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Documents

November 18, 1980

Telegram from Szabó Ferenc, 'Information from the Korean charge d’affaires on their ten-point proposal for reunification'

Information from DPRK charge d’affaires on ten-point proposal for reunification, on two-governments-one-nation system, with Hungarian response

November 5, 1980

Telegram from Szabó Ferenc, 'Information from the Korean charge d’affaires on their ten-point proposal for reunification'

Information sent by DPRK charge d’affaires on ten-point proposal for reunification and the Hungarian response on the proposal

December 9, 1980

Record for the Vice Minister Comrade Dr. Házi Vencel about the consultations with Comrade O Man-seok, the Head of Department of the DPRK’s Foreign Affairs Ministry

O Man-seok's brief of DPRK internal policies activities to move forward the cause of unifying Korea.

February 16, 1981

Hungarian Foreign Ministry, 4th Main Department, Memorandum, 16 February 1981. Subject: Establishment of a Social Democratic Party in the DPRK.

The Hungarian Foreign Ministry reports that the Korean Democratic Party has changed names and become known as the Korean Social Democratic Party.

January 18, 1978

Hungarian Embassy in the DPRK, Telegram, 18 January 1978. Subject: Invitation to Zia ul-Haq to visit the DPRK.

Pakistan denies Kim Il Sung's invitation for Zia ul-Haq to visit Pyongyang and explains that domestic developments will prevent ul-Haq from traveling abroad.

May 1, 1975

Hungarian Embassy in the DPRK, Report, 1 May 1975. Subject: Visit of a Laotian delegation in the DPRK.

The Hungarian Embassy in the DPRK provides an overview of relations between Pyongyang and Vientiane and summarizes a recent visit of a Lao delegation to North Korea.

November 21, 1977

Report, Embassy of Hungary in North Korea to the Hungarian Foreign Ministry

Soviet-DPRK delegations meet, but agree to not discuss North Korea's economic problems repaying the Soviet Union, or the Soviet Union's refusal to supply a nuclear power plant to North Korea.

February 23, 1979

Report, Embassy of Hungary in North Korea to the Hungarian Foreign Ministry

The Hungarian Ambassador in North Korea reports on the construction of the Kori Nuclear Power Plant in South Korea, highlighting that South Korea's projected power output would eventually surpass North Korea's by three-fold. As a result, North Korea was anxious to build its own nuclear power plant and perhaps even an atomic bomb.

April 15, 1976

Report, Embassy of Hungary in North Korea to the Hungarian Foreign Ministry

Report on Soviet-Korean economic negotiations. The DPRK makes a request for a nuclear power plant, which the Soviet Union declines. The Korean delegation is overly aggressive and crude to the Soviets.

June 25, 1976

Telegram, Embassy of Hungary in North Korea to the Hungarian Foreign Ministry

Soviet-Korean relations deteriorate, as Korea falls behind in commercial deliveries and the Soviet Union declines to deliver a nuclear power plant.