Site icon Youth Ki Awaaz

Closing Of North Korea’s Embassies Remains The Biggest Policy Shakeups

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un listens to questions from the media during the one-on-one bilateral meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump at the second North Korea-U.S. summit in the Metropole hotel in Hanoi, Vietnam February 28, 2019. REUTERS/Leah Millis - RC1630028F20

As climatic conditions take a little bit of a decline, the intense yearning to feel quite comfortable in all instances sticks around stronger than ever. Reportedly North Korea is toiling firmly to keep its embassies afloat amidst the International sanctions. 

But circumstances do not allow it to do the same as we find its diplomatic mission was getting closed for reasons ably known to it. That’s why it has closed as many as one dozen embassies in foreign countries. It will finally affect the future of nearly 25 per cent of North Korea’s diplomatic missions by far extending most parts of the world, reports The Independent. 

This did not rigidly abound with excitement. However, by the moment the dates for closures climbed in international media this month, it referred to challenges originating from US and EU sanctions and denoted that North Korea was confronted with difficulties in specifying mutually beneficial affinities with Spanish institutions, as well as commercial and artistic entities.

The sudden closure of embassies has set the scene for what could be one of the country’s biggest policy shakeups in decades, wrote Chad O’Carroll. It was also indicated that the North Korean embassy in Italy would take over the commitment for Spain. 

Exit mobile version