Inquirer
North Korea’s amended constitution has removed any reference to reunification with South Korea and to a shared Korean national identity, formally framing Seoul as a “hostile state.” The changes, which leader Kim Jong Un had signaled at a Supreme People’s Assembly in March, are a major policy departure for North Korea, which has technically remained at war with its southern neighbor since an armistice in 1953 halted hostilities in the Korean War. READ: Kim Jong Un to bolster front-line defenses against ‘arch enemy’ What has changed with North Korea’s revised charter? The new constitution, distributed by South Korea’s Ministry of […]... Keep on reading: North Korea's new constitution deepens split with Seoul
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