SEOUL, May 25 (AJP) - North Korea will convene a key Workers’ Party meeting in late June to review first-half policy implementation and discuss its agenda for the rest of the year, state media reported Monday, in what could offer clues to Pyongyang’s next steps after formally erasing unification from its constitution.
The ruling party’s Political Bureau adopted a decision on Sunday to call the second plenary meeting of the ninth Central Committee in late June, the Korean Central News Agency said. The meeting will “review the implementation of party and state policies for 2026” and discuss second-half tasks and “a series of important issues,” according to KCNA.
The plenum comes after North Korea’s ninth party congress in February and a March session of the Supreme People’s Assembly, where Pyongyang revised its constitution to reflect leader Kim Jong Un’s “two hostile states” doctrine. The amended constitution defines North Korea’s territory as only the northern part of the Korean Peninsula and removes references to eventual unification with the South.
Attention is also focused on whether the meeting will produce follow-up guidelines on South Korea or the United States, particularly as speculation grows that Chinese President Xi Jinping may visit Pyongyang for talks with Kim after his recent meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump.
Pyongyang’s hardened stance toward Seoul was on display last week when North Korea’s Naegohyang women’s football club visited South Korea for the AFC Women’s Champions League finals in Suwon, the first visit by a North Korean sports delegation in more than seven years.
The team won the title but avoided contact with South Korean officials, civic groups and reporters throughout its stay.
The players used passports rather than inter-Korean travel certificates, underscoring Pyongyang’s insistence on treating the relationship as one between separate states. After the final, coach Ri Yu-il abruptly left a press conference after objecting to a South Korean reporter’s reference to “the North,” asking that the country’s official name be used.
Copyright ⓒ Aju Press All rights reserved.



