After days of speculation, it has been confirmed that North Korea's leader Kim Jong-un has visited China. The visit, confirmed by China and North Korea, was Mr Kim's first known foreign trip since taking office in 2011. Mr Kim held "successful talks" with Chinese leader Xi Jinping in Beijing, China's Xinhua news agency reported. China is North Korea's main economic ally and it was thought highly likely it would consult Beijing before planned summits with South Korea and the US. Mr Kim is due to meet South Korean President Moon Jae-in in April, and US President Donald Trump in May . The Beijing visit is considered a significant step in North Korea's preparation for the proposed talks.
North Korea's KCNA news agency called the visit "a milestone" in improving bilateral ties with China. "It makes sense for North Korea to explain their positions and co-ordinate with China, their most important partner," Andray Abrahamian, research fellow at Pacific Forum CSIS told the BBC. "Relations have been extremely strained the last five years and China has been sidelined in the diplomacy of the last several months," he said. "From Beijing's perspective, this is a visit that should have happened some time ago."
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