KHABAROVSK, Russia, Aug. 22 Kyodo
(EDS: UPDATING)
North Korean leader Kim Jong Il visited the headquarters of the Russian Far Eastern Military District on Thursday and met with Col. Gen. Yuri Yakubov, the district commander, before heading for Vladivostok to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday.
What Kim and Yakubov discussed is unknown. Kim, accompanied by Kim Young Chun, chief of the general staff of the Korean People's Army, also visited an army unit of the Russian Far Eastern Military District in Volochayevsk, a small town 10 minutes from the center of Khabarovsk.
There, he was shown weapons and military hardware used by Russian troops, military training grounds, barracks and a medical center.
While the North Korean leader reportedly visited several defense plants during his trip to Russia last summer, this is believed to be his first official inspection of a military unit.
Kim also visited a Russian orthodox church in Khabarovsk earlier in the day. He stayed in St. Bishop Innokenty Irkutsky Church for more than 30 minutes, during which he asked clergymen about the history of orthodoxy and its difference from Catholicism and other religions, according to the Russian news agency Itar-Tass.
Kim earlier in the morning visited the Khabarovsk Amurkabel cable manufacturer and Dalkhimfarm Plant, the largest pharmaceutical factory in the Far East.
He dined at the Parus Hotel, built in 1902, which has hosted leaders including former Soviet Union leaders Leonid Brezhnev and Mikhail Gorbachev and former Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau.
Following his arrival in Khabarovsk, the largest city in Russia's Far East, the Kremlin confirmed Kim and Putin will hold talks in Vladivostok on Friday afternoon.
Kim last met Putin during his 24-day train journey through Russia on the Trans-Siberian Railway in July and August last year.
On Wednesday, Kim toured the riverside town of Komsomolsk-on-Amur and invited 100 Russian children to take a vacation in North Korea.
During a cruise on the Amur river, Kim, who reportedly dislikes flying, told Russian specialists accompanying him he does not suffer from aerophobia and is prepared to go to Moscow by air next time, Itar-Tass reported.
Explaining why he traveled to Russia by rail on both occasions, Kim emphasized that by looking out of a railway coach window one can get to know the life of another country much better than when flying over it, the report quoted him as saying.
The Russian government reportedly came under fire for traffic tie-ups, train delays and other inconveniences that Kim's train tour caused many Russians last year.
COPYRIGHT 2002 Kyodo News International, Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2002 Gale Group