Kim Yo Jong – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Mon, 06 Apr 2026 18:21:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png Kim Yo Jong – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 North Korea leader’s sister says Seoul’s regret sending drones ‘wise behaviour’ https://artifex.news/article70831779-ece/ Mon, 06 Apr 2026 18:21:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70831779-ece/ Read More “North Korea leader’s sister says Seoul’s regret sending drones ‘wise behaviour’” »

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Kim Yo Jong, a sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. File
| Photo Credit: AP

The powerful sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said on Monday (April 6, 2026) that the regret expressed by Seoul over a January drone incursion into the North is “wise behaviour”.

Earlier in the day, South Korean President Lee Jae Myung expressed regret to Pyongyang over drones sent into the nuclear-armed North earlier this year, actions he called “irresponsible”.

“The ROK president personally expressed regret and talked about a measure for preventing recurrence. Our government appreciated it as very fortunate and wise behaviour for its own sake,” Kim Yo Jong said in a statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency, using the official name of South Korea.

Seoul initially denied any official role in the January drone incursion — with authorities suggesting it was the work of civilians — but Mr. Lee said a probe had revealed government officials had been involved.

The North warned in February of a “terrible response” if it detects more drones crossing the border from the South, prompting Seoul to investigate the claims.

Pyongyang said it downed a drone carrying “surveillance equipment” in early January.

Photos released by state media showed the wreckage of a winged craft scattered across the ground alongside grey and blue components that allegedly included cameras.

“It has been confirmed that a National Intelligence Service official and an active-duty soldier were involved,” Mr. Lee told a cabinet meeting.

“We express regret to the North over the unnecessary military tensions caused by the irresponsible and reckless actions of some individuals,” he said.

He added that South Korea’s constitution bans private individuals from conducting acts that could “provoke the North”.

“Such actions, even when deemed necessary for national strategy, must be approached with extreme caution,” he said.

Ms. Kim Yo Jong said her brother had taken Mr. Lee’s remark “as a manifestation of a frank and broad-minded man’s attitude”, but warned Seoul to “stop any reckless provocation against the DPRK and refrain from any attempt at contact”, using the initials of the North’s official name.

“The ROK side should be mindful that it will be forced to pay a price… if such a provocation as violating the inalienable sovereignty of our state occurs again,” she warned.

‘Most hostile state’

Mr. Lee has sought to repair ties with North Korea since taking office last year, criticising his predecessor for allegedly sending drones to scatter propaganda over Pyongyang.

His repeated overtures, however, have gone unanswered by the North.

Former South Korean president Yoon Suk Yeol is standing trial over charges that his administration sent drones into the North to provoke a backlash and create a pretext for declaring military rule.

Yoon was impeached and ousted from office in April last year and has been sentenced to life in prison over his declaration of martial law.

Mr. Lee’s expression of regret follows North Korean leader Mr. Kim Jong Un’s labelling of Seoul as the “most hostile state” in a policy address in March in which he vowed to “thoroughly reject and disregard it”.

North Korea’s leader also reaffirmed his commitment to maintaining the country’s nuclear arsenal, describing it as an “irreversible course”.

During Yoon’s presidency, relations between Seoul and Pyongyang hit rock bottom, with the North sending balloons filled with garbage, including animal manure, in response to propaganda leaflets sent northward by South Korea-based activists, many of them North Korean defectors.

The two Koreas technically remain at war, as the 1950–53 conflict ended in an armistice rather than a peace treaty, and both enforce mandatory military service for men.



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North Korea leader’s sister promoted at party congress https://artifex.news/article70669616-ece/ Tue, 24 Feb 2026 03:11:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70669616-ece/ Read More “North Korea leader’s sister promoted at party congress” »

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Kim Yo Jong, the sister of North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Un. File
| Photo Credit: Reuters

The powerful sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has been given a promotion in the ruling party structure during a rare party congress, State media reported on Tuesday (February 24, 2026).

The Workers’ Party Central Committee on Monday (February 23) named Kim Yo Jong – previously a deputy department director – as a full department director, Pyongyang’s official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) said.

Thousands of party elites have packed the capital Pyongyang for a once-in-five-years summit of the ruling Workers’ Party, a gathering that directs state efforts on everything from diplomacy to war planning.

The congress offers a rare glimpse into the political workings of reclusive North Korea and is widely seen as a forum for Mr. Kim to flex his grip on power.

Kim Yo Jong has long been among her brother’s closest lieutenants and one of the most influential women in the isolated regime.

Born in the late 1980s, according to the South Korean government, she is one of three children born to Mr. Kim’s father and predecessor, Kim Jong Il, and his third known partner, former dancer Ko Yong Hui.

She was educated in Switzerland alongside her brother and rose rapidly up the ranks once he inherited power after their father’s death in 2011.

