Seoul warns Russia over North Korea-supplied weapons
South Korean government officials said Russia should not “make any mistakes” that could damage relations between the two countries.
South Korean Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lim Soo-suk made the comments on Thursday at a press conference in Seoul and was addressing recent remarks by Russian foreign ministry official Maria Zakharova, who cautioned Seoul against supplying arms to Ukraine.
“We hope that Russia gives up its dependency on North Korea and acts like a permanent member of UN Security Council,” Lim Soo-suk said.
The warning shot comes as Russian President Vladimir Putin recently strengthened ties with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un on a visit to the North Korean capital of Pyongyang earlier this month.
The two leaders signed a pact declaring the countries would protect one another from foreign aggression. Both nations have frosty relations with the West and are under numerous sanctions.
Meanwhile, Russian news reports claim that roughly 10,000 recently minted Russian citizens have been sent into war with Ukraine.
According to the Russian news agency Interfax, Kremlin official Alexander Bastrykin said that recent citizenship recipients must register with the military and take part in the war.
“Already about 10,000 of them" have been sent to fight in Ukraine, Bastrykin said.
“Investigators” had also allegedly caught and forcibly registered 30,000 recent citizens who failed to sign up to the military, the investigative Committee chairman added.
Other media reports claim that South Korea anticipates North Korea sending engineers and military personnel to the occupied Donetsk Oblast region in Ukraine to rebuild Russian infrastructure. South Korean broadcaster TV Chosun recently reported that a government official claimed