MOSCOW, April 30 (Reuters) --- North
Korean leader Kim Jong Un will not attend events in Moscow next week
commemorating the 70th anniversary of the end of World War Two in Europe, the
Kremlin said on Thursday.
"He has
decided to stay in Pyongyang ,"
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on a conference call. "This
decision is related to (North) Korea 's
internal affairs."
The trip would have
been Kim's first overseas since he took power in 2011 after the death of his
father.
Shin Kyung-min, a
member of South Korean parliament's intelligence committee, had said on
Wednesday that South Korea 's
spy agency expected Kim to go to Moscow
although there was no independent confirmation of the plan.
Yang Moo-jin, an
expert at the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul ,
said Kim could have boosted his image by going to Moscow and it was not clear why he had
decided not to go.
"He was at the
stage in his leadership where he should have been seen working on external
affairs and trying to overcome international isolation, especially in light of
the negative publicity he's got in recent months," he said.
"By visiting Russia , he would have been able to exert pressure
on China and also on South Korea ,
and he would have been able to improve his own image by going over there with
his attractive wife and speak in English, which he surely must be able to
do."
But some analysts
had questioned whether Kim, believed to be in his early 30s, would choose for
his first overseas visit an event where he would share the stage with several
leaders and have less control over proceedings than in a two-way summit.
Peskov said about
30 foreign leaders would attend anniversary events but not all would attend a
military parade on Red Square on May 9. These
include German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who is expected to be in Moscow only on May 10.
Many Western
leaders are shunning the anniversary events in a show of displeasure over Russia 's actions during the crisis in Ukraine ,
where pro-Russian separatists are fighting Ukrainian government forces.
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