In 2018, she visited South Korea for the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics during a period of inter-Korean rapprochement.

Pyongyang also frequently uses her name to issue statements outlining its positions or criticising the South and the U.S.

Heir apparent

Later in the days-long congress, Kim Jong Un is expected to unveil the next phase in North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme.

The country’s nuclear arsenal has been transformed under Mr. Kim from a source of mild global concern to something treated as a genuine threat.

It is just the ninth time the Workers’ Party congress has convened under North Korea’s decades-spanning Mr. Kim rule.

Particular attention will also be placed on the whereabouts of Kim’s teenage daughter Ju Ae, who has emerged as North Korea’s heir apparent, according to Seoul’s national intelligence service.

At the previous congress five years ago, Mr. Kim declared that the United States was his nation’s “biggest enemy”.

There is keen interest in whether Mr. Kim might use the congress to soften this stance, or double down.

U.S. President Donald Trump stepped up his courtship of Mr. Kim during a tour of Asia last year, saying he was “100 percent” open to a meeting.

Mr. Kim has so far largely shunned efforts to resume top-level diplomatic dialogue.



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Trash carried by a North Korean balloon again falls on the presidential compound in Seoul https://artifex.news/article68789869-ece/ Thu, 24 Oct 2024 03:37:35 +0000 https://artifex.news/article68789869-ece/ Read More “Trash carried by a North Korean balloon again falls on the presidential compound in Seoul” »

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This combination of pictures released from North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) via KNS on early October 19, 2024, shows a balloon and items apparently from South Korea, found on October 18 in the southern border area in North Korea.
| Photo Credit: KCNA VIA KNS / AFP

“Trash carried by a North Korean balloon fell on the presidential compound in central Seoul on Thursday (October 23, 2024),” officials said, the second such case in recent months that raises concerns about the vulnerability of key South Korean sites during potential North Korean aggression.

The incident comes after the rival Koreas ramped up threats and rhetoric against each other over North Korea’s claims that South Korea flew drones over its capital Pyongyang to scatter propaganda leaflets this month.

South Korea’s presidential security service said in a statement that one of the balloons floated by North Korea burst over the South Korean presidential compound on Thursday (October 23, 2024) morning, dropping rubbish on the ground. No dangerous items were found.

North Korea has sent trash-carrying balloons into South Korea since late May in a resumption of a Cold War-style psychological campaign. The trash that fell on the South Korean presidential compound in July contained no dangerous material and no one was hurt.

It wasn’t immediately known whether South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol was at the compound during the latest incident. His schedule showed he was due to meet with visiting Polish President Andrzej Duda at his office later Thursday (October 23, 2024).

South Korea’s Dong-A Ilbo newspaper reported earlier Thursday (October 23, 2024) on its website that North Korea’s latest balloons contained propaganda leaflets criticising Mr. Yoon and his wife Kim Keon Hee along with trash.

The newspapers said the leaflets were scattered in areas in Seoul’s Yongsan district, where Mr. Yoon’s presidential office is located, and noted that North Korea has recently begun using GPS technology to drop balloons more accurately in intended locations.

The South Korean presidential security service didn’t immediately confirm the report.

Experts say North Korea likely lacks sophisticated technology to drop balloons on specific targets.

“Whether the balloons have GPS or not, it’s all about launching them in large numbers and hitting the right altitude based on wind direction and speed, so that they can ride those winds to travel,” Lee Choon Geun, an honorary research fellow at South Korea’s Science and Technology Policy Institute, said.

“While some media are saying the accuracy of the balloons has improved, that improved accuracy isn’t because they equipped them with some sort of guidance system, but rather because it’s the season when winds blow southward,” researcher Lee said.

North Korea has earlier accused South Korea of “infiltrating drones” to drop propaganda leaflets over Pyongyang three times this month and threatened military responses if it happened again. South Korea has refused to confirm whether it sent drones but warned that North Korea would face the end of its regime if the safety of South Korean citizens is threatened.

North Korea said its balloon activities were in response to South Korean activists launching anti-Pyongyang leaflets via their own balloons. South Korea responded by restarting propaganda loudspeaker broadcasts at border areas, prompting North Korea to turn on their own frontline loudspeakers.

The Koreas’ Cold War-style campaigns come as North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has increased the pace of his weapons tests and expanded military cooperation with Russia.

U.S. and South Korean officials said Wednesday (October 23, 2024) that 3,000 North Korean troops have been deployed to Russia and are training at several locations. South Korean officials say North Korea eventually aims to send a total of 10,000 troops to Russia to support its war efforts in Ukraine.

South Korea is concerned that Russia may reward North Korea by giving it sophisticated technologies that could improve the North’s nuclear and missile programs that target South Korea and its allies.



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North Korea Army ‘Ready To Shoot’ Amid Friction With South Korea Over Drones https://artifex.news/north-korea-army-ready-to-shoot-amid-friction-with-south-korea-over-drones-6781818/ Sun, 13 Oct 2024 17:01:53 +0000 https://artifex.news/north-korea-army-ready-to-shoot-amid-friction-with-south-korea-over-drones-6781818/ Read More “North Korea Army ‘Ready To Shoot’ Amid Friction With South Korea Over Drones” »

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Seoul:

North Korea’s artillery units near the border with South Korea have been ordered to be ready to fire amid frictions over drones that Pyongyang says are being flown over the frontier, state media cited the government as saying on Sunday.

Some defectors and activists in South Korea fly aid parcels into the North and drop leaflets criticising leader Kim Jong Un.

North Korea has blamed the South Korean military for the practice. It has also been floating balloons with trash into the South in reprisal.

North Korean state news agency KCNA quoted the defence ministry’s spokesperson as saying Pyongyang sees a high likelihood of more drones flying over the capital, with its military told to prepare for all scenarios including conflict.

On Friday, North Korea accused South Korea of sending drones into Pyongyang at night this week and last, and said the intrusion demanded retaliatory action.

Kim Yo Jong, powerful sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, warned Seoul on Saturday of a “horrible disaster”.

She said the blame lies with the South Korean military if it failed to identify drones sent by a non-governmental organization crossing the border.

South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said it could not confirm the North’s accusations.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)




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Trash dropped by a North Korean balloon falls on South Korea’s Presidential compound https://artifex.news/article68440314-ece/ Wed, 24 Jul 2024 06:34:22 +0000 https://artifex.news/article68440314-ece/ Read More “Trash dropped by a North Korean balloon falls on South Korea’s Presidential compound” »

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South Korean Army soldiers collect the trash from a balloon presumably sent by North Korea, in Incheon, South Korea, on July 24, 2024.
| Photo Credit: AP

Trash from at least one North Korean balloon fell on the South Korean Presidential compound on July 24, raising worries about the security of key South Korean facilities from North Korean provocations.

“The rubbish that fell on the ground at the compound in central Seoul contained no dangerous material and no one was hurt,” South Korea’s Presidential security service said in a statement. But experts say South Korea needs to shoot incoming North Korean balloons at border areas next time, as it’s not clear whether North Korea would put in hazardous items in future campaigns.

North Korea’s latest balloon launches came days after South Korea boosted its frontline broadcasts of K-pop songs and propaganda messages across the rivals’ heavily armed border. Their tit-for-tat Cold War-style campaigns are inflaming tensions, with the rivals threatening stronger steps and warning of grave consequences.

Seoul officials earlier said North Korea had used the direction of winds to fly balloons toward South Korea, but some of the past balloons had timers that were likely meant to pop the bags of trash midair. The security service gave no further details about the rubbish found at the Presidential compound, such as whether balloons were discovered along with the trash.

If North Korea is found to have used timers or any other device to deliberately dump trash on key South Korean facilities such as the Presidential office, it would certainly invite strong response by South Korea. But experts say dropping balloons at ground targets is extremely sophisticated technology and that North Korea would certainly lack such an ability.

The security service refused to disclose whether President Yoon Suk Yeol was in the office at the time. Mr.Yoon’s office earlier said he has no official schedule on July 24.

‘North Korean landmines could float into South Korea’

South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said earlier on Wednesday that North Korean balloons were flying north of Seoul after crossing the border and had urged people to be alert for falling objects.

It was North Korea’s 10th such launch since late May. The more than 2,000 huge balloons so far have dropped wastepaper, scraps of cloth, cigarette butts and even manure on South Korea. North Korea has said it was responding to South Korean activists scattering political leaflets across the border via their own balloons.

Experts say North Korea considers South Korean civilian leafleting activities a major threat to its efforts to stop the inflow of foreign news and maintain its authoritarian rule. In furious responses to past South Korean leafletting, North Korea destroyed an empty South Korean-built liaison office in its territory in 2020 and fired at incoming balloons in 2014.

The North’s balloons haven’t caused major damage but have raised security jitters among people, worried North Korea could use such balloons to drop more hazardous materials such as chemical- and biological agents.

South Korea said on Sunday it was ramping up its anti-Pyongyang propaganda broadcasts from its loudspeakers at all major sites along the land border because North Korea was continuing launches of trash-carrying balloons. South Korea restarted last Thursday its loudspeaker broadcasts for the first time in about 40 days in retaliation for North Korea’s previous balloon activities.

Observers say South Korean propaganda broadcasts can demoralise frontline North Korean troops and residents. In 2015, North Korea fired artillery rounds across the border in anger over South Korea’s restart of propaganda broadcasts, prompting the South to return fire.

