
Russia, North Korea start road bridge construction on border river
Russia and North Korea have begun construction of their first road bridge across a border river.
A groundbreaking ceremony was held on Wednesday, attended via video link by Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin and North Korean Premier Pak Thae Song.
The bridge across the Tumen River will connect the Russian Far East with North Korea's northeastern region.
Mishustin said the bridge construction "symbolizes our common desire to strengthen friendly, neighborly relations."
Pak said the bridge will be built as "a huge symbol of the immortal friendship and cooperation between the peoples of our two countries."
They each gave the start signal for the construction to begin on their respective sides.
The lower 17 kilometers of the Tumen serves as a border between the two countries. There is currently a railway bridge but no way for cars to get across.
The Russian government says the two-lane bridge will be about 1 kilometer in length and that its construction is expected to be completed in about 18 months.
North Korea has been deepening both military and political ties with Russia. It has sent troops to Russia to take part in operations to reclaim territory in Kursk, where Ukrainian forces have been staging cross-border incursions.
Pyongyang apparently aims to strengthen economic ties with Russia as well through building the new bridge.

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Yomiuri Shimbun
4 hours ago
- Yomiuri Shimbun
The U.S. Granted These Journalists Asylum. Then It Fired Them.
Aristide Economopoulos/For The Washington Post Leonid Martynyuk is a Russian journalist who was working for Voice of America but was recently fired in the Trump administration's cuts at the government-funded news operation. Martynyuk came to the United States in 2014 and was later granted asylum. When Leonid Martynyuk got off the train from Sochi to Krasnodar in southern Russia in the summer of 2014, a strange man bumped into him. The man started yelling, refusing to leave, egging on a fight. He claimed Martynyuk pushed him – not the other way around. Martynyuk's soon-to-be-wife, Ekaterina, motioned to police officers, pleading to intervene and defuse the hostile situation. But when the police arrived, they were only interested in interrogating Martynyuk – not the other man, who was released without questioning. 'This was when I was sure that the entire thing was an orchestrated set up to have me arrested,' Martynyuk later wrote in his application for political asylum in the United States. Martynyuk spent 10 days in prison on charges of hooliganism. His real offense, he maintains, was criticizing Russian President Vladimir Putin. His crime was journalism. Martynyuk, then in his mid-30s, spent years writing critical reports about Putin alongside his mentor, the well-known political opposition leader Boris Nemtsov, who previously served as deputy prime minister under Boris Yeltsin in the late 1990s. In one report, Nemtsov and Martynyuk detailed Putin's extensive wealth and opulence; in another, they detailed extensive corruption around the 2014 Olympics in Sochi. Martynyuk also ran a popular YouTube channel. When he was released from prison, Martynyuk's lawyer suggested that he and Ekaterina relocate to the United States for a short time, so the pair left for the New York area in October 2014. Four months later, two gunmen assassinated Nemtsov while he was walking home from dinner along a Moscow bridge. 'After that, I decided it would be dangerous to return,' Martynyuk recently told The Washington Post. He applied for political asylum, which the U.S. government granted two years later. But now Martynyuk, who became a full citizen in 2024, is once again feeling the ire of a powerful government – this time, it's the United States. On May 30, Martynyuk was one of more than 500 Voice of America staffers terminated by the U.S. Agency for Global Media, the agency that oversees the government-funded news service. Kari Lake, senior adviser to the USAGM, which oversees Voice of America and funds nonprofit news outlets with similar goals, says the agency represents government waste. The contractors fired could soon be joined by hundreds of full-time staffers, who are expected to be fired. After Putin came to power in 1999, he gradually clamped down on independent media in the country. Martynyuk read, listened to and watched Voice of America's work as a young man in the early 2000s, and he learned English through a program at the time titled Special English. His history with the network goes back much further: His grandfather was a colonel in the Soviet Army, stationed in Lviv in the 1970s. At night, he would listen to VOA on the radio – in secret. Martynyuk applied to work for VOA's fact-checking team, Polygraph. At the time of his firing, Polygraph employed one editor and three reporters, all of whom either received or had applied for political asylum. Stacy Caplow, a Brooklyn Law School professor, who – along with students in her clinic – helped Martynyuk apply for asylum, told The Post that he was the quintessential asylum seeker. 'This was the kind of case where if they didn't grant asylum, there would be something wrong with the system,' she said. 