产品展示
  • 核载7人589人年审车贴警示车贴七座SUV七座商务车面包车贴7坐车贴
  • 长安20款全新欧尚X70A避光垫汽车中控仪表台防晒垫遮阳改装饰配件
  • 07 09 10 11思威CRV前后保险杠配件改装饰包围护板前后杠防撞踏板
  • 大功率10寸梯型12V24V改装汽车载有源低音炮220V插卡蓝牙音响音箱
  • 汽车通用贴纸狼图腾车贴车身个性改装腰线拉花全车贴划痕贴机盖贴
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

汽车配件

N. Korea to hold plenary meeting of ruling party in early June

2024-06-07 00:48:27      点击:038
This <strong></strong>photo, carried by North Korea's Korean Central News Agency, shows the North holding an enlarged plenary meeting of the ruling Workers' Party of Korea to discuss the country's agricultural issues, March 2. Yonhap
This photo, carried by North Korea's Korean Central News Agency, shows the North holding an enlarged plenary meeting of the ruling Workers' Party of Korea to discuss the country's agricultural issues, March 2. Yonhap

North Korea has decided to convene a plenary meeting of the ruling Workers' Party of Korea (WPK) in early June to discuss economic projects implemented in the first half and other policy issues, state media reported Monday.

The political bureau of the WPK decided to hold the eighth plenary meeting of the party's eighth central committee, according to the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA). It did not disclose the date of the upcoming meeting.

The plenary meeting will be held to review "the implementation of the national economic plans in the first half of 2023 and discuss the policy issues of weighty significance," the KCNA said in an English-language dispatch.

It appears to be unprecedented for the North to hold a party plenary meeting twice in the first half, given that the secretive regime has convened such a gathering once or twice per year.

In February, the North held a party plenary meeting to solely discuss the country's agricultural issues amid food shortages.

The North has been undergoing economic hardships amid global sanctions over its nuclear and missile programs and protracted COVID-19 restrictions. (Yonhap)




Is NK's recent nuclear warhead display prelude to nuclear test?
Is NK's recent nuclear warhead display prelude to nuclear test?