South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff spokesperson Lee Sung Joon said the ongoing South Korean broadcasts include K-pop songs and news on South Korean economic development. South Korean media reported the broadcasts also contained news on the recent defection of a senior North Korean diplomat and called the mine-planting work by North Korean soldiers at the border “hellish, slave-like lives.”

South Korea has an estimated 40 loudspeakers — 24 stationary and 16 mobile ones. South Korea’s military said on July 22 it was fully operating the fixed loudspeakers and plans to use the mobile loudspeakers as well.

South Korea’s military has warned of other unspecified stronger steps if North Korea continues its balloon campaigns. North Korea hasn’t made an official response to the South Korean propaganda broadcasts. But last week, Kim Yo Jong, the powerful sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, threatened new countermeasures against South Korean civilian leafleting as she warned that South Korean “scum” must be ready to pay “a gruesome and dear price” over their actions.



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North Korean leader’s sister Kim Yo Jong calls South Korea’s live-fire drills ’suicidal hysteria’ https://artifex.news/article68380507-ece/ Mon, 08 Jul 2024 06:47:38 +0000 https://artifex.news/article68380507-ece/ Read More “North Korean leader’s sister Kim Yo Jong calls South Korea’s live-fire drills ’suicidal hysteria’” »

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Kim Yo Jong. File
| Photo Credit: AP

The sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un called South Korea’s recent front-line live-fire drills “suicidal hysteria” as she threatened unspecified military steps on July 8 if further provoked.

The warning by Kim Yo Jong came after South Korea resumed firing exercises near its tense land and sea borders with North Korea in the past two weeks. The exercises were the first of their kind since South Korea suspended a 2018 agreement with the North aimed at easing front-line military tensions in June.

“The question is why the enemy kicked off such war drills near the border, suicidal hysteria, for which they will have to sustain terrible disaster,” Kim Yo Jong said in a statement carried by state media.

She accused South Korea’s conservative government of deliberately escalating tensions as a way to escape a domestic political crisis. She said the riskiness of the South Korean drills is clear to everyone as they happened amid “a touch-and-go situation” established after the U.S., South Korea and Japan recently held a new trilateral military exercise that North Korea views as a security threat.

“In case it is judged according to our criteria that they violated the sovereignty of (North Korea) and committed an act tantamount to a declaration of war, our armed forces will immediately carry out its mission and duty assigned by the (North Korean) constitution,” she said, without elaborating.

Later on Monday, Koo Byoungsam, a spokesperson at South Korea’s Unification Ministry, described Kim’s statement as an attempt to trigger an internal divide in South Korea, saying that North Korea must first look at its own human rights violations and the international isolation caused by its nuclear programme.

South Korea’s Defence Ministry separately said it will continue its live-fire drills as scheduled but didn’t say when and where new exercises are planned.

North Korea has been engaged in a provocative run of weapons tests since 2022. But its two recent tests — one on a missile with “a super-large warhead” and the other on a multiwarhead missile — drew widespread skepticism from South Korean officials and experts who said North Korea likely fabricated successful launches to cover up failed tests.

In early June, South Korea fully suspend the 2018 inter-Korean military pact after North Korea flew balloons carrying manure, cigarette butts and wastepaper across the border to protest South Korean activists scattering political leaflets in the North via their own balloons.

The military agreement — reached during a short-lived era of reconciliation between the Koreas — required the two countries to cease all hostile acts at border areas, such as live-firing drills, aerial surveillance and psychological warfare. The deal had already been in the danger of collapse, with both Koreas taking steps in breach of it amid animosities over North Korea’s spy satellite launch last November.



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North Korea Says “Will Build Overwhelming Military Power” https://artifex.news/north-korea-says-will-build-overwhelming-military-power-5509420/ Tue, 23 Apr 2024 23:55:51 +0000 https://artifex.news/north-korea-says-will-build-overwhelming-military-power-5509420/ Read More “North Korea Says “Will Build Overwhelming Military Power”” »

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North Korea says U.S. military exercises are preparations for a nuclear war against it.

Seoul:

 Kim Yo Jong, the powerful sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, said the country will continue to build overwhelming and the strongest military power to protect its sovereignty and regional peace, the North’s KCNA news agency reported on Wednesday.

Kim said a series of military exercises by the U.S. military in the region this year starting with live-fire drills conducted with the “South Korean puppet military gangsters” are driving the regional security environment into a dangerous turmoil.

“We will continue to build overwhelming and the most powerful military power to safeguard our sovereignty, security and regional peace,” KCNA quoted her as saying.

The U.S. and South Korean militaries have been conducted a range of drills with greater scale and intensity in recent months under a pledge by the two countries’ leaders to upgrade military readiness against North Korea’s military threats.

About 100 military aircraft conducted two-week-long aerial drills this month, according to South Korea’s military.

North Korea says U.S. military exercises are preparations for a nuclear war against it. Washington and Seoul say the drills are defensive in nature and regularly conducted to maintain readiness.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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