, “Hang in there!”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait