Putin, Kim and new multipolar world. Sullivan, striking Russia is common sense. Conflict in Lebanon
Putin-Kim summit: North Korea vows full support for Russia’s "sacred fight" against West, Ukraine
North Korea sent Russia millions of munitions in exchange for food: Seoul
South Korea says North Korea has sent Russia 6,700 containers carrying more than three million artillery shells since September.
North Korea has sent about 6,700 containers carrying millions of munitions to Russia since September in exchange for food as well as parts and raw materials for weapons manufacturing, according to officials.
South Korean Defense Minister Shin Wonsik told reporters on Tuesday that the containers might carry more than three million 152mm artillery shells or 500,000 122mm rounds.
The North Korean defectors finding fame in South Korea
North Korea’s Kim gifted car by Russia’s Putin, state media says
“It could possibly be a mix of the two, and you can say that at least several million shells have been sent,” Shin said, according to the Yonhap news agency.
The minister did not elaborate on the source of information.
He said hundreds of North Korean munitions factories are running at about 30 percent of their capacity due to a lack of raw materials and electricity, but those producing artillery shells for Russia were operating “at full swing”.
In return for the munitions, Russia provided North Korea with food, raw materials and parts used in weapons manufacturing, he said.
“It seems that food accounts for the largest proportion [of shipments from Russia], which is believed to have stabilised food prices in North Korea, with other necessities also included,” Shin said.
He added that the volume of containers shipped from Russia to North Korea appeared to be approximately 30 percent larger than those shipped from Pyongyang to Moscow in the same period.
Russia and North Korea’s relationship has become closer in recent years.
In September, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un travelled to Russia for a summit with President Vladimir Putin and held talks on military cooperation and possible Russian help for Pyongyang’s satellite programme.
'I Want to Break Free' (Queen) Performed In North Korea
Very rare footage of the North Korean girl group 'Moranbong Band' and The North Korean Military Chorus.
Don't worry - they're singing about breaking free from the Western imperialists under the wise guidance of the Glorious Leader.
Moranbong Band - Phantom of the opera
Moranbong Band - My heart (내 마음)
North Korean Moranbong Band: 배우자 - Let's study (English Translation)
The Moranbong Band, also known as Moran Hill Orchestra, is an all-female music group in North Korea whose members were selected by the country's supreme leader Kim Jong-un. Performing interpretive styles of pop, rock, and fusion, they are the first all-female band from the DPRK, and made their world debut on July 6, 2012. Their varied musical style has been described as symphonic because it is "putting together different kinds of sounds, and ending in a harmonious, pleasing result.
LA ESPECTACULAR ORQUESTA FEMENINA MORANBON Cecil González
North Korean Moranbong Band: The World’s Most Famous Songs (US, Brazil, Russia, France...
2021 North Korea's Grand Art Performance "We Sing of Party" - Celebrates 8th Congress
Ri Sol Ju (Kim Jong Un’s wife) 'Soldier's Footsteps' 병사의 발자욱 (engl. subt.)
A secret state: Going inside North Korea (2018)
CNN in the United Sates is Jewish run.
Wallen Bankers
IDF scales back operation. Dagestan airport PSYOP. Kiev ends gas transit. Scholz Nigeria stream. U/1
Wallenberg famil
The Wallenberg family is a prominent Swedish family renowned as bankers, industrialists, politicians, bureaucrats, and diplomats, present in most large Swedish industrial groups, like Ericsson, Electrolux, ABB, SAS Group, SKF, AIK, Atlas Copco and more. In the 1970s, the Wallenberg family businesses employed 40% of Sweden's industrial workforce and represented 40% of the total worth of the Stockholm stock market.[1]
The most famous of the Wallenberg family, Raoul Wallenberg, a diplomat, worked in Budapest, Hungary, during World War II to rescue Jews from the Holocaust. Between July and December 1944, he issued protective passports and housed Jews, saving tens of thousands of Jewish lives.[2] Their flagship company, Investor AB, has a market capitalization of around $60 billion.[3] The family is also heavily involved in philanthropy through the Wallenberg foundations, especially the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation.
History
The earliest known member of the Wallenberg family is Per Hansson (1670–1741) who, in 1692, married Kerstin Jacobsdotter Schuut (1671–1752). Their son, Jakob Persson Wallberg (1699–1758) married twice. The children of his first marriage called themselves Wallberg and those of his second called themselves Wallenberg.[4] Jakob Persson Wallberg was the great-grandfather of André Oscar Wallenberg who, in 1856, founded Stockholms Enskilda Bank, the predecessor of today's Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken.[1]
André Oscar Wallenberg's son Knut Agathon Wallenberg took over as CEO of Stockholms Enskilda Bank in 1886. Like many other Wallenberg relatives, Knut Agathon Wallenberg was also involved in Swedish politics and diplomacy becoming Minister for Foreign Affairs 1914–1917, and member of the Riksdags first chamber (Parliament of Sweden) 1907–1919. In 1916, new legislation made it more difficult for banks to own shares in industrial companies on a long-term basis. Investor was formed as an investment part of Stockholms Enskilda Bank.
New Duke Of Westminster 'Owns Half Of London'
Our history - Grosvenor
Snowing Again in Sahara Desert & Magnetosphere Decline Causing Jet Streams to Dance (505)
The new seventh Duke of Westminster has inherited his father's £9bn estate at the age of just 25 and has been described as now owning "half of London".
Hugh Richard Louis Grosvenor, previously known by his honorary title Earl Grosvenor, also inherits Eaton Hall in Cheshire - home to the Grosvenor family since the 15th century.
Despite not being the eldest child of the late Duke of Westminster, who died at the age of 64 on Tuesday, and his wife Natalia, the new Duke will inherit the billion-pound fortune instead of his elder sister Tamara due to an archaic tradition.
The rule of primogeniture that dates back to the time of William the Conqueror sees legitimate male heirs take precedence over their older sisters when it comes to inheriting an estate.
@chesscomsupport8689