China's Xi holds talks with North Korea's Kim in Beijing
Asia
By
AFP
| Sep 04, 2025
Chinese President Xi Jinping and Kim Jong Un met for talks in Beijing on Thursday, state media reported, while the North Korean leader is in China on a rare foreign visit.
Kim and Russia's Vladimir Putin flanked Xi at a massive parade of Chinese military might on Wednesday in Beijing, where underwater drones, massive missiles and laser weapons were showcased to the foreign leaders.
China is North Korea's most important ally, their relationship forged in the bloodshed of the Korean War in the 1950s.
Chinese state media said Kim and Xi met for talks in Beijing's Great Hall of the People.
China's foreign ministry said earlier the talks would be "an in-depth exchange of views on China-DPRK relations and issues of common concern", using the acronym for North Korea.
READ MORE
Ketraco gets nod to reappoint board after petition struck out
Kenya targets 240,000 youth jobs in fisheries sector expansion
Kenya's insurance industry faces its claims moment
Co-op Bank posts Sh29.75b profit, proposes a record Sh14.67 billion dividend
MPs push KenGen to upgrade its power generation technology
Mwangi's Sh734m windfall as Equity posts record earnings
MoUs without jobs? Kenya's seafarer strategy under scrutiny
Why World Bank has banned PwC Kenya for 21 months
Property sector reaps big from rising demand for luxury healthcare
"China is willing to work with the DPRK to strengthen strategic communication... (and) deepen the exchange of experience in governance," spokesman Guo Jiakun said.
Kim arrived in Beijing on Tuesday accompanied by his daughter Kim Ju Ae, his second reported trip abroad in six years and his first to China since 2019.
His attendance at the parade was the first time he was seen with Xi and Putin at the same event.
Kim enjoyed a brief bout of high-profile international diplomacy from around 2018, meeting US President Donald Trump and then South Korean president Moon Jae-in several times.
However, he withdrew from the global scene after the collapse of a summit with Trump in Hanoi in 2019.
Beijing has historically provided diplomatic, economic and political support to the secretive North, which remains under crippling international sanctions.