Kim Jong Un, the top leader of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), vowed to further improve the country's social system and foreign relations at the ongoing Party congress, the official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported on Friday.
Kim suggested practical ways to give full play to the advantages of the country's social system, as he reported to the third-day session of the eighth congress of the ruling Workers' Party of Korea on Thursday.
In his report reviewing the work of the Party's Seventh Central Committee, Kim analyzed and evaluated in-depth the shortcomings exposed and lessons drawn from the work in the past five years, setting forth "directions and ways for opening up a fresh golden age" by carrying out reforms in such fields as "education, public health, literature, and arts," KCNA said.
DPRK leader Kim Jong Un attends the third-day session of eighth congress of the ruling Workers' Party of Korea in Pyongyang, the DPRK, January 8, 2021. /KCNA
During the session, Kim and the congress attendees also doubled down on the Party's general stance to comprehensively expand and forge external relations, including ties with South Korea, KCNA added.
Relations with Seoul went cold starting June, 2020 after Pyongyang demolished an inter-Korean liaison office in the border town of Kaesong in retaliation for the South's failure to stop activists from sending anti-DPRK leaflets into the North.
The DPRK opened the eighth Party Congress on Tuesday amid expectations of a new five-year economic development plan and new policies on relationship with the United States particularly as U.S. President-elect Joe Biden swears in on January 20.
The congress will continue on Friday, according to KCNA.