'It's clear-cut. Asylum is designed for people like him.' For foreign-born journalists who have found refuge not just in the U.S. but at Voice of America, losing their jobs feels like an existential threat – one that could stop them from working every day to speak truth to power, for the first time in their careers. Nik Yarst, a video producer on the fact-checking team, also lost his job on May 30. Yarst was a Sochi-based correspondent for the Public Television of Russia, also known as OTR, and reported extensively on corruption in Russia during the Olympics. He and a cameraman were driving to an interview with a Russian official when he was stopped by Russian police, who found narcotics in his car. Yarst, who later tested negative for a drug test, said the police slid the drugs into his car to arrest him. He served a year on house arrest, while his legal battle continued, and faced a 10-year prison sentence if convicted. 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'VOA was the one service who could hire people like me,' he said. He feels not betrayed but disappointed by the government. President Donald Trump, 'during his campaign, he talked a lot about the swamp, about corrupt people,' Yarst said. 'But these are not corrupt people who are out on the street.' When Fatima Tlis arrived in America, she resettled in Erie, Pennsylvania, through the work of the International Institute of Erie, now the Erie field office of the nonprofit U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants. It helped her learn English, get a Social Security card and establish credit. She couldn't get a car, so she and her two children would ride bicycles through the rural roads of northeast Pennsylvania to Walmart for groceries, which they loaded into backpacks. 'Of course, in Pennsylvania, nobody cares that you're some kind of a famous journalist,' she told The Post. 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Politkovskaya, a journalist and human rights activist critical of Putin, was assassinated in 2006. Tlis joined Voice of America in 2010 after two years of fellowships at Harvard, including the prestigious Nieman Fellowship. At the time of Trump's executive order in March dismantling the USAGM, she was the supervisory editor in charge of Polygraph and the team's only full-time employee. The others worked full time but were designated as personal services contractors, who are easier to hire and fire. As of now, she still has a job. Lake sent her plans for a reduction in force at the USAGM to Congress on June 3, a move that would eliminate all but 80 staffers at the agency and fewer than 20 at Voice of America. About 1,300 people worked at VOA before the March executive order. Tlis said that – beyond Polygraph – she personally knows of more than a dozen asylum holders or seekers at Voice of America. Lake did not respond to a request for comment about the asylum holders that have or could be fired. 'The people who were working on my team, journalists who, because of their job, endured the impossible just to be able to support the truth in their countries,' Tlis said. 'Still, after all of that they remained true to their profession, to their mission, and wanted to continue fighting lies and falsehoods and unmasking disinformation. Those people are getting fired right now.'


The Mainichi
6 hours ago
- The Mainichi
US expert posts satellite image of suspected N. Korea nuke facility
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Kyodo News
7 hours ago
- Kyodo News
U.S. expert posts satellite image of suspected North Korea nuke facility
KYODO NEWS - 3 minutes ago - 13:01 | World, All A U.S. nuclear weapons expert has released satellite images of what is believed to be a new uranium enrichment facility under construction in Yongbyon in North Korea's northwest, likely the same location flagged earlier this week by the chief of the International Atomic Energy Agency. The image posted online by Jeffrey Lewis, a professor at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey, was taken in April. IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi told the organization's board of governors on Monday in Vienna that the nuclear watchdog is monitoring the construction of the new structure, which he said has similar features to an existing uranium enrichment plant in Kangson near Pyongyang. However, Grossi did not provide images of the facility. The new building is located some 2 kilometers away from the existing Yongbyon complex, according to the satellite image. The new facility has a central hall approximately 95 meters long and 24 meters wide where centrifuges could be installed. It is surrounded by office and support spaces, Lewis said. Comparing it with a satellite image taken in 2002 during the construction of the Kangson enrichment facility, he noted the similarities in layout and dimensions. The professor also said North Korea packed more centrifuges into a much smaller floor space as it expanded its production of enriched uranium. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un toured a nuclear material production base and the Nuclear Weapons Institute last September and in January, according to the country's state-run media. The reports did not disclose the location of the sites. In an unusual move, the official Korean Central News Agency published pictures in September and January showing arrays of centrifuges at one or more undeclared facilities visited by Kim. Lewis said Kim probably visited the Kangson plant in September and the Yongbyon facility in January. However, some Japanese researchers have pointed out the leader traveled to the Yongbyon complex twice. Related coverage: North Korea's Kim Jong Un calls for bolstering nuclear arsenal during tour White House says Trump committed to denuclearization of North